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2 E. Eur. Const. Rev. 1 (1993)

handle is hein.journals/eeurcr2 and id is 1 raw text is: East European
Constitutional
Review

DEPARTMENTS

2    Constitution Watch
Country-by-country updates on constitutional politics in Central and Eastern Europe.
12    Special Reports
A stormy Congress session yields few answers to the separation of powers problem in Russia; new draft
constitutions are a sign of progress in Ukraine and Belarus.
40    From the Center
Conferences upcoming in Budapest and Paris; acknowledgment of support, &c.
FEATURES

21    Back to the Drawing Board
Post-Leninist constitution-makers shouldn't be too hasty in importing the
technology of Western liberal constitutionalism.
26    Where Has All the Power Gone?
In the aftermath of the Soviet empire, free-floating power is claimed by
all the actors on the Russian political stage.
30    Of Presidents and Parliaments
The emerging democracies of Central and Eastern Europe offer a diverse
range of solutions to the legislative-executive quandary.
33    Parliamentarism Rationalized
Why classical Western models of rule by assembly fail to meet the needs
of the new post-Communist democracies.
35    Against Positive Rights
Why social and economic rights don't belong in the new constitutions.

Stephen Holmes
Alexander Blankenagel
Matthew S. Shugart
Evgeni Tanchev

Cass Sunstein

John Roemer &Jon Elster

38    A Third Way?
Constitutional issues in market socialism.

East European Constitutional Review, Vol. 2, No. 1, Winter 1993. Published quarterly by the Center for the Study of Constitutionalism in
Eastern Europe in partnership with the Central European University. Editor: David Franklin. Managing editor in charge of documentation:
Dwight Semler. Editorial board:Jon Elster, Stephen Holmes, Wiktor Osiatynski, Cass Sunstein. Subscriptions are free. For information,
write to the Center for the Study of Constitutionalism in Eastern Europe, The University of Chicago Law School, 1111 East 60th Street,
Chicago, Illinois, 60637, or fax to 312-702-0730. Copyright © 1993 by The Center for the Study of Constitutionalism in Eastern Europe.

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