法院应如何回应政治问题?探索加拿大最高法院联邦制与土著判例法的对话转向

Minh Do, Robert Schertzer
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摘要

在本文中,我们:(1)提出了法院应该如何应对司法管辖权的高度政治争议的理论,(2)评估法院是否可以实现这一理想。我们的理论借鉴了规范现实主义,认为法院应尽可能将冲突推回到政治领域——通过概述指导谈判的规则和原则,促进自由和公平的对话,同时在执行司法权和相关权利时,拒绝零和结果。我们赞成这种做法,因为它可以通过承认司法机构在结构性争端中的有限民主地位,为法律和政治制度创造合法性。为了使这一论点立足于实际实践,我们评估了加拿大最高法院如何处理与管辖权权威有关的两种高度政治化的法理——联邦制和土著权利案件。我们表明,法院越来越依赖于在这两个领域促进对话的这种方法。虽然我们认为这种方法特别适合于联邦案件,但我们的分析揭示了土著判例法的负面结果。法院的做法往往不能有力地执行土著人民的宪法权利,这表明它的促进者角色不能充分解释国家和土著人民之间的权力不平衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Should Courts Respond to Political Questions? Exploring the Dialogical Turn in the Supreme Court of Canada’s Federalism and Indigenous Case Law
In this article, we: (1) advance a theory for how courts should respond to highly political disputes about jurisdictional authority, and (2) assess whether courts can achieve this ideal. Our theory draws from normative realism to argue that courts should push conflict back into the political realm whenever possible—facilitating free and fair dialogue by outlining rules and principles to guide negotiations, while also rejecting zero-sum outcomes when enforcing jurisdictional powers and related rights. We favor this approach because it can generate legitimacy for the legal and political systems by recognizing the judiciary’s limited democratic standing in structural disputes. To ground this argument in actual practice, we assess how the Supreme Court of Canada has managed two streams of highly political jurisprudence related to jurisdictional authority—federalism and Aboriginal rights cases. We show that the Court has increasingly relied on this approach of facilitating dialogue in both areas. While we argue that this approach is particularly well suited to federalism cases, our analysis uncovers negative outcomes in Indigenous case law. The Court’s approach often fails to strongly enforce the constitutional rights of Indigenous peoples, demonstrating that its facilitator role does not adequality account for the power imbalances between the state and Indigenous peoples.
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