Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution

Codified constitutions are arguably the most celebrated type of Constitution in the world.1 This is probably because codified Constitutions are contained in one document called 'The Constitution.'2 As such, they offer a primary and singular source from which 'constitutional' pro...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Madebwe, Tinashe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/895
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905362711805952
author Madebwe, Tinashe
author_facet Madebwe, Tinashe
author_sort Madebwe, Tinashe
collection DSpace
description Codified constitutions are arguably the most celebrated type of Constitution in the world.1 This is probably because codified Constitutions are contained in one document called 'The Constitution.'2 As such, they offer a primary and singular source from which 'constitutional' provisions can be gleamed, making such Constitutions accessible and clear to citizens and to the world at large.3 Beyond this however, codified Constitutions are also celebrated because of their symbolic value.4 Here, it is worthwhile to consider that codified Constitutions typically emerge, and succeed, following an upheaval, the classical example of which is a revolution.5 As such, codified Constitutions are celebrated partly because they represent the turn to new constitutional dispensations in which things will be 'different' from the way they were previously. This symbolism is not to be discounted. Various states, most recently South Africa and Iraq, have relied on the symbolic value that codified Constitutions hold as the backbone for the transition to constitutional democracies which have united peoples across the nation and been regarded as a beacon of hope and change
format Article
id ir-11408-895
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Midlands State University
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-8952022-06-27T13:49:06Z Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution Madebwe, Tinashe Constitutionalism Zimbabwean Constitution Codified constitutions are arguably the most celebrated type of Constitution in the world.1 This is probably because codified Constitutions are contained in one document called 'The Constitution.'2 As such, they offer a primary and singular source from which 'constitutional' provisions can be gleamed, making such Constitutions accessible and clear to citizens and to the world at large.3 Beyond this however, codified Constitutions are also celebrated because of their symbolic value.4 Here, it is worthwhile to consider that codified Constitutions typically emerge, and succeed, following an upheaval, the classical example of which is a revolution.5 As such, codified Constitutions are celebrated partly because they represent the turn to new constitutional dispensations in which things will be 'different' from the way they were previously. This symbolism is not to be discounted. Various states, most recently South Africa and Iraq, have relied on the symbolic value that codified Constitutions hold as the backbone for the transition to constitutional democracies which have united peoples across the nation and been regarded as a beacon of hope and change 2016-04-19T15:56:34Z 2016-04-19T15:56:34Z 2014 Article http://hdl.handle.net/11408/895 en [Midlands State University Law Review;Vol.1; p. 6-19 open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Constitutionalism
Zimbabwean Constitution
Madebwe, Tinashe
Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title_full Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title_fullStr Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title_full_unstemmed Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title_short Constitutionalism and the new Zimbabwean Constitution
title_sort constitutionalism and the new zimbabwean constitution
topic Constitutionalism
Zimbabwean Constitution
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/895
work_keys_str_mv AT madebwetinashe constitutionalismandthenewzimbabweanconstitution