http://chicagounbound.
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Caitlin Goss
of Hungary, the very frequency of constitutional amendment can encourage
judges to develop a stable and enduring invisible constitution that sits above
daily politics. As such, drafters of interim texts will need to consider the possi-
ble interconnection between amendment procedures and judicial review and
consider which amendment thresholds might best allow for what Arato calls
‘constitutional learning’ or what Jackson more cautiously hopes for in ‘consti-
tutions as a form of continuous conversation’.
113
Secondly, the tendency for interim constitutions to create permanent
effects, including through the generation of enduring invisible constitutions,
highlights the importance of the how interim constitutions are drafted. Interim
constitutions are typically drafted or agreed to by unelected bodies that rep-
resent key parties or bodies that are not fully representative. As such, tempo-
rary constitutions are premised on a kind of two-stage legitimacy whereby the
first stage of constitutional drafting (the temporary text) is made legitimate
by a rejection of the past regime and the promise of a more democratically-
negotiated permanent text. However, if the interim text ends up being deter-
minative of significant features of the permanent constitution – both textual
and non-textual – then drafters of interim constitutions must be mindful that
these texts are not mere placeholders. This knowledge may feed into new
norms about the level of public and expert involvement in interim constitu-
tional negotiation and transparency and accountability. It may also lessen the
degree to which interim constitutions may claim to ‘relax the dead hand’ of
the past by freeing themselves from a founding moment.
114
Finally, I want to note that this chapter has focused on the way in which an
invisible constitution develops in judicial and legislative spheres. However, I
think that what is visible and invisible as part of the constitutional bargain will
also be affected by the popular understanding of the constitution. A popular
understanding of the constitution will include not only (and perhaps not all
of) the written text of the constitution, views about the bargain struck at the
interim stage, the degree of departure from the previous regime and percep-
tions about the desirability of constitutionally relevant practices such as tran-
sitional justice mechanisms. This popular understanding of the constitution
at the interim stage will influence the kinds of interests represented in public
consultations about a final constitution and in the types of claims brought
before constitutional courts in the interim and post-interim era. Thus it is pos-
sible that the people contribute directly to the formulation of the constitution,
in both its visible and invisible formulations.
113
Jackson, Supra note 2, 1287; Andrew Arato, Constitution Making Under Occupation: The Poli-
tics of Imposed Revolution in Iraq (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2009).
114
Varol, Supra note 44, 448.