Monday, November 17, 2008
Capital Punishment. Abortion. Same-Sex Marriage.
How large a role should SCOTUS play, or how small a role, in adjudicating moral controversies that implicate constitutional rights--as do the large controversies over capital punishment, abortion, and same-sex marriage? MOJ readers may be interested in this:
and the Supreme Court
Michael J. Perry
Emory University - School of Law; University of San Diego - School of Law
November 13, 2008
Emory Public Law Research Paper No. 08-47
Abstract:
In my new book--Constitutional Rights, Moral Controversy, and the
Supreme Court (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2009)--I examine three of the
most disputed constitutional issues of our time: capital punishment,
state laws banning abortion, and state policies denying the benefit of
law to same-sex unions. I explain that if a majority of the justices of
the Supreme Court believes that a law (or other policy) violates the
Constitution, it does not necessarily follow that the Court should rule
that the law is unconstitutional. In cases in which it is argued that a
law violates the Constitution, the Supreme Court must decide which of
two importantly different questions it should address: (1) Is the
challenged law unconstitutional? (2) Is the lawmakers' judgment that
the challenged law is *constitutional* a reasonable judgment? One can
answer both questions in the affirmative.
By
focusing on the death penalty, abortion, and same-sex unions, I aim to
provide new perspectives not only on moral controversies that implicate
one or more constitutionally entrenched human rights, but also on the
fundamental question of the Supreme Court's proper role in adjudicating
such controversies.
In this SSRN paper, I reproduce the table of contents and the introduction to the book
[To download, click here.]
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2008/11/capital-punishm.html