RT Article T1 Democracy, constitutional framework, and human rights: A comparison of Monaco, Tonga, Hong Kong, and Singapore JF International journal of law, crime and justice VO 64 A1 Wong, Mathew Y. H. A2 Kwong, Ying-ho A2 Chau, Venisa Yeuk Wah LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1764287924 AB This article examines constitutional protection of human rights, in particular civil liberties and political rights, in two democratic and two undemocratic regimes respectively. While the existing literature is consensual on the importance of constitutional democracy in upholding fundamental human rights, the discussion on authoritarianism is limited. This paper provides a comparative framework and suggests that not only do the constitutional democracies, namely Tonga and Monaco, perform well on constitutional human rights protection, Hong Kong and Singapore, both undemocratic, also demonstrate a similar level of protection on paper. Combining with their performance on human rights protection, it is argued that constitutional provisions in both democratic and authoritarian states carry limited significance, but how constitutions are interpreted and implemented matter the most. K1 civil liberties K1 Constitution K1 Democracy K1 Human Rights K1 Political rights DO 10.1016/j.ijlcj.2020.100438