|
|
1 | (24) |
|
A Courts and Democratic Dysfunction: Promoting Democratic Responsiveness |
|
|
2 | (6) |
|
B Responsiveness to Context and Limits on Judicial Capacity |
|
|
8 | (3) |
|
C Responsive Judging: Responding to Litigants (and Disappointed Parties) |
|
|
11 | (2) |
|
D A Sometimes View of the Promise of Judicial Review |
|
|
13 | (3) |
|
|
16 | (9) |
|
PART 1 DEMOCRATIC FOUNDATIONS |
|
|
|
2 Constitutions and Constructional Choice |
|
|
25 | (34) |
|
A Judicial Review and Constructional Choice |
|
|
27 | (10) |
|
1 Abortion, sexual privacy, and same-sex marriage |
|
|
27 | (6) |
|
2 Implied speech and equality rights |
|
|
33 | (1) |
|
3 Structural social rights |
|
|
33 | (3) |
|
4 An unconstitutional amendment doctrine |
|
|
36 | (1) |
|
B Constitutional Theory and Constructional Choice |
|
|
37 | (6) |
|
|
40 | (1) |
|
2 Sexual privacy and equality |
|
|
41 | (1) |
|
3 Structural social rights |
|
|
42 | (1) |
|
C Why Courts? Constitutional Choice and Democracy |
|
|
43 | (4) |
|
|
47 | (5) |
|
E Criticism of Ely's Approach |
|
|
52 | (2) |
|
F Representation-Reinforcement Beyond Ely |
|
|
54 | (5) |
|
3 Defining Democracy and Democratic Dysfunction |
|
|
59 | (36) |
|
|
60 | (5) |
|
B Democratic Dysfunction: Antidemocratic Monopoly Power |
|
|
65 | (15) |
|
|
72 | (2) |
|
|
74 | (4) |
|
3 Monopoly: Intent versus effect |
|
|
78 | (2) |
|
C Legislative Blind Spots and Burdens of Inertia |
|
|
80 | (8) |
|
1 Legislative blind spots |
|
|
82 | (2) |
|
2 Legislative burdens of inertia |
|
|
84 | (4) |
|
D "Deliberate" versus Interconnected Democratic Blockages |
|
|
88 | (7) |
|
PART 2 COURTS AND DEMOCRATIC RESPONSIVENESS |
|
|
|
4 The Scope and Intensity of Responsive Judicial Review |
|
|
95 | (48) |
|
A The Legal and Political Legitimacy of Judicial Review |
|
|
96 | (3) |
|
B The Political Legitimacy of Constitutional Implications |
|
|
99 | (3) |
|
C Responsive Review in Practice |
|
|
102 | (25) |
|
|
102 | (6) |
|
|
108 | (7) |
|
3 Implied rights to freedom of expression and equality |
|
|
115 | (2) |
|
4 Structural social rights |
|
|
117 | (5) |
|
5 Unconstitutional amendment doctrine |
|
|
122 | (5) |
|
D The Intensity of Judicial Review: Toward Calibrated Proportionality or Scrutiny |
|
|
127 | (13) |
|
1 Calibrating judgments about limitations on expression |
|
|
131 | (3) |
|
2 Calibrating judgments about discrimination |
|
|
134 | (6) |
|
E Deference and a Legislative Action/Inaction Distinction |
|
|
140 | (3) |
|
5 Democratic Dysfunction and the Effectiveness of Responsive Review |
|
|
143 | (38) |
|
A Detecting Democratic Dysfunction |
|
|
145 | (6) |
|
|
151 | (6) |
|
C Responsive Judicial Review in Practice |
|
|
157 | (10) |
|
1 Comparative LGBTQI + rights |
|
|
158 | (3) |
|
2 Structural social rights |
|
|
161 | (4) |
|
3 Unconstitutional amendment doctrine |
|
|
165 | (2) |
|
D Preconditions for Success |
|
|
167 | (14) |
|
1 Judicial independence and a political tolerance interval for judicial review |
|
|
168 | (3) |
|
2 Litigation support structure |
|
|
171 | (5) |
|
3 Jurisdiction and remedial toolkit |
|
|
176 | (5) |
|
6 Risks to Democracy: Reverse Inertia, Democratic Backlash, and Debilitation |
|
|
181 | (23) |
|
A Limits on Judicial Capacity and Legitimacy |
|
|
182 | (3) |
|
B Reverse Burdens of Inertia |
|
|
185 | (9) |
|
|
194 | (6) |
|
D Democratic Debilitation |
|
|
200 | (1) |
|
E Judicial Prudence, Principle, and Pragmatism |
|
|
201 | (3) |
|
7 Toward Strong-Weak/Weak-Strong Judicial Review and Remedies |
|
|
204 | (41) |
|
A Weakened Judicial Review |
|
|
205 | (11) |
|
B Why (and How to) Weaken Review |
|
|
216 | (12) |
|
1 The democratic minimum core and the pragmatic argument for weak-strong judicial review |
|
|
217 | (3) |
|
2 Blind spots and burdens of inertia: a principled and pragmatic case for weak-strong review |
|
|
220 | (8) |
|
C Toward Strong-Weak/Weak-Strong Judicial Review |
|
|
228 | (12) |
|
|
240 | (5) |
|
PART 3 RESPONSIVE JUDGING AND COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL THEORY |
|
|
|
8 A Responsive Judicial Voice: Building a Court's Legitimacy |
|
|
245 | (36) |
|
A Why Responsive Judging--or a Responsive Judicial Voice |
|
|
246 | (2) |
|
B Judicial Framing and Responsive Judicial Review |
|
|
248 | (6) |
|
|
248 | (2) |
|
2 Tone: Respect or comity |
|
|
250 | (2) |
|
|
252 | (2) |
|
C Responsive Judicial Review and Judging: Building Support for LGBTQI+ Rights |
|
|
254 | (7) |
|
D Responsive Judging and the Democratic Minimum Core |
|
|
261 | (4) |
|
E Responsive Judging: Limits and Cautions |
|
|
265 | (16) |
|
1 Limits on responsive judging |
|
|
265 | (2) |
|
2 Democratic legitimacy versus legitimation |
|
|
267 | (2) |
|
3 A responsive judicial voice beyond the bench |
|
|
269 | (2) |
|
9 Conclusion: Toward a New Comparative Political Process Theory? |
|
|
271 | (10) |
Index |
|
281 | |