<p>This essay explores majority decisions to give up majority power. In particular, it analyzes a majority's decision to institute judicial review as a method of final decision-making on questions of constitutional rights and contrasts that decision with the majority's election of a dictator. Both decisions involve a majority's voluntary transfer of power for certain matters in irreversible ways. Adopting the proceduralist viewpoint, the essay argues that these types of decisions--involving majoritarian renunciation of power--require a greater justification than decisions that do not alter future decision-procedures. That greater justification requires these types of decisions, decisions this essay terms "delegation decisions," to satisfy t...
There are divergent views in the legal academy concerning judicial review, but at their core these v...
According to Professor Christopher Eisgruber, judicial review of the sort embedded in United States ...
In this thesis I argue that, in liberal democracies, parliaments should enjoy sovereignty in constit...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
The existence of judicial review confronts scholars of political institutions, particularly scholars...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
Proceduralists hold that democracy has a non-instrumental value consisting in the ideal of equality ...
Recent scholarship in political science and law challenges the view that judicial review in the Unit...
Judicial review has long been characterized by constitutional scholars as countermajoritarian and an...
The problem of judicial review turns out to be a number of different problems that should be disag...
Proceduralists hold that democracy has a non-instrumental value consisting in the ideal of equality...
The United States Supreme Court is a counter-majoritarian force in our democracy. Nine unelected and...
A theme of uneasiness, and even of guilt, colors the literature about judicial review. Many of those...
This dissertation gives a justification of judicial review, which is the institution of courts havin...
This Article examines the role of judicial deference in a modern democracy. The Author disputes the ...
There are divergent views in the legal academy concerning judicial review, but at their core these v...
According to Professor Christopher Eisgruber, judicial review of the sort embedded in United States ...
In this thesis I argue that, in liberal democracies, parliaments should enjoy sovereignty in constit...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
The existence of judicial review confronts scholars of political institutions, particularly scholars...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
Proceduralists hold that democracy has a non-instrumental value consisting in the ideal of equality ...
Recent scholarship in political science and law challenges the view that judicial review in the Unit...
Judicial review has long been characterized by constitutional scholars as countermajoritarian and an...
The problem of judicial review turns out to be a number of different problems that should be disag...
Proceduralists hold that democracy has a non-instrumental value consisting in the ideal of equality...
The United States Supreme Court is a counter-majoritarian force in our democracy. Nine unelected and...
A theme of uneasiness, and even of guilt, colors the literature about judicial review. Many of those...
This dissertation gives a justification of judicial review, which is the institution of courts havin...
This Article examines the role of judicial deference in a modern democracy. The Author disputes the ...
There are divergent views in the legal academy concerning judicial review, but at their core these v...
According to Professor Christopher Eisgruber, judicial review of the sort embedded in United States ...
In this thesis I argue that, in liberal democracies, parliaments should enjoy sovereignty in constit...