A different form of assemblearism: the Turkish Constitution of 1924
Una diversa forma di assemblearismo: la costituzione turca del 1924
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.57660/dpceonline.2023.2049Keywords:
Turkey, Kemalism, Constitution, secularism, assemblearism.Abstract
Within the European constitutional discourse of the 1920s and 1930s, this essay delves into the profound characteristics, historical context, and ramifications of the 1924 Constitution. This constitutional framework introduced a distinctive form of assemblearism, strategically positioning it within the parliamentary arena as a structural concept, while deviating from conventional parliamentarism solutions, particularly from a rationalized perspective. The 1924 Constitution prioritized harnessing the newfound centrality of the Grand Assembly, a real and proper assemblearism at unique party, as the primary mechanism for safeguarding and championing the secular and republican tenets of Kemalism, rather than engaging in a better definition of the optimal form of government for the new political-system. As a consequence, the Constitution only partially aligned Turkey with Western democracies because, fundamentally, it eroded the core principle of liberal-democratic constitutionalism—the equilibrium and separation of powers — fundamentally rooted in pluralistic values.
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