The Material Constitution and Extractive Political Economy

Date

2023-01-15

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Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Type

Book chapter

Peer reviewed

Abstract

Mongolia’s recent transition to a mineral exporting economy has much to tell us about the relationship between economic change and constitutional transformation. It reveals how the legal construction of markets invite a bevy of transnational economic and legal ‘actors, norms and processes’ which interact with the national constitution. Natural resource extraction, in particular, is charged with the potential to catalyse material constitutional change within the state, by virtue of its profound socio-environmental impacts, the generation of new conflicts over resource control within the state and the exposure of national institutions to transnational investment norms within the context of volatile global commodity markets.

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Citation

Lander, J. (2023) The Material Constitution and Extractive Political Economy: Lessons from Mongolia. In: The Cambridge Handbook on the Material Constitution, CUP, pp. 313–324

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