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“Economic Constitution”: On the Roots of a Legal Concept
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2015
Extract
Our world is in abundance of most different kinds of legal systems, but none of them is as thoroughly imbued with constitutional ideas and categories as the American law. Thus, the dedication of an article dealing with a concept of constitutional law to an American judge and scholar seems not inappropriate. The contribution focuses on a legal term of specifically continental European thinking, the concept of “Wirtschaftsverfassung” or, translated literally, of “economic constitution.” I will try to explain on which premises and under which circumstances this legal term has been developed during the first decades of our century.
Concepts often share the fate of human thoughts in general: they appear for the first time in certain contexts, they journey through time and space, they flourish in one place and sink in another; for long periods they may be missing yet they come to life again all of a sudden in a new context. The concept of the economic constitution is such a case, too. It can be found already in the Physiocrats, but no fixed place is assigned to it; every now and then it has been used by authors of the 19th century but without any chance of gaining a foothold; in our century, however, it secures the status of a central concept for legal doctrine and theory of constitution, at least among the German jurists. So, unlike many other juridical concepts, this one does not root in a common European heritage like ancient Roman law or the law of the medieval Church; and with regard to the political and juridical ideas of the Natural Law School and the Enlightenment the continuities are so sparse and faint that it is hardly possible to trace the lines back over the centuries.
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- Symposium in Honor of Judge John T. Noonan, Jr.
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- Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 1983
References
1. 336 Verhandlungen der Verfassunggebenden Deutschen Nationalversammlung, at 172 (Proceedings on the Constitution of the German National Assembly, editor's note).
2. 328 Verhandlungen der Verfassunggebenden Deutschen Nationalversammlung, at 1748.
3. Gesetz über die Regelung der Kohlenwirtschaft of 23 March 1919 (coal mining regulations, editor's note); Ausführungsbestimmungen (Executive regulations) of 21 August 1919.
4. Franz Böhm, Wettbewerb und Monopolkampf: eine Untersuchung zur Frage des wirschaftlichen Kampfrechts und zur Frage der rechtlichen Struktur der geltenden Wirtschaftsordnung, 1933.
5. Compare Nörr, Labour Law and Constitution: the Example of the Weimar Reichsverfassung of 1919, in: Omaggio à Peter Stein, Index 22 (1994) 591; id Auf dem Wege zur Kategorie der Wirtschaftsverfassung: wirtschaftliche Ordnungsvorstellungen im juristischen Denken vor und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg, in Geisteswissenschaften zwischen Kaiserreich und Republik: zur Entwicklung von Nationalökonomie, Rechtswissenschaft und Sozialwissenschaft im 20. Jaharhundert, 1994, 423; id Law and Market Organization: the Historical Experience in Germany From 1900 to the Law Against Restraints of Competition (1957), in: 151 Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics at 5 (1995).
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