Law and legitimacy in the Supreme Court / Richard H. Fallon, Jr.
2018
KF8748 .F284 2018 (Map It)
On loan from Cellar, due 16. Mar 2020
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Details
Title
Law and legitimacy in the Supreme Court / Richard H. Fallon, Jr.
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2018.
Copyright
©2018
Call Number
KF8748 .F284 2018
ISBN
9780674975811 hardcover alkaline paper
0674975812 hardcover alkaline paper
0674975812 hardcover alkaline paper
Description
xii, 221 pages ; 25 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)1007495290
Summary
"The book addresses questions about the roles of law and politics and the challenge of legitimacy in constitutional adjudication in the Supreme Court. With all sophisticated observers recognizing that the Justices' political outlooks influence their decision making, many political scientists, some of the public, and a few prominent judges have become Cynical Realists. In their view Justices vote based on their policy preferences, and legal reasoning is mere window-dressing. This book rejects Cynical Realism, but without denying many Realist insights. It explains the limits of language and history in resolving contentious constitutional issues. To rescue the notion that the Constitution is law that binds the Justices, the book provides an original account of what law is and means in the Supreme Court. It also offers a theory of legitimacy in Supreme Court adjudication. Given the nature of law in the Supreme Court, we need to accept and learn to respect reasonable disagreement about many constitutional issues. If so, the legitimacy question becomes: how would the Justices need to decide cases so that even those who disagree with the outcomes ought to respect the Justices' processes of decision? The book gives a fresh and counterintuitive answer to that vital question. Adapting a methodology made famous by John Rawls, it argues that the Justices should strive to achieve a "reflective equilibrium" between their interpretive principles, framed to identify the Constitution's enduring meaning, and their judgments about appropriate outcomes in particular cases, evaluated as prescriptions for the nation to live by in the future. The book blends the perspectives of law, philosophy, and political science to answer theoretical and practical questions of pressing national importance"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
ix
Introduction
1
1.
Legitimacy and Judicial Authority
20
2.
Constitutional Meaning Original Public Meaning
47
3.
Constitutional Meaning Varieties of History That Matter
71
4.
Law in the Supreme Court Jurisprudential Foundations
83
5.
Constitutional Constraints
105
6.
Constitutional Theory and Its Relation to Constitutional Practice
125
7.
Sociological, Legal, and Moral Legitimacy Today and Tomorrow
155
Notes
177
Acknowledgments
215
Index
217