“Global constitutionalism is an academic and political agenda that identifies and advocates for the application of constitutionalist principles in the international legal sphere in order to improve the effectiveness and the fairness of the international legal order. "
(Anne Peters, 2009)
- The institutionalization of power,
- The limitation of power
- Social idealism,
- The standard setting capacity of constitutions in the sense of a systematization of law
- The recognition of individual rights
(Schwöbel, 2011)
GC THEORIES RELYING ON AN ASSUMPTION/POSSIBILITY OF A CONSTITUTIONALIZATION PROCESSGC THEORIES AS NOETIC STUDIES
(Schwöbel, 2011)
SOCIAL (SOCIETAL) CONSTITUTIONALISM INSTITUTIONAL CONSTITUTONALISM NORMATIVE CONSTITUTONALISM ANALOGICAL CONSTITUTONALISMA. Fischer-Lescano, G. Teubner, P. Allot, C. Tomuschat, J. Delbrück
“constitutional problems arising outside the borders of the nation state in transnational political processes, and at the same time outside the institutionalized political sector, in the ‘private’ sectors of global society.”
(Gunther Teubner, 2013)
A. Peters, AM Slaughter, M. Maduro, J. Habermas
(B. Fassbender, J. Delbrück, E. de Wet, M. Byers)
“(…) the Charter shows a number of strong constitutional features; in particular, it includes rules about how the basic functions of governance are performed in the international community, that is to say, how and by whom the law is made and applied, and how and by whom legal claims are adjudicated. The Charter also establishes a hierarchy of norms in international law (Article 103).”
( (Fassbender, 2009)
GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM AS A MINDSET
ORGANIC GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM
(…) constitutionalism is not necessarily tied to any definite institutional project, European or otherwise. Irrespective of the functional needs or interests that laws may seek to advance, a Kantian view would focus on the practice of professional judgment in applying them. Less than an architectural project, constitutionalism would then be a programme of moral and political regeneration. This is what I mean by the description of constitutionalism as a "mindset.”
(Martti Koskenniemi, 2007)
“ a living structure and a forum which functions for debates on fragmentation, legitimacy and the role of law in the society.
(Christine Schwöbel, 2011)
→←
CONSTITUTIONALISATION THROUGH FRAGMENTED BODIES
WORLD STATE or UNION OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL ORDER
According to Anne-Marie Slaughter, three basic shifts in international legal order at globalization age:
"It is simply the rising need for and capacity of different domestic government institutions to engage in activities beyond their borders, often with their foreign counterparts. It is regulators pursuing subjects of their regulations accross borders; judges negotiating minitreaties with their foreign brethren to resolve complex transnational cases; and legislators consulting on the best ways to frame and pass legislation affecting human rights or the environment."
(Slaughter, 2005)
"sets of direct interactions among sub-units of different governments that are not controlled or closely guided by the policies of the cabinets or chief executives of those governments"
(Keohane&Nye, 1974)
- to exchange information
- to take roles in enforcement of regulations
- to harmonise different laws of nations
(Slaughter, 2005)
Networks on environment, public health, business and networks of judges or diaspora communities
OR even illegal networks, such as Al Qaeda like other global networks of human trafficking, drugs, money laundering etc.
(Slaughter, 2005)
"The networking of political institutions is the de facto response to the management crisis suffered by nation states in a supranational world. The call for global governance has been answered to some extent in the practice of governments and social actors. Not under the utopian form of a world government led by retired statesmen and noble intellectuals, but in the daily practice of joint decision-making in a network state made of nation-states, supranational associations, international institutions, local and regional government, and quasi-public non-governmental organizations."(Castells, 2009)
(Ladeur, 1994)
SOCIETY OF NETWORKS
SOCIETY OF ORGANIZATIONS
SOCIETY OF INDIVIDUALS

"Networks are flexible, adaptive structures that powered by information technology, can perform any task that has been programmed in the network. They can expand indefinitely, incorporating any new node by simply reconfiguring themselves, on the condition that these new nodes do not represent an obstacle to fulfilling key instructions in their program."![]()
(Castells, 2009)
"Power does not reside in institutions, not even the state or large corporations. It is located in the networks that structure society."(Castells, 2009)
"Social network analysis has freed the community question from its traditional preoccupation with solidarity and neighborhood. It provides a new way to study community that is based on the community relationships that people actually have rather than on the places where they live or the solidary sentiments they have."
(Wellman, 2009)
"I argue that the idea of `a community' as a distinct social phenomenon should be abandoned. Instead the focus should be on social relations of community of various contrasting types"(Cotterrell, 2013)
"the law created and embodied in collectivities of all types. (...) The law of the state itself rests on social law"
(Gurvitch, 1947)
“Social law is for us the autonomous law of communion by which each active, concrete, and real totality is integrated in an objective fashion. This social law incarnates a positive value. It is a law of integration. It is distinguished from the law of coordination (the order of individual law) and the law of subordination. These latter two are solely recognized by the systems of juridical individualism and unilateral universalism.”
(Gurvitch, 1947)
"I-Other": INDIVIDUAL LAW → SEPARATION
"WE": SOCIAL LAW → INTEGRATION
"every form of active sociality which realizes a positive value is a producer of law(...) The force of obligation flows from the normative fact."
(Gurvitch, 1947)