Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Michigan Law Review
Abstract
Most normative legal scholarship regarding the role of judicial review rests upon a descriptively inaccurate foundation. The process of constitutional interpretation does not set electorally accountable government against unaccountable courts. The premise of electorally accountable decision making assumes an identifiable majority actually exists. In addition, the premise of judicial interference assumes that judicial decisions are final, when they are not. A more accurate view of the constitutional system needs to take into account constituency representation, the spaciousness of the constitutional text, and the dynamic nature of constitutional interpretation. The actual role of judicial review is dialogic. The courts interpret the Constitution, but they also facilitate and mold a society wide constitutional dialogue.
First Page
577
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2307/1289700
Volume
91
Publication Date
1993
Recommended Citation
Barry Friedman,
Dialogue and Judicial Review,
91
Michigan Law Review
577
(1993).
Available at:
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-articles/410
