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I'individu et l'état dans l'evolution constitutionelle de la Suisse
1936
by
Rappard
Democracy
Federalism
Liberalism
Sovereignty
Alexis de Tocqueville
Individualism
Plato
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Mercantilism
French Revolution
Natural Law
Napoleon Bonaparte
Klemens von Metternich
Separation of Powers
Industrial Revolution
Property Rights
Tax Reform
Customs Union
Free Trade
Infrastructure
Interventionism
Progressive Taxation
Protectionism
Statism
Capitalism
Deficit Spending
Nationalization
Competition
Monopoly
Public Finance
Max Weber
Economic Policy
Social Policy
Banknotes
Legal Tender
Trade Policy
Labor Law
Social Justice
Socialism
Insurance
League of Nations
War Economy
Welfare Economics
Public Health
Welfare State
Cartels
Bureaucracy
Income Distribution
Subsidies
Taxation
Totalitarianism
Demography
Montesquieu
Agriculture
Banking
Geopolitics
Political Economy
Table of Contents · 85 segments
1
Front Matter and Table of Contents
chapter
2
Front Matter: Contents Conclusion and Foreword
essay
3
Theoretical and Historical Introduction
theoretical
4
General Features of the Old Swiss Ancien Régime
chapter
5
Revolutionary Awakening and Opening of the Helvetic Constitution Chapter
chapter
6
General Principles of the Helvetic Constitution
chapter
7
Why the Constitution of 1798 Was Introduced
chapter
8
Pierre Ochs, Herald of Modern Switzerland
chapter
9
Public Opinion under the Helvetic Republic
chapter
10
Bonaparte's Mediation
chapter
11
The Restoration and the Allied Victors of Napoleon
chapter
12
Continuation of Allied Communication to the Landamman
chapter
13
The Constituent Diet under Foreign Tutelage
chapter
14
Guiding Ideas of the Pact of 1815
chapter
15
Cult of the Past and Unlimited Cantonal Sovereignty
chapter
16
Federalist Resistance and the Federal Pact of 1815
chapter
17
The Restoration Regime, 1815-1830
chapter
18
General Course of the Swiss Revolutions of 1830
chapter
19
The Zurich Revolution and the Uster Memorial
chapter
20
Uster Memorial Demands and the Zurich Constitution of 1831
chapter
21
Structure and Strength of the Bernese Aristocracy before 1830
chapter
22
French, Swiss, and Local Forces in the Bernese Revolution
chapter
23
Bernese Petitions and the Coming Constitutional Program
chapter
24
Bernese Constitutional Reform of 1831 and the Triumph of Liberal Individualism
chapter
25
Chapter IX Introduction: Cantonal Revolutions and the Confederation
chapter
26
Attempts to Revise the Pact of 1815 and Their Failure
chapter
27
Conflicts Between Liberals and Conservatives, 1833-1847
chapter
28
The Sonderbund and Its Defeat: Opening of the Final Federal Crisis
chapter
29
Critique of Cantonal Alliance Provisions under the Federal Pact
footnotes
30
Sonderbund Conflict: Ideological Debate, Civil War, and Liberal Victory
chapter
31
Drafting and Meaning of the Swiss Constitution of 1848
chapter
32
Constitutional Evolution from 1848 to 1874: Chapter Introduction
chapter
33
Cantonal Constitutional Evolution and the Rise of Direct Democracy
essay
34
Recall of Cantonal Authorities
chapter
35
Cantonal Direct Election, Individual Liberties, and Statism after 1848
chapter
36
Transition to the Confederation’s Constitutional Evolution
chapter
37
Federal Economic Policy: Posts, Telegraphs, Currency, Measures, and Customs Debate
chapter
38
Tariff Liberalism and the Emergence of the Railway Question
chapter
39
Expert Reports and the Federal Council’s Railway Policy
chapter
40
The Parliamentary Battle over Railway Statism and Liberal Individualism
chapter
41
Federal Protection of Individual Constitutional Rights
chapter
42
The Schwyz Mixed-Marriage Case and Legislative Protection of Rights
chapter
43
The Origins of the 1866 Constitutional Revision and Jewish Emancipation
chapter
44
The Failed Partial Revision of 1866
chapter
45
Chapter XII: Overview of the 1870–1874 Constitutional Revision
chapter
46
Economic Liberty and Freedom of Establishment in the 1874 Constitution
chapter
47
Religious Liberty, Judicial Protection, and Direct Democracy Debates
chapter
48
Optional Referendum and the Triumph of Direct Democracy in the 1874 Constitution
chapter
49
Introduction to Federal Statism and Article 27 on Education
chapter
50
Parliamentary Genesis of Article 27: Federal Intervention in Primary Education
chapter
51
Article 24 on Forests, Torrents, and Federal Environmental Police
chapter
52
Article 26 and the Federalization of Railway Legislation
chapter
53
Article 39: Banknotes, Monetary Crisis, and Limits on Federal Banking Power
chapter
54
Opening of Article 29 on Swiss Customs Policy
chapter
55
Article 29 and the Erosion of Swiss Free-Trade Constitutionalism
chapter
56
Article 34, Social Statism, and the Federal Proposal on Child Labor
chapter
57
Commission Expansion of Article 34 to Adult Labor, Emigration, and Insurance
chapter
58
Parliamentary Debates on Article 34: Fazy and Ruchonnet
chapter
59
Debates over Federal Factory Legislation and the Rise of Swiss Social Statism
chapter
60
Constitutional Evolution from 1874: Early Partial Revisions
chapter
61
Swiss constitutional revisions catalogued, 1891–1931
chapter
62
Interpretive overview of the constitutional movement since 1874
essay
63
Liberalism and democracy after 1874
essay
64
Opening of the section on statism
essay
65
School statism and federal subsidies for primary education
essay
66
Customs protectionism and the decline of Swiss free trade
essay
67
Railway nationalization and the case for federal ownership
essay
68
Patents, banknote monopoly, forests, hydropower, and transport regulation
essay
69
Wheat supply, agricultural protection, and the logic of agrarian statism
essay
70
Alcoholism, the alcohol monopoly, and absinthe prohibition
essay
71
Food safety, consumer protection, and tuberculosis control
essay
72
Social insurance from employer liability to old-age and survivors insurance
essay
73
Arts and crafts, small industry, and limits on economic freedom
essay
74
Financial repercussions of federal statism
chapter
75
Recapitulation and future outlook: individualism, democracy, and statism
chapter
76
Bibliographical abbreviations: official documents and beginning of private publications
bibliography
77
Bibliography Continued: Burckhardt through Wyss
bibliography
78
Index A-C: Mediation Act, Cantons, Centralization, Constitutions
bibliography
79
Index D-F: Democracy, Diet, Rights, State, Federalism, Finances
bibliography
80
Index G-H: Constitutional Guarantees, Cantons, Political Figures, Public Health
bibliography
81
Index I-L: Individualism, Initiative, Education, Liberalism, Liberties
bibliography
82
Index M-P: Pact of 1815, Ochs, Petitions, Policy, Property
bibliography
83
Index R-S: Restoration, Referendum, Revolutions, Sonderbund, Sovereignty
bibliography
84
Index T-Z: Treaties, Public Works, Uster, Vaud, Valais, Zurich
bibliography
85
Errata
footnotes