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Judges and Unjust Laws: Common Law Constitutionalism and the Foundations of Judicial Review
 
 
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Judges and Unjust Laws: Common Law Constitutionalism and the Foundations of Judicial Review [Hardcover]

Douglas Edlin (Author)

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Book Description

0472116622 978-0472116621 December 2, 2008

"With keen insight into the common law mind, Edlin argues that there are rich resources within the law for judges to ground their opposition to morally outrageous laws, and a legal obligation on them to overturn it, consequent on the general common law obligation to develop the law. Thus, seriously unjust laws pose for common law judges a dilemma within the law, not just a moral challenge to the law, a conflict of obligations, not just a crisis of conscience. While rooted firmly in the history of common law jurisprudence, Edlin offers an entirely fresh perspective on an age-old jurisprudential conundrum. Edlin's case for his thesis is compelling."
---Gerald J. Postema, Cary C. Boshamer Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Law, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and author of Bentham and the Common Law Tradition

"Douglas Edlin builds a powerful historical, conceptual, and moral case for the proposition that judges on common law grounds should refuse to enforce unjust legislation. This is sure to be controversial in an age in which critics already excoriate judges for excessive activism when conducting constitutional judicial review. Edlin's challenge to conventional views is bold and compelling."
---Brian Z. Tamanaha, Chief Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo Professor of Law, St. John's University, and author of Law as a Means to an End: Threat to the Rule of Law

"Professor Edlin's fascinating and well-researched distinction between constitutional review and common law review should influence substantially both scholarship on the history of judicial power in the United States and contemporary jurisprudential debates on the appropriate use of that power."
---Mark Graber, Professor of Law and Government, University of Maryland, and author of Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil

Is a judge legally obligated to enforce an unjust law?

In Judges and Unjust Laws, Douglas E. Edlin uses case law analysis, legal theory, constitutional history, and political philosophy to examine the power of judicial review in the common law tradition. He finds that common law tradition gives judges a dual mandate: to apply the law and to develop it. There is no conflict between their official duty and their moral responsibility. Consequently, judges have the authority---perhaps even the obligation---to refuse to enforce laws that they determine unjust. As Edlin demonstrates, exploring the problems posed by unjust laws helps to illuminate the institutional role and responsibilities of common law judges.

Douglas E. Edlin is Associate Professor of Political Science at Dickinson College.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
common law review, common law judicial process, common law judicial function, extraconstitutional judicial review, stipulated reversal, epistemic threshold, ultra vires model, fundamental common law principles, horizontal stare decisis, common law constitutionalism, vertical stare decisis, shocks the conscience test, common law working, authoritative legal sources, common law judiciary, judicial obligation, consequentialist model, legislative primacy, mon law tradition, common law adjudication, common law reasoning, legislative supremacy, deciding court, unjust statutes, common law method
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Supreme Court, Court of Appeal, House of Lords, King James, Lord Mansfield, South Carolina, Lord Coke, Ronald Dworkin, Judge Waties, New Jersey, Eighth Amendment, Fugitive Slave Act, Edward Coke, Fourteenth Amendment, John Finnis, Joseph Raz, Act of Parliament, Justice Chase, Second Circuit
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