Democracy and Judicial Review: Are They Really Incompatible?
Perspectives on Politics, Vol. 7, No. 4, pg. 805-822.
Annabelle Lever
This article shows that judicial review has a democratic justification,
although it is not necessary for democratic government and its virtues
are controversial and often speculative. Against critics like Waldron
and Bellamy, it shows that judges, no less than legislators, can embody
democratic forms of representation, accountability and participation.
Hence, judicial review is not undemocratic simply because it enables
unelected judges to over-rule elected legislators when people disagree
about rights. Against recent defenders of judicial review, such as
Eisgruber and Brettschneider, it shows that democratic arguments for
judicial review do not require judges to be better at protecting rights
than legislators. Hence a democratic justification for judicial review
does not depend on complex and inevitably controversial interpretations
and evaluations of judicial as opposed to legislative judgments.
Democratic government does not demand special virtue, competence or
wisdom in its citizens or their leaders. From a democratic perspective,
therefore, the case for judicial review is that it enables individuals
to vindicate their rights against government in ways that parallel
those they commonly use against each other. This makes judicial review
normatively attractive whether or not it leads to better decisions than
would be made by other means.
Read the article.