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

Constitutional design
Public consultation
Political elites

Matthew Martin. “Elite Fractures, Public Capture: The Strategic Use of Public Consultation in Global Constitution-Making,” Journal of Law and Courts (forthcoming). Job market paper.

Author
Affiliation

Department of Government, University of Texas at Austin

Published

March 2025

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 3: Predicted Probability of Public Consultation Across Level of Democracy (V-Dem Electoral Democracy Index)