masthead


  NELLCO Repository Home

Customized Email Alerts by Subject Area

Search

My Account

NELLCO Home



poweredbybepress

 

   logo

Available Papers  •  Georgetown Law Web Site  •  Search the Collection  •  Policies
NELLCO LSR > GEORGETOWN > FWPS > PAPERS bealert

Ennobling Politics
Robin West, Georgetown Law

in Law and Democracy in the Empire of Force (H. Jefferson Powell & James Boyd White eds., Ann Arbor, Mich.: Univ. of Michigan Press forthcoming).

Download the Paper (PDF format) - July 23, 2008 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
The article discusses jurisprudential as opposed to purely historical and legal reasons for our failure to either recognize or discover positive rights in our constitutional tradition. By delegating constitutional law to courts, we perhaps unwittingly tie our political morality to a form of decision making -- adjudication -- that must and likely should police against abuses of public power, just as it polices in the civil law sphere against abuses of private power. Constitutionalism and constitutional discourse cannot, so long as it is conducted through adjudicative channels, develop a body of principles conducive to the moral deployment of power, as opposed to challenging or bucking its misuse. One cost of this, relatively unreckoned even by our contemporary critics of judicial review, is the erosion of any conception of politics (rather than law) as being a potentially ennobling human practice.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Robin West, "Ennobling Politics" (July 23, 2008). Georgetown Law. Georgetown Law Faculty Working Papers. Paper 72.
http://lsr.nellco.org/georgetown/fwps/papers/72




REPOSITORY HOME  | SEARCH  | MY ACCOUNT  | NELLCO HOME |
Powered by bepress.