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Global influence of U.S. Constitution on the decline, study reveals

The U.S. Constitution's global influence is on the decline, finds a new study by David S. Law, JD, PhD, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.

鈥淥ther countries are increasingly turning to sources other than the U.S. Constitution for guidance in establishing provisions and for general structural provisions in creating their constitutions,鈥 he says.

, with co-author Mila Versteeg, DPhil, associate professor of law at the University of Virginia, analyzed 60 years of data on the content of the world鈥檚 constitutions.

鈥淭he data revealed that there is a significant and growing generic component to global constitutionalism, in the form of a set of rights provisions that appear in nearly all formal constitutions,鈥 Law says.

鈥淥ur analysis also confirms, however, that the U.S. Constitution is becoming increasingly out of sync with these global practices.鈥

Their research, which examined 729 constitutions adopted by 188 different countries from 1946-2006, also found little emulation of the constitutions of Germany, South Africa, and India.

Similarly, no particular treaty or international human rights instrument stands out as an overall model. However, they did note links between constitution-making in other countries and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, although the tie-in was not uniform.

Law and Versteeg found that the constitutions of non-democratic countries tend to exhibit relatively greater similarity to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, while those of common law countries exhibit the opposite tendency.

鈥淚t is difficult to infer from these patterns, however, that countries have actually emulated international or regional human rights instruments when writing their constitutions,鈥 Law says.

Law notes that the article does not stake a position about whether it is a good or a bad thing that other countries do or do not use the U.S.

Constitution as a model, or whether the United States itself is in fact losing some form of international influence.

鈥淪ome people have questioned whether we had an ideological agenda in writing this article, but our reasons for writing it were straightforward and not at all sinister,鈥 Law says.

鈥淲e had a previous study that identified trends in the global evolution of constitutionalism, and a logical next question to ask was whether the U.S. Constitution was at the forefront of that evolution,鈥 he says.

鈥淲e also thought that people would be interested in the answer to this question, and we hoped to demonstrate that empirical scholarship in the area of constitutional law, which remains extremely rare, can be of interest to a wider audience.鈥

Law says newer constitutions are part of a 鈥減olycentric evolutionary process鈥 that does not favor modeling based on a 鈥渟pecimen that is frozen in time.鈥

鈥淚f the United States were to revise the Bill of Rights today 鈥 with the benefit of over two centuries of experience, and, in a manner that addresses contemporary challenges while remaining faithful to the nation鈥檚 best traditions 鈥 there is no guarantee that other countries would follow its lead.

鈥淏ut the world would surely pay close attention,鈥 Law says.

Law and Versteeg鈥檚 article, 鈥淭he Declining Influence of the Constitution,鈥 will appear in the New York University Law Review.

The authors鈥 forthcoming research will look at which are guilty of having sham constitutions.

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 agree more with the quotation from Justice (Antonin) Scalia in The New York Times article that some constitutions are not worth the paper they are written on,鈥 Law says. 

鈥淭his is a question we have been thinking about for some time,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd we think we now have something original and empirical to say about it 鈥 beyond merely repeating the obvious point that some constitutions are sham constitutions.鈥

Citation: Global influence of U.S. Constitution on the decline, study reveals (2012, February 22) retrieved 8 June 2025 from /news/2012-02-global-constitution-decline-reveals.html
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