NAFTA Chapter 11 as Supraconstitution

43 Pages Posted: 6 Nov 2009

See all articles by Stepan Wood

Stepan Wood

Peter A Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia

Stephen Clarkson

University of Toronto

Date Written: November 5, 2009

Abstract

More and more legal scholars are turning to constitutional law to make sense of the growth of transnational and international legal orders. They often employ constitutional terminology loosely, in a bewildering variety of ways, with little effort to clarify their analytical frameworks or acknowledge the normative presuppositions embedded in their analysis. The potential of constitutional analysis as an instrument of critique of transnational legal orders is frequently lost in methodological confusion and normative controversy. An effort at clarification is necessary. We propose a functional approach to supraconstitutional analysis that applies across issue areas, accommodates variation in kinds and degrees of supraconstitutionalization, recognizes its simultaneously domestic and transnational character, and reflects its uneven incidence and impacts. We apply this framework to NAFTA to consider whether and how it superimposes a supraconstitutional legal order on member states' domestic constitutional orders. We show that the main thrust of this contemporary supraconstitutional project is to restructure state and international political forms to promote market efficiency and discipline, enable free capital movement, confer privileged rights of citizenship and representation on corporate capital, insulate key aspects of the economy from state interference, and constrain democratic decision-making.

Keywords: supraconstitution, NAFTA, investment arbitration, international constitutionalization, globalization

JEL Classification: K30, K33

Suggested Citation

Wood, Stepan and Clarkson, Stephen, NAFTA Chapter 11 as Supraconstitution (November 5, 2009). CLPE Research Paper No. 43/2009, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1500564 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1500564

Stepan Wood (Contact Author)

Peter A Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia ( email )

1822 East Mall
Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z1
Canada
+1 604-827-0441 (Phone)

Stephen Clarkson

University of Toronto ( email )

Sidney Smith Hall
100 St George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G3
Canada

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
364
Abstract Views
2,873
Rank
151,600
PlumX Metrics