Explaining Constitutional Review in New Democracies: The Case of Taiwan

IF 0.5 Q3 LAW
Nuno Garoupa, V. Grembi, S. Lin
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引用次数: 39

Abstract

This paper extends the empirical analysis of the determinants of judicial behavior by considering the Taiwanese case. Taiwan is a particularly interesting case because the establishment and development of constitutional review corresponds to a political transition from an authoritarian regime dominated by one party to an emerging democracy. We test the attitudinal hypothesis by making use of a new dataset of ninety-seven decisions issued by the Taiwanese constitutional court in the period 1988-2008. The attitudinal hypothesis is that the Taiwanese constitutional judges respond to party interests, either because their preferences coincide with the appointer or because they want to exhibit loyalty to the appointer. Our econometric analysis does not provide strong evidence for the attitudinal hypothesis. We provide an explanation. Faced with a transition from a one-party political regime to a democracy, the Taiwanese Grand Justices needed to assert their independence from the other branches of government and gain credibility, thus dissenting more often, periodically and individually voting against the interests of the dominant party.
解释新民主国家的宪法审查:以台湾为例
本文以台湾案例为例,扩展司法行为决定因素的实证分析。台湾是一个特别有趣的例子,因为宪法审查制度的建立和发展与从一党专政到新兴民主的政治转型相对应。我们利用台湾宪法法院在1988-2008年间发布的97项判决的新数据集来检验态度假设。态度假设认为,台湾宪法法官对政党利益做出反应,要么是因为他们的偏好与被任命者一致,要么是因为他们想表现出对被任命者的忠诚。我们的计量经济学分析并没有为态度假说提供强有力的证据。我们提供一个解释。面对从一党制向民主制的转变,台湾的大法官们需要维护他们独立于其他政府部门的独立性,并获得公信力,因此,他们需要更频繁地、定期地、个别地投票反对执政党的利益。
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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