L’IMPORTATION CONSTITUTIONNELLE ET LA MODERNISATION POLITIQUE DE L’ÉTAT ROUMAIN
THE CONSTITUTIONAL IMPORTATION AND THE POLITICAL MODERNIZATION OF THE ROMANIAN STATE
Author(s): Claudia-Elena Crăciun-ChivereanuSubject(s): Constitutional Law, Political history, Social history, 19th Century, Politics of History/Memory
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai
Keywords: constitutional import; the Belgian Constitution of 1831; the Romanian Constitution of 1866; foreign prince; modernization and political independence; modern liberal constitutionalism;
Summary/Abstract: This article has as its starting point the genesis of Romanian constitutionalism. Developed according to the Belgian model, the Constitution of 1866 allowed the birth of a democratic system of government and consolidated the autonomy of Romania, in the context where, after the abdication of Prince Alexandru Ioan Cuza, there was an inherent need for governmental stability. However, the decision to adopt a prestigious constitutional model was guided by the idea of international legitimacy. The predominantly liberal character of the Belgian Constitution of 1831 influenced the process of drafting fundamental laws in several European states, not only in Romania (Greece, Italy, Prussia, etc.). The constitutional import process is inevitable, but extremely difficult and rarely impossible. The inevitability of this process stems from the fact that overarching constitutional ideas and mechanisms are generally limited. This type of transfer occurs when constituent assemblies face a particular problem and choose to focus on already functioning constitutions.
Journal: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai - Studia Europaea
- Issue Year: 68/2023
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 247-282
- Page Count: 36
- Language: French