Small States and Autocracy – A Look at Government in Malta
/John STANTON
John Stanton examines Malta’s government and democracy from its time as a British colony to post-independence.
Read MoreJohn Stanton examines Malta’s government and democracy from its time as a British colony to post-independence.
Read MoreIn Pacific constitutional studies, written constitutions are often framed as postcolonial products – legal instruments adopted in the wake of empire. Tonga stands apart from this narrative. As the only Pacific Island nation never formally colonised (though it was a British protectorate from 1900 to 1970), Tonga developed its own constitutional order through a process that cannot be explained adequately by modern constitutional theory or legal pluralism.
Read MoreNew Symposium: Elisabeth Perham, Maartje de Visser and Rosalind Dixon introduce a new symposium on the Blog on Small State Constitutionalism. Based on an edited collection of the same name published by Hart in 2025, the symposium highlights the constitutional issues caused by or encountered in relation to small state jurisdictions.
Read MoreWith Opinion CDL-AD(2025)038-e, adopted at its 144th session on 9–10 October 2025, the Venice Commission was called upon to apply international standards on the composition of judicial councils to a consolidated Western European democracy, Spain, following a request submitted by the President of the General Council of the Judiciary (hereinafter GCJ). In doing so, the Opinion ultimately reaffirms that the composition of judicial councils is no longer a matter of exclusive domestic concern grounded solely in State sovereignty, but rather constitutes an integral element of a European legal order founded on the rule of law and, as such, falls within the scrutiny of European institutions.
Read More3 February 2026 marks the first publication day for the Blog following our Southern Hemisphere summer hiatus. We are delighted to return with a number of exciting updates, including personnel changes, new collaborations, and announcements.
Read MoreThe blog of the International Association of Constitutional Law (IACL)
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