Introduction: Are There Any Uni-Textual Constitutions in the World?, Richard Albert ( The University of Texas , USA ) 1. Multi-Textual Constitutions in Japan: History, Functions, and Operation, Masahiko Kinoshita ( Kobe University, Japan ) 2. Multi-Textuality and Incrementalism in Cameroon's Democratic Transition, Laura-Stella Enonchong ( University of London, UK ) 3. The Beauty and the Beast: The Excessive Multi-Textualism of the Austrian Constitution, Konrad Lachmayer ( Sigmund Freud University, Austria ) 4. Canada's Multi-Textual Constitution, Mary Liston ( University of British Columbia, Canada ) 5. Multi-Textuality by Amendment: The Brazilian Case, Bruno Cunha ( Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil ) 6. Vertical and Horizontal Layers of the Lithuanian Constitution, Toma Birmontiene & Jolita Miliuviene ( Mykolas Romeris University, Lithuania ) 7. There and Back Again: The Case of Mexico's Constitutional Forms Between Uni- and Multi-Textualism, Jaime Olaiz-González ( Universidad Panamerica, Mexico ) 8.
The Tradition of Multi-Textuality in Poland, Natalie Fox ( Jagiellonian University, Poland ) 9. Exploring Macro-Constitutional Reality in Ukraine: Multi-Textual Insights from the Constitutional Court, Oleksandr Marusiak ( National Academy of Law Sciences of Ukraine ) 10. Multi-Textuality in China: Revisions and Revolutions, Leigha Crout ( Depaul University, USA ) 11. Multi-Textuality and the Question of Constitutional Authorship, Dolunay Bulut ( University of Arizona, USA ) 12. The Taliban's Multi-Textual Constitution: Cultivated Ambiguity as Authoritarian Technique, Amal Sethi ( University of Leicester, UK ).