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355 Pages·2008·1.184 MB·English
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THE JUDGE IN A DEMOCRACY This page intentionally left blank THE JUDGE IN A DEMOCRACY Aharon Barak PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON AND OXFORD Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University Press Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TW All Rights Reserved Second printing, and first paperback printing, 2008 Paperback ISBN: 978-0-691-13615-8 The Library of Congress has cataloged the cloth edition of this book as follows Barak, Aharon. The judge in a democracy / Aharon Barak. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN-13: 978-0-691-12017-1 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-691-12017-X (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Judges. 2. Judicial process. 3. Law—Interpretation and construction. 4. Judicial power. 5. Judges—Israel. 6. Judicial power—Israel. 7. Judge-made law—Israel. 8. Courts—Israel. 9. Israel. Bet ha-mishpaòt ha-’elyon. 1. Title. K2146.B37 2006 347(cid:2).014—dc22 2005028578 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available This book has been composed in Galliard Printed on acid-free paper. ∞ press.princeton.edu Printed in the United States of America 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 Contents Introduction ix PART ONE THE ROLE OF THE JUDGE 1 Chapter One Bridging the Gap between Law and Society 3 Law and Society 3 Changes in Legislation and in Its Interpretation 4 Changes in Society Affecting the Constitutionality of Statutes 8 Changes in the Common Law 10 Change and Stability 11 Chapter Two Protecting the Constitution and Democracy 20 The Struggle for Democracy 20 What Is Democracy? 23 The Separation of Powers 35 Democracy and the Rule of Law 51 Fundamental Principles 57 Independence of the Judiciary 76 Human Rights 81 Criticism and Response 88 PART TWO THE MEANS OF REALIZING THE JUDICIAL ROLE 99 Chapter Three Preconditions for Realizing the Judicial Role 101 Judicial Impartiality and Objectivity 101 Social Consensus 107 Public Confidence 109 vi CONTENTS Chapter Four The Meaning of Means 113 The Legitimacy of the Means 113 Operative Legal Theory 113 Judicial Philosophy 116 Chapter Five Interpretation 122 The Essence of Interpretation 122 Purposive Interpretation 125 Purposive Interpretation of a Constitution 127 Purposive Interpretation of Statutes 136 Purposive Interpretation and Judicial Discretion 146 Purposive Interpretation and Intentionalism (or Subjective Purpose) 148 Purposive Interpretation and Old Textualism 149 Purposive Interpretation and New Textualism 152 Chapter Six The Development of the Common Law 155 The Common Law as Judge-Made Law 155 Judicial Lawmaking 157 Overruling Precedent 158 Chapter Seven Balancing and Weighing 164 The Centrality of Balancing and Weighing 164 Balancing and Categorization 166 The Nature of Balancing 167 Types of Balancing 170 The Advantages of Balancing 172 Critique of Balancing and Response 174 The Scope of the Balancing 175 Chapter Eight Non-Justiciability, or “Political Questions” 177 The Role and Limits of Justiciability 177 Types of Justiciability 178 Justiciability and Public Confidence 186 CONTENTS vii Chapter Nine Standing 190 Standing and Adjudication 190 Standing and Substantive Democracy 194 Chapter Ten Comparative Law 197 The Importance of Comparative Law 197 The Influence of Comparative Law 198 Comparative Law and Interpretation of Statutes 199 Comparative Law and Interpretation of the Constitution 200 Use of Comparative Law in Practice 202 Chapter Eleven The Judgment 205 Formulating the Judgment and Realizing the Judicial Role 205 The Judge as Part of the Panel 208 PART THREE THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE COURT AND THE OTHER BRANCHES OF THE STATE 213 Chapter Twelve Tension among the Branches 215 Constant Tension 215 The Tension Is Natural and Desirable 216 The Attitude toward the State 217 Public Officials as Trustees 220 Duties of the Individual toward the State 222 Chapter Thirteen The Relationship between the Judiciary and the Legislature 226 The Uniqueness of the Legislature 226 Judicial Review of Legislation 229 Judicial Review of Nonlegislative Decisions of the Legislature 231 The Dialogue between the Judiciary and the Legislature 236 viii CONTENTS Chapter Fourteen The Relationship between the Judiciary and the Executive 241 The Scope of Review 241 Judicial Interpretation and Executive Interpretation 246 Executive Reasonableness 248 Proportionality 254 PART FOUR EVALUATION OF THE ROLE OF A JUDGE IN A DEMOCRACY 261 Chapter Fifteen Activism and Self-Restraint 263 Definition of the Terms 263 Some Definitions and Their Critiques 267 Definition of Activism and Self-Restraint 270 The Desirability of Activism or Self-Restraint 279 Chapter Sixteen The Judicial Role and the Problem of Terrorism 283 Terrorism and Democracy 283 In Battle, the Laws Are Not Silent 287 The Balance between National Security and Human Rights 291 Scope of Judicial Review 298 Chapter Seventeen The Role of the Judge: Theory, Practice, and the Future 306 Theory 306 Reality 310 The Future 310 Index 317 Introduction I am not a philosopher. I am not a political scientist. I am a judge—a judge in the highest court of my country’s legal system. So I ask myself a question that many supreme court judges—and, in fact, all judges on all courts in modern democracies1—ask them- selves: What is my role as a judge? Certainly it is my role, and the role of every judge, to decide the dispute before me. Certainly it is my role, as a member of my nation’s highest court, to determine the law by which the dispute before me should be decided. Certainly it is my role to decide cases according to the law of my legal system. But is that all that can be said about my role? Are there criteria for assessing the quality of my work as a judge? Certainly no such assessment should be based on the aesthetic quality of my writing.2 Nor should the criterion be the number of sources I cite in my decisions. But then what would be a meaning- ful criterion? What is my role, and do I even have a role beyond merely deciding the dispute before me according to the law? These questions occupy me daily as I enter the courtroom and take my seat on the bench. In my twenty-six years of service on the Supreme Court of Israel, I have written thousands of opinions. But am I a “good” judge? 1See generallyMichael Kirby, “Judging: Reflections on the Moment of Decision,” 18 Austl. B. Rev. 4 (1999); Beverley M. McLachlin, “The Charter: A New Role for the Judiciary?” 29 Alta. L. Rev. 540 (1991); Beverley M. McLachlin, “The Role of the Court in the Post-Charter Era: Policy-Maker or Adjudicator?” 39 U. N.B. L.J.43 (1990); Georghios M. Pikis, “The Constitutional Position and Role of the Judge in a Civil Society,” Commonwealth Jud. J., Dec. 2000, at 7. 2Although aesthetics are important, as Richard Posner’s discussion of Justice Cardozo indicates. SeeRichard A. Posner, Cardozo: A Study in Reputation10, 42, 143 (1990).

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