我们非原旨主义的持枪权

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW
R. Leider
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引用次数: 1

摘要

哥伦比亚特区诉海勒案虽有争议,但具有里程碑意义。讨论集中在其自称的原旨主义方法的优点上。支持者称赞其努力回归更原旨主义和文本主义的方法来解决宪法问题,而批评者则质疑海勒的历史主张的准确性,并批评其偏离先例。本文挑战了许多关于海勒的传统智慧,它对原旨主义的使用,以及它与19世纪和20世纪判例法的关系。本文认为,尽管海勒的言论很多,但它实际上是大众宪政主义(而非原旨主义)的例证,因为它处理了本案中最重要的实际问题:确定携带武器权利的内容。在这个问题上,海勒——而不是米勒——在很大程度上与美国历史上大部分州法院和联邦法院裁决涉及携带武器权利的案件的方式一致。特别是,本文认为,19世纪法院所遵循的主要方法既不是“原旨主义”,也不是“文本主义”关于携带武器的权利。这些法院没有考虑到詹姆斯·麦迪逊(James Madison)在1789年对权利的看法,也没有考虑到1791年美国人对第二修正案的普遍理解。相反,他们试图在携带武器的权利范围上找到妥协的立场,以容纳那些相信该权利的人和那些寻求对武器进行更严格限制的人。为了做到这一点,19世纪的法院随着时间的推移改变了他们对携带武器权利目的的理解,这反过来又使他们能够得出关于权利内容的结论,这些结论反映了当代大众对权利的理解——以及对权利限制的理解。在这种修正主义的解释中,米勒案代表了法院对历史方法的突破,因为它可以论证允许使用普通军事武器——这种方法不容易允许法院根据新情况调整第二修正案的权利,因为这些军事武器变得越来越具有破坏性。这些困难促使后来的法院采用米勒案的“集体权利”解释——这种解释过于严格,因此也难以调整以反映大众的理解。论文的结论是,海勒反映了一种新的妥协:扩大个人自卫的理由,同时削弱第二修正案的军事目标。这项新的妥协承认个人拥有自卫武器的权利,同时允许对军用武器进行更大的控制——这与当今主流美国人对这项权利的看法一致。尽管海勒从根本上重塑了第二修正案的权利,以适应21世纪对权利的普遍理解,但其方法论与大多数法院处理第二修正案问题的方式相当一致——这种方法听起来更像是流行的宪政主义,而不是原旨主义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Our Non-Originalist Right to Bear Arms
District of Columbia v. Heller was a landmark, if controversial, opinion. Discussion has centered on the merits of its self-described originalist approach. Supporters praise its efforts to return to a more originalist and textualist approach to constitutional questions, whereas critics challenge the accuracy of Heller’s historical claims and criticize its departure from precedent.This paper challenges much of the conventional wisdom about Heller, its use of originalism, and its relationship to nineteenth and twentieth century case law. This article argues that, despite much of its rhetoric, Heller actually exemplified popular constitutionalism — not originalism — in the way it approached the most important practical question at issue in the case: determining the content of the right to bear arms. On that question, Heller — and not Miller — is largely consistent with the way, throughout most of American history, that both state and federal courts have adjudicated cases involving the right to bear arms. In particular, this article argues that the dominant approach followed by nineteenth-century courts was neither “originalist” nor “textualist” about the right to bear arms. These courts did not look to how James Madison viewed the right in 1789 or how Americans in 1791 commonly understood the Second Amendment. Instead, they attempted to find compromise positions on the scope of the right to bear arms to accommodate a population divided between those believing in the right and those seeking stronger restrictions on weapons. To do this, the nineteenth-century courts shifted their understanding of the purpose of the right to bear arms over time, which, in turn, enabled them to reach conclusions about the content of the right that reflected the contemporary popular understanding of the right — and of the right’s limits. In this revisionist account, Miller is the case that represented a break with the courts’ historical approach because it arguably allowed access to common military weapons — an approach that did not readily allow courts to adjust the Second Amendment right to new circumstances as these military weapons became increasingly destructive. These difficulties prompted subsequent courts to adopt the “collective rights” interpretation of Miller — an interpretation that was too rigidly restrictive, and therefore, also difficult to adjust to reflect popular understandings. The paper concludes that Heller reflects a new compromise: expanding the individual self-defense rationale while diminishing the Second Amendment’s military objectives. This new compromise recognizes an individual right to have self-defense weapons, while allowing greater control over military-style weapons — which aligns with how mainstream Americans today view the right. Although Heller radically reshaped the Second Amendment right to fit the twenty-first century popular understanding of the right, its methodological approach is quite consistent with how most courts have approached Second Amendment questions — an approach that sounds more in popular constitutionalism than originalism.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Founded in 1925, the Indiana Law Journal is a general-interest academic legal journal. The Indiana Law Journal is published quarterly by students of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law — Bloomington. The opportunity to become a member of the Journal is available to all students at the end of their first-year. Members are selected in one of two ways. First, students in the top of their class academically are automatically invited to become members. Second, a blind-graded writing competition is held to fill the remaining slots. This competition tests students" Bluebook skills and legal writing ability. Overall, approximately thirty-five offers are extended each year. Candidates who accept their offers make a two-year commitment to the Journal.
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