Constitutional Foundings in Northeast Asia
In: Constitutionalism in Asia Ser.
Intro -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- 1. Northeast Asian Constitutional Foundings: The Weight of History -- Introduction -- I. Why This Book? -- II. The Weight of History -- III. The Legacies of Constitutional Foundings -- IV. A Note of Acknowledgement -- 2. The 1954 Constitution of China: Empire State Building -- Introduction -- I. National Revival -- II. The Constitution as Saviour of the Chinese Empire -- III. Chinese Constitutional Attempts Since the Qing Dynasty -- IV. The Death of the Liberal Democratic Model in China -- V. The Birth of Leninist Constitutionalism in China -- VI. The 1954 Constitution: The Great Consolidation of Power -- VII. Structure of the 1954 Constitution -- VIII. The PRC and State Building -- IX. Epilogue: Constitutional Founding -- 3. The Making of the Constitutional Order of the Hong Kong SAR: The Role of Sino-British Diplomacy (1982-90) -- Introduction -- I. The Negotiation of the Joint Declaration (1982-84) -- II. Representative Government and Sino-British 'convergence' (1984-86) -- III. Informal Diplomatic Dialogue and the 1987 Review (1986-88) -- IV. Towards the Second Draft of the Basic Law (1988-89) -- V. Post-4 June Developments (1989-90) -- VI. Conclusion -- 4. Macao's Constitutional Founding -- Introduction -- I. Before The Handover: The Historical Background -- II. The Hong Kong Model -- III. The Making of the Macao Basic Law -- IV. A Summary -- 5. The Birth of the Constitution of the Republic of China -- Introduction -- I. The ROC Constitution and the Draft Constitutions -- II. Constitutional Questions Considered by the Drafters and their Aftermath -- III. The Impact of Internal and External Factors -- IV. The Impact of the ROC Constitution on Taiwan"s State Building -- V. Conclusion -- 6. The Meiji Constitution and Japan's Emergence in the International Order, 1853-1905 -- Introduction.