Reviews
A significant contribution to the literature on constitutional theory. Breslin's careful discussion of the similarities and differences among the various strains of communitarian thought provides a thorough introduction for those who are only vaguely familiar with communitarianism and its challenge to liberalism.
A worthy analysis of the ever-present dilemma in constitutional governments—individual rights in tension with the public good.
A laudable project that... generates a fresh perspective on the communitarian-liberal debate... Provides some excellent critical material.
Comprehensive and sympathetic understanding of communitarian theory.
This work is sure to add insight... even as it revitalizes longstanding debates in political theory.
[A] concise and lively treatment of constitutions and their functions.
Breslin's book will stir up some dust and provoke academic controversy in a highly productive way. His strongly stated and well-argued thesis—that communitarianism cannot sustain a constitutional vision—will surely garner great attention among political theorists and students of public law. Everyone who reads it will come away with a new understanding of the power, complexity, and problems of communitarian ideas.
Breslin develops a provocative critique of communitarian political theory. His central claim is that communitarian thought is anti-constitutionalist because it elevates the will of the community over objective, clearly discernible constitutional limitations. The Communitarian Constitution succeeds admirably in sharpening debates over fundamental matters of constitutional design.
Book Details
Preface
1. Introduction: Communitarianism, Constitutional Visions, and the Anti-Federalist Legacy
Part I: Toward a Vision of Communitarian Politics
2. Theoretical and Prescriptive Foundations: The
Preface
1. Introduction: Communitarianism, Constitutional Visions, and the Anti-Federalist Legacy
Part I: Toward a Vision of Communitarian Politics
2. Theoretical and Prescriptive Foundations: The Liberal-Communitarian Debate
3. Participation, Consensus, and the Common Good: Constructing a Communitarian Polity
Part II: The Communitarian Constitution
4. The Constitutionalist Challenge to American Communitarianism
5. Communitarian Democracy: In Tension with Constitutional Theory?
6. Mixed Constitutionalism and the Communitarian Hope
7. Conclusion: The Enduring Constitutional Debate
Notes
References
Index