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Elite Fractures, Public Capture: The Strategic Use of Public Consultation in Global Constitution-Making

Matthew Martin
Journal of Law and Courts · 13(1): 1–34 · 2025 · doi: 10.1017/jlc.2024.9
Other details: Presented at American Political Science Association (2024), Law and Society Association (2024), and Northern Political Science Association (2023).

Abstract

Since 1974, two out of every five constitutions (40.3%) were prepared via processes that included public consultation. The reasons for adopting these participatory mechanisms, however, are largely unexplored. I argue that public consultation is a tool for elite contestation of power. Introducing an original dataset of public consultations in constitution-making processes from 1974-2021 (n = 300), I find that in democracies, factional majorities and newcomer elites use public consultation to legitimate a break from the status quo. In autocracies, governing coalitions that depend on performance and enjoy greater party institutionalization push for public consultation to preserve favorable power-sharing arrangements.

Key figures

Figure 2: World Map of Public Consultation in Constitution-Making (1974-2021)
Figure 3a: Predicted Probability of Public Consultation Across Level of Democracy (Lexical Index of Democracy)
Figure 3a: Predicted Probability of Public Consultation Across Level of Democracy (Lexical Index of Democracy)
Figure 3b: Predicted Probability of Public Consultation Across Level of Democracy (V-Dem Electoral Democracy Index)
Figure 3b: Predicted Probability of Public Consultation Across Level of Democracy (V-Dem Electoral Democracy Index)