Upside-Down Judicial Review

IF 1.8 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
C. Lain
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

The countermajoritarian difficulty assumes that the democratically elected branches are majoritarian and the unelected Supreme Court is not. But sometimes just the opposite is true. Sometimes it is the democratically elected branches that are out of sync with majority will, and the Supreme Court that bridges the gap-turning the conventional understanding of the Court’s function on its head. Instead of a countermajoritarian Court checking the majoritarian branches, we see a majoritarian Court checking the not-so-majoritarian branches, enforcing prevailing norms when the representative branches do not. The result is a distinctly majoritarian, upside-down understanding of judicial review. This Article illustrates, explains, and explores the contours of this phenomenon, using three classic cases of the countermajoritarian difficulty — Brown v. Board of Education, Furman v. Georgia, and Roe v. Wade — to anchor the discussion. Democracy never looked so undemocratic, nor (in an upside-down way) has it ever worked so well.
颠倒司法审查
反多数主义的困难假设民主选举的分支机构是多数主义的,而未经选举的最高法院不是。但有时情况正好相反。有时是民主选举的分支机构与多数人的意愿不同步,而最高法院弥补了这一差距——彻底改变了对法院职能的传统理解。我们看到的不是一个反多数主义的法院来制衡多数主义的分支机构,而是一个多数主义的法院来制衡不那么多数主义的分支机构,在有代表性的分支机构不遵守现行规范的时候,强制执行现行规范。其结果是明显的多数主义,对司法审查的理解是颠倒的。本文用反多数主义困难的三个经典案例——布朗诉教育委员会案、弗曼诉乔治亚州案和罗伊诉韦德案——来阐述、解释和探讨这一现象的轮廓。民主从来没有看起来如此不民主,也从来没有(以一种颠倒的方式)运行得如此之好。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
5.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Georgetown Law Journal is headquartered at Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C. and has since its inception published more than 500 issues, as well as the widely-used Annual Review of Criminal Procedure (ARCP). The Journal is currently, and always has been, run by law students.
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