IV
                    
                There are many differences among constitutions
 from the point of view of
                    both style and content.
 Indeed, Great Britain to this day has no single
                        docu-
 ment labelled
                    “Constitution,” and for this reason it has
 become
                    customary to describe the British Constitution
 as being an
                    “unwritten” one. This is very misleading,
 since many
                    parts of this Constitution are written, for
 constitutional status is
                    invariably ascribed to such doc-
 uments as
                        Magna Carta (1215), the Habeas Corpus Act
                    (1641), the Bill of Rights (1689), the Act of Settlement
 (1701), the Act of
                    Union (1707), the Parliament Act
 (1911), and the successive Representation
                    of the Peo-
 ple, Judicature, and Local Government
                    Acts.
                All of these written documents, it is generally agreed,
 are parts of the
                    British Constitution. But this Consti-
                    tution includes much more, notably the rules of the
 common law, and
                    well-established customs and con-
 ventions
                    which deal with very basic matters, such as
 the principle of ministerial
                    responsibility to the House
                    
                     of Commons, and which are observed as faithfully as
 the formal
                    law itself. During the troubled and revolu-
                        tionary days of the Cromwellian period, several efforts
 were
                    made to reconcile the prerogatives of the ruler
 with the privileges of
                    Parliament by the device of some
 sort of written constitution, but these
                    efforts failed, and
 with the death of Cromwell the monarchy was
                    promptly restored. Since then the limitations which
 the traditional parts
                    of the English Constitution impose
 upon arbitrary rule have been so clearly
                    delineated and
 so effective in operation that it has not been found
                    necessary to state the basic constitutional law of the
 realm in the style
                    of a formal written code. There is
 general agreement among students of
                    government with
 the observation made by William E. Gladstone in 1878
                    that “the British Constitution is the most subtile orga-
 nism which has proceeded from the womb and
                    the long
 gestation of progressive history” (Wolf-Phillips
                    [1968],
 p. 182).
                
A much more significant difference between the
 English and the American
                    constitutions than mere
 matters of form and style is the existence in
                    Britain
 of the principle of parliamentary supremacy. From the
 point of
                    view of fundamental constitutional law, par-
                        liamentary supremacy means that the courts of the
 realm are
                    legally incapable of refusing to enforce an
 act of Parliament on grounds of
                    unconstitutionality.
 To be sure, the word
                    “unconstitutional” is often used
 in Great Britain to
                    describe an act believed to be
 contrary to the basic law of the country,
                    but this does
 not have the legal significance which the term has in
                    the United States. Parliament is supreme in the sense
 that all of its
                    enactments have the quality of law. This
 does not mean that the English
                    courts are powerless,
 since they have the responsibility of interpreting
                        stat-
 utes. In view of the fact that
                    Parliament legislates less
 than does the American Congress, and usually in
                    more
 general language, the judicial power of statutory inter-
 pretation is not to be taken
                    lightly.
                Most of the new states of Africa and Asia have, in
 the twentieth century,
                    felt that it was necessary to
 adopt formal, written constitutions, although
                    the State
 of Israel has preferred to follow the English example.
                    Israel has no formal constitutional document, and ac-
                        cepts the principle of parliamentary supremacy, for
 the Israeli
                    courts do not have the power of judicial
 review. On the other hand, on the
                    continent of Europe
 the practice has prevailed in modern times of
                    having
 formal written constitutions, but usually without judi-
 cial enforcement. The 1948 Constitution of
                    West Ger-
 many, however, created a
                    Constitutional Court
 (Bundesverfassungsgericht) with
                    judicial review pow-
 ers, and the Supreme Court
                    of Canada has such powers
 also. The de Gaulle Constitution of France (1958)
                     created a Constitutional Council (conseil consti-
 tutionnel) with the
                    power to declare organic laws of
 Parliament
                    unconstitutional before enactment, and
                    ordinary laws invalid if sent to it by the President
                    or
 Parliament. But this Council is not a true court and
 is not part of
                    the judicial system; private individuals
 and groups have no access to it,
                    and it does not hear
 appeals from lower courts.
                The absence of judicial review, however, as the
 English and Israeli examples
                    illustrate, does not mean
 the absence of constitutionalism. An independent
                        judi-
 ciary endowed with judicial review
                    powers may exert
 a powerful influence as a limitation upon the
                    exercise
 of governmental powers, but there are other instru-
 ments available to make
                    constitutionalism a viable
 concept. These include periodic elections, a
                    free press,
 opposition political parties, and various elements of
                    political responsibility. As a protection against the
 exercise of arbitrary
                    authority in Britain, for example,
 constitutionalism is a viable force
                    because it is fully
 accepted by an informed electorate which has the
                    power of voting out of office a government which
 would presume to ignore
                    its requirements.
                A constitution is more than a mere document, and
 even in judicial review
                    countries, more than a mere
 law. It imposes restraints upon government, but
                    at the
 same time it also legitimizes its power. It is a record
 of
                    national experience and a symbol of the nation's
 aspirations. It serves the
                    important function of articu-
 lating the
                    ideals of the community, of stating its social
 and economic aims. It exerts
                    a tremendous educational
 influence as a convenient, easily-read compendium
                    of
 the nation's basic purposes and principles.
                There are many differences among constitutions.
 Some are extremely detailed
                    (e.g., the constitutions of
 India and Mexico), and some, like that of the
                    United
 States, are very short. Some are judicially enforceable,
 while
                    most are not. Some constitutions are “norma-
 tive,” while others are merely
                    “nominal,” not to be
 taken too seriously. Some are
                    stable, others are fragile.
 Some are republican, while others are
                    monarchical.
 Some create parliamentary systems of government,
 while
                    others provide for presidential systems. Some
 establish federal systems
                    while others, such as the
 American states, provide for unitary systems.
                    Some are
 described as rigid, and others as flexible, depending
 upon
                    the ease or difficulty of the processes of consti-
 tutional amendment. There are many other terms
                    used
 to describe various constitutions—such as revolu-
 tionary, bonapartist, legitimist,
                    programmatic, confirm-
 atory—all
                    suggesting aspects of world history.
                Whatever particular form of government a consti-
                        tution delineates, however, it serves as the keystone
 of the
                    arch of constitutionalism, except in those coun-
                    
                    
                    tries whose written constitutions are mere sham. Con-
 stitutionalism as a theory and in
                    practice stands for
 the principle that there are—in a properly
                    governed
 state—limitations upon those who exercise the
                    powers
 of government, and that these limitations are spelled
 out in a
                    body of higher law which is enforceable in
 a variety of ways, political and
                    judicial. This is by no
 means a modern idea, for the concept of a higher
                    law
 which spells out the basic norms of a political society
 is as old
                    as Western civilization. That there are stand-
                    ards of rightness which transcend and control public
 officials, even
                    current popular majorities, represents a
 critically significant element of
                    man's endless quest for
 the good life.