South- Asian Economic Constitutionalism and the (Re) Building of Constitutional Order in South Asia
DOI
Access Status
This content is available to Open Access.
To download content simply use the links provided under the Files section.
More information about licence and terms of use for this content is available in the Rights section.
Type
Article
Date
2023-03
Journal Title
Indian Journal of Law and Justice
Journal Editor
Bandyopadhyay, Rathin
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of North Bengal
Statistics
Total views and downloads
Views
68Downloads
53Authors
Advisor
Editor
Abstract
The appellation ‘South Asia’ represents a vibrant set of post-colonial geographies
that are witnessing transformative constitutional churning in their socio economic and political structures. Constitutional law studies about South Asian
societies have generated interest in South Asian constitutionalism and how the
region is tackling unstable democratic patterns. In this context, South Asian
States have changed, amended and replaced their existing constitutional
structures and forms of governance. In the recent past, the deeply divided region
has witnessed two important crises, the 2021 Taliban offensive in Afghanistan
and the 2022 Sri Lankan political crisis. Both crises despite their structural
dissimilarities trace some parallelism in the factors that incited the democratic
and non-democratic responses, i.e., lack of political consensus on economic
governance and economic mismanagement by democratically elected
governments. Besides its economic impact, the lack of constitutional order in
managing the economy has also trickled down political repercussions. The crisis
reflects the role that an accountable government should play in the market.
Despite constitutional structures for economic governance and the establishment
of government institutions, South Asian states are witnessing the withering of
institutional mechanisms and delegitimization of rule of law.
The paper argues for a need for the South Asian States to develop formative
practices that focus on accountable constitutional governance of the economy and
strengthening financial institutions. While South Asian constitutions have kept
economic actions by the states outside the purview of judicial and public scrutiny,
the lack of accountability and cynical manipulation of independence of economic
institutions by the authoritarian leaders raises questions on the constitutional limits of the unbridled power and domination by the elected leaders. In this
context, the paper explores how strengthening the pillars of Economic
Constitutionalism can lead to the creation of a stable constitutional order in South
Asia.
Description
Citation
Accession No
Call No
Book Title
Edition
Volume
ISBN No
Volume Number
14
Issue Number
1
ISSN No
0976-3570
eISSN No
Pages
Pages
69 - 87