layout: module title: Consensus permalink: /modules/constitution/ summary: A shared set of agreements underlies all future ones and is harder to change than other agreements.
A constitution is a method for outlining the limits and regulations of an organization, nation, or other group’s governance. It may be composed as a single, succinct document or comprised of a set of acts, treaties, and particular court cases.
Input: mission, purpose, and goals of an organization; an understanding of how the organization will function; long-term conception of the organization
Output: document(s) defining the scope of the group, its structures, functions, and eventual goals
Constitutions have a long history, with the oldest evidence dating back to Hammurabi's code of justice issued in modern-day Iraq circa 2300 BC. Well-known ancient codes of this nature include the Hittite code, and the oral codes of Athens.
Detailed modern, Western constitutions began with Oliver Cromwell’s Instrument of Government in England in the early 1650s. Most of the original thirteen American colonies adopted their own constitutions, with Connecticut’s being the oldest known North American constitution.
Kerwin, C. M., & Furlong, S. R. (2018). Rulemaking: How government agencies write law and make policy. Cq Press.
Anckar, D. (2015). Prohibiting Amendment: the Use of Absolute Rigidity in the Constitutions of the Countries of the World. Perspectivas-Journal of Political Science, (14).