In the World of Constitution Building in 2020
The COVID-19 pandemic occupied social, political and media attention for much of 2020 and disrupted most ‘normal’ human habits. There is, however, one thing whose momentum has not slowed down in this most unusual year: constitution building. New constitutions were born (e.g. in Algeria and Guinea-Conakry), significant amendments were approved (e.g. in Malta, Samoa and Georgia) and reform processes were initiated (e.g. in Chile, Kenya, and Sri Lanka) across the four corners of the globe.
Through ConstitutionNet, the Constitution Building Programme of the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) has been following, collating, synthesizing and analyzing these constitutional reform developments. In particular, the Voices from the Field series enable local constitutional experts to analyze and share their views both on the process and content of reforms in their respective countries to a global audience.
In 2020, ConstitutionNet published 35 original analysis covering 30 countries, eight of them for the first time, ranging from Haiti to Samoa, Afghanistan to Botswana, and Australia to Germany. Since its inception, ConstitutionNet has now published pieces about 113 countries. The regular updates cover an even wider range of jurisdictions, and there are few, if any, countries that do not engage in constitutional reform debates and initiatives. The following sections showcase some of the notable developments in both the process and content of constitution building.
Beyond ConstitutionNet’s regular focus on constitutional reforms, in view of the significant impact of COVID-19 and public responses to tackle it, International IDEA launched, in partnership with the New Zealand Centre for Public Law at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington and the Center for International and Area Studies at Northwestern University, video testimonials from 50 countries on Government Responses to COVID-19 with a view to understand and share experiences across jurisdictions. Here we learned for instance that countries do not always resort to constitutionally provided states of emergency, with many instead invoking statutory emergencies, and some bypassing formal emergency declarations. Understanding the triggers informing the choice of a specific legal route and the consequences of the choice will require further exploration. In addition to exchanging valuable experiences, the process allowed the development of a community of scholars and practitioners that could enable further collaborations on the design, interpretation, implementation and reform of constitutions.
Chile goes gender-equal
One of the most notable developments regarding the process of writing a new constitution is Chile’s decision to adopt a new constitution through a fully elected constitutional convention that will have equal gender representation. While there has been a steady increase in the presence of women in constitution drafting bodies in various countries, Chileans have set the bar high by seeking and achieving full equality.
The challenge now is to ensure that the presence of women translates into seriously considering women’s unique and diverse interests, needs and thinking on all aspects of the constitutional framework, beyond so-called ‘women’s issues’. There is a long way to go before Chileans can celebrate their new constitution, but they have already achieved a milestone that will inspire men and women in constitutional building processes across the world.
The constituent power returns
Another key development in 2020 was the direct or indirect invocation of the constituent power – the mandate of the sovereign people to define their constitutional framework – to adopt new constitutions outside the bounds of existing constitutional frameworks. For instance, in Guinea-Conakry, the government resorted to an ostensibly new constitution making process with a view to bypass a prohibition against amendment of presidential term limits, allowing the incumbent to run for a third term. In Haiti, the government is seeking a referendum to adopt a new constitution, despite the express prohibition against resort to referendums to make changes to the constitution. While there appears to be broad political agreement among Haitian political forces on the need for constitutional reform, the apparent contradiction with clear constitutional provisions has created contestation.
Where political will exists, the absence of special processes for making new constitutions may not necessarily be a serious problem. Chile offers a great example. Following popular demands for a new constitution, the various political groups agreed to amend the constitution to provide for a process to make a new constitution. This agreement allowed the conduct of a referendum first to ascertain the popularity of the demand for a new constitution, and second to determine the nature and composition of the body that will draft the constitution. The name of the drafting body, ‘constitutional convention’, was carefully chosen to avoid a situation where the body may act as an unbounded constituent assembly.
Regardless of the motivations of the proponents of the reforms, the examples indicate the importance of expressly addressing the process for the adoption of new constitutions. Such provisions would establish processes under conditions untainted by fleeting exigencies, create clarity and could contribute to reducing manifestly capricious maneuvers. The Chilean experience speaks to a tradition of legal continuity, and the possibility of garnering political consensus towards formulating provisions that apply to a single reform process. Nevertheless, in the absence of a tradition of legal continuity or political consensus, the temptations to maneuver legal process may necessitate express constitutional regulation.
Designing for emergencies
A quick look at the Voices from the Field pieces and the regular news updates reveals that constitutional reform initiatives have affected virtually every critical aspect of constitutional governance, from values and rights to the electoral system, structure and powers of the judiciary, structure of the legislature, systems of government, decentralization of power, to checks and balances.
Perhaps one notable issue that dominated political and constitutional debates in 2020 is the design and implementation of emergency powers. While there was no widespread and systematic effort to reform applicable constitutional rules, there is heightened attention on effective and workable mechanisms to ensure meaningful checks, accountability and oversight. Notably, New Zealand established an opposition-majority and opposition-led parliamentary committee to scrutinize government responses to the pandemic. While this resulted from government commitment to limited and accountable powers, it is likely to inspire constitutional designers. In contrast, the Hungarian parliament granted the executive unfettered powers to manage the emergency without any time limit.
The experiences with the COVID-19 pandemic have already attracted debates on the optimal constitutional and legal arrangement on emergencies. This will likely influence, and even trigger, deliberations in future constitutional reform efforts.
The pandemic also raised questions on other issues, notably on whether, on what grounds and through which processes elections may be postponed. In the Central African Republic, the Constitutional Court ruled that the constitution did not allow amendments to postpone presidential elections and urged parties to engage in dialogue in order to find a consensual solution in case postponement became unavoidable. In Ethiopia, the House of Federation, the organ in charge of constitutional interpretation, ordered the indefinite postponement of elections without sufficient engagement with opposition groups, intensifying underlying political tensions. These experiences are likely to induce constitutional drafters to more deliberately address the pervasive implications of emergencies in the future.
Looking to 2021: Transitions and more
Even under the COVID-19 cloud, constitution building continued and thrived in 2020. Constitution enthusiasts and practitioners should expect a flurry of constitutional reform activities in 2021 in all regions of the globe. As in 2020 and before, the direction of the reforms varies and will depend on the pressures for reform and the political power balance on the ground. Constitutional reform is set to be on the agenda from countries transitioning to peace and/or democracy, for example in Mali, Sudan and South Sudan; to those seeking to improve their democratic trajectory, such as Chile and Armenia, perhaps even Belarus; to those attempting to address perceived constitutional inefficiencies and political paralysis, for instance in Haiti; to the elite-led ‘popular’ initiative to address ‘winner-takes-all-politics’ in Kenya; and popular demands for reform in Thailand.
Ongoing political contestation and crises are also likely to intensify debates on constitutional reform from Belarus to Ethiopia and Sri Lanka to Kyrgyzstan. In places where the combined effects of COVID-19 and other political and economic pressures generate social upheavals, demands for constitutional adjustments are also likely to surface.
International IDEA and the Constitution Building team will continue to collate and organize regular updates and generate original analyses as expected and unexpected constitutional reform processes unfold.
The ConstitutionNet team would like to thank and wish all our readers a pleasant end to 2020 and a promising start to 2021.
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Dr Adem K Abebe is editor of ConstitutionNet.
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