Constitutional Rights and Constitutional Design: Moral and Empirical Reasoning in Judicial Review by Paul Yowell (Paperback, 2020)

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The decisions courts make in constitutional rights cases pervade our political life and touch on our most basic interests and values. Judges now regularly review social science research to assess whether a law will effectively achieve its aim, and at what cost to other interests.

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The decisions courts make in constitutional rights cases pervade our political life and touch on our most basic interests and values. The spread of judicial review of legislation around the world means that courts are increasingly called on to settle matters of moral and political controversy, including assisted suicide, data privacy, anti-terrorism measures, marriage, and abortion. But doubts regarding the institutional capacities of courts for deciding such questions are growing. Judges now regularly review social science research to assess whether a law will effectively achieve its aim, and at what cost to other interests. They cite studies and statistical information from psychology, sociology, medicine, and other disciplines in which they are rarely trained. This empirical reasoning proceeds alongside open-ended moral reasoning, with judges employing terms such as equality, liberty, and autonomy, then determining what these require in concrete circumstances. This book shows that courts were not designed for this kind of moral and empirical reasoning. It argues that in comparison to legislatures, the institutional capacities of courts are deficient. Legislatures are better equipped than courts for deliberating and decision-making in regard to the kinds of factual and moral issues that arise in constitutional rights cases. The book concludes by considering the implications of comparative institutional capacity for constitutional design. Is a system of judicial review of legislation something that constitutional framers should choose to adopt? If so, in what form? For countries with systems of judicial review, practical proposals are made to remedy deficiencies in the institutional capacities of courts.

Product Identifiers

PublisherBloomsbury Publishing
ISBN-139781509940301
eBay Product ID (ePID)19046540762

Product Key Features

Number of Pages186 Pages
Publication NameConstitutional Rights and Constitutional Design: Moral and Empirical Reasoning in Judicial Review
LanguageEnglish
SubjectLaw
Publication Year2020
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaAdministrative Procedural Law, Constitutional Law
AuthorPaul Yowell
FormatPaperback

Dimensions

Item Height234 mm
Item Weight272 g
Item Width156 mm

Additional Product Features

Country/Region of ManufactureUnited Kingdom
Title_AuthorPaul Yowell

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