Classroom convention: teaching comparative constitutional design through simulation
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to detail a simulation exploring the academic and real-world debates surrounding constitutional design. Design/methodology/approach The authors deployed this simulation in different contexts: undergraduate courses in comparative politics and middle school classrooms of gifted students in India. Findings In conjunction with discussion of institutional setup, such as parliamentary vs presidential systems and judicial review vs parliamentary sovereignty, the students were required to design a new constitution for a fictional country that just overthrew a brutal dictator. Throughout the simulation, the students were assigned to be the representatives of a particular ethnic group, each with distinct interests to be represented during the constitutional convention. Originality/value The authors detail the learning objectives and simulation setup for this constitutional convention. Finally, the authors discuss some issues raised by the students during the simulation.
Year of publication: |
2017
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Authors: | Fisher, Sarah ; Justwan, Florian |
Published in: |
Social Studies Research and Practice. - Emerald Publishing Limited, ISSN 1933-5415, ZDB-ID 2394747-0. - Vol. 12.2017, 1, p. 84-94
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Publisher: |
Emerald Publishing Limited |
Subject: | Ethnic conflict | Simulation | Negotiation | Comparative constitutional design | Comparative politics | Constitutional convention |
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