A Tale of Two Maps: The Limits of Universalism in Comparative Judicial Review

A. Dodek
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

The explosion of scholarship in comparative constitutional law in the last decade tends to overshadow the traditional suspicion that comparative law exhibited towards public law. For the greater part of the 20th century, the dominant paradigm in comparative public law was particularism and strong skepticism towards universalist features and possibilities in public law, especially constitutional law. With the rise of judicial review after World War II and especially in Eastern Europe after the collapse of the Soviet Union, comparative judicial review has begun to flourish. This paper is a comment on a paper by Professor Miguel Schor entitled "Mapping Comparative Judicial Review" presented at the Second Osgoode Hall Law School Constitutional Law Roundtable in Toronto in February 2007. In this paper, the author argues that the comparative scholarship on judicial review overemphasizes the centrality of "the Question of Legitimacy" of judicial review in a democratic polity. This is attributed to the mistaken extrapolation of the American debate over judicial review to universal application. Drawing on the examples of Canada, South Africa and Israel, the author argues that the Question of Legitimacy has less importance and a decisively different character in those countries than in the United States. It is time to recall and embrace some of the particularist skepticism in comparing judicial review across different legal systems.
两幅地图的故事:比较司法审查中普遍主义的局限
在过去的十年中,比较宪法学术的爆炸式增长往往掩盖了比较法对公法表现出的传统怀疑。在20世纪的大部分时间里,比较公法的主导范式是特殊主义和对公法,特别是宪法的普遍主义特征和可能性的强烈怀疑。随着二战后司法审查的兴起,特别是在苏联解体后的东欧,比较司法审查开始蓬勃发展。本文是对Miguel Schor教授在2007年2月于多伦多举行的第二届Osgoode Hall法学院宪法圆桌会议上发表的题为“映射比较司法审查”的论文的评论。本文认为,司法审查的比较研究过分强调了司法审查在民主政体中的“合法性问题”的中心地位。这是由于把美国关于司法审查的争论错误地推断为普遍适用。作者以加拿大、南非和以色列为例,认为合法性问题在这些国家的重要性和性质都不如美国。在比较不同法律制度的司法审查时,是时候回顾并接受一些特殊主义的怀疑主义了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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