如果人们对他们的裁决感到愤怒,法官应该在意吗?

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences
C. Sunstein
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引用次数: 174

摘要

乍一看,法院应该关心公众是否会被他们的决定激怒的说法令人费解;司法对公愤及其影响的预期似乎与司法独立不相容。尽管如此,出于结果主义和认识论的原因,法官可能会受到愤怒前景的影响。如果一项司法裁决会破坏其本意是促进或造成严重社会危害的原因,法官就有理由基于结果主义的理由而犹豫不决。公众愤怒的前景也可能表明,法院的裁决在案情上是不正确的;如果大多数人不同意法院的裁决,也许法院错了。那些采用结果主义方法的人比那些采用非结果主义解释方法的人(包括一些原旨主义者)更愿意考虑愤怒。如果人们遭受系统性偏见,或者公众观点是信息、道德或法律级联的产物,那么关注愤怒的认识论论点就会大大削弱。还有一个强有力的理由是,禁止基于规则后果主义的理由考虑公愤的影响。法官可能不太适合进行相关的调查,考虑到愤怒可能会产生过度的胆怯。这些观点对那些在民主基础上支持大众宪政或司法约束的人具有普遍意义。对司法关注公愤的结果主义和认识论基础的理解,也为其他政府官员的决策提供了经验教训,包括总统、州长和市长,他们可能倾向于做出会引起公愤的决定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
If People Would Be Outraged by Their Rulings, Should Judges Care?
At first glance, it is puzzling to suggest that courts should care whether the public would be outraged by their decisions; judicial anticipation of public outrage and its effects seems incompatible with judicial independence. Nonetheless, judges might be affected by the prospect of outrage for both consequentialist and epistemic reasons. If a judicial ruling would undermine the cause it is meant to promote or impose serious social harms, judges have reason to hesitate on consequentialist grounds. The prospect of public outrage might also suggest that the Court's ruling would be incorrect on the merits; if most people disagree with the Court's decision, perhaps the Court is wrong. Those who adopt a method on consequentialist grounds are more likely to want to consider outrage than are those who adopt an interpretive method on nonconsequentialist grounds (including some originalists). The epistemic argument for attention to outrage is greatly weakened if people suffer from a systematic bias or if the public view is a product of an informational, moral, or legal cascade. There is also a strong argument for banning consideration of the effects of public outrage on rule-consequentialist grounds. Judges might be poorly suited to make the relevant inquiries, and consideration of outrage might produce undue timidity. These points have general implications for those who favor popular constitutionalism, or judicial restraint, on democratic grounds. An understanding of the consequentialist and epistemic grounds for judicial attention to public outrage also offers lessons for the decisions of other public officials, including presidents, governors, and mayors, who might be inclined to make decisions that will produce public outrage.
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CiteScore
4.80
自引率
2.00%
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