Hashimy, Sayed Qudrat The Constitutional Failures in Afghanistan:A Narrative of Agonising Constitutional Death. The Indian Journal of Politics, 56 (1-2). pp. 111-131.
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Abstract
Afghan constitutions fell because these constitutions were the regime’s constitution and not the Afghan people’s constitution. Each regime had its constitution, and all these constitutions were adopted in shrowded secrecy without a public referendum or inclusive public participation. The country was simply ungovernable; each regime collapsed because it lacked legitimacy in the eyes of the people. In this article, the study examines the chronicle failure of the Constitutions in Afghanistan by highlighting the Afghanistan experience with the Constitutions 1923 and 1931, Constitution 1964, and Constitution 2004, which all serve as the core for the present discourse. The contention of this paper is to explain the causes of constitutional failure in the context of political transition. The premise of this paper is to overview the constitutional crisis over the last 98 years. The study employed doctrinal legal research in which normative approaches were to evaluate the literature to acquire the required legal propositions. The literature gathered and used in this study will include secondary, primary, and legal documents. This qualitative explorative study aims to analyse the constitutional failure and demise of constitutionalism. This study mined all types of relevant materials that have been
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Constitutional Failure, Constitutional Crisis, Constitutionalism and Demise of Constitutionalism |
Subjects: | L LAW > LAW |
Divisions: | Department of > Law |
Depositing User: | C Swapna Library Assistant |
Date Deposited: | 25 Sep 2023 05:57 |
Last Modified: | 25 Sep 2023 05:58 |
URI: | http://eprints.uni-mysore.ac.in/id/eprint/17744 |
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