Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I. Political Phenomenology:
1.1. Hannah Arendt and the theory of the bourgeois public sphere
1.2. Simone Weil, necessity and courage
1.3. The phenomenology of work
1.4. Toward a critical phenomenology
Part II. Political Constitutionalism:
2.1. Constituent power and the constitutional distinction
2.2. Constitutionality
2.3. Labour, solidarity and the social constitution
2.4. Constitutionalism adrift
Part III. Market Constitutionalism:
3.1. Market trajectories
3.2. 'Total market' thinking
3.3. Europe's social market and the disembedding of labour protection
3.4. The deep commodification of labour
Part IV. Strategies of redress:
4.1 The constitutional situation
4.2. Militant formalisms
4.3. Constitution, autogestion, rupture
4.4: Constitutionalising contradiction
toward an open constitutional dialectic.
Emilios Christodoulidis, University of Glasgow
Emilios Christodoulidis holds the Chair of Jurisprudence at the University of Glasgow. He is the author of the award-winning Law and Reflexive Politics (1996), edits the book series Critical Studies in Jurisprudence, and serves as managing editor of Law & Critique.