Judicial Review and Political Legitimacy

Authors

  • Jeremy Waldron Author New York University

Keywords:

Judicial review, political legitimacy, democracy, constitutional law, constitutional courts

Abstract

This article analyzes the relationship between a judicial review of legislation and the principle of political legitimacy understood as the capacity of a legal and political system to generate support for the implementation of laws and policies, even among those who are opposed to them on their merits. The article claims that, despite the existence of multiple forms of judicial review, as well as diverse and respectable sources of legitimacy, judicial review is not designed to generate political legitimacy. In this sense, given the impossibility of solving this ‘democratic difficulty,’ the article proposes different approaches that might help to mitigate it, as is the case of judicial super-majorities to strike down legislation, following a strong presumption of constitutionality or offering explicit reasons for addressing these democratic concerns. Finally, the article calls for civility in constitutional litigation in order to prevent demonization of the opponent and to open the door to political legitimacy in the context of judicial review.

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Author Biography

Jeremy Waldron, New York University

Teacher of legal and politics in the NYU School of Law. Until recently, was a Chichele professor of social and politic theory at Oxford University. Author of plenty books and articles in the topics of: law theory, constitutionalism, rules of law, democracy, property, torture, security.

Published

2018-06-29

How to Cite

Waldron, J. (2018). Judicial Review and Political Legitimacy. Díkaion, 27(1), 7–28. Retrieved from https://dikaion.unisabana.edu.co/index.php/dikaion/article/view/9023

Issue

Section

Articles