Making sense of constitutional pluralism: a review of Klemen Jaklic’s

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.40, No.1, February 2015, p110-117
Publication Date February 2015
ISSN 0307-5400
Content Type

Publishers Abstract
Klemen Jaklic’s book on constitutional pluralism is a comprehensive inquiry into an intellectual movement whose supporters have much less in common than could be expected. In his book, Jaklic makes an effort to systematise the movement and provide a normative dimension to it, something that leads him to defend a utopian model of democracy for the EU.

The author argues that this book, with all its virtues, shows also all of the weaknesses of constitutional pluralism: its lack of common premises, an absence of common purpose and a tendency to mix descriptive with normative analyses.

The review proposes an alternative to the one proposed by the author, but under the assumption that the promise of constitutional pluralism is yet to be achieved, if it ever will be.

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