Wednesday, January 6, 2010
The Political Morality of Liberal Democracy [Update]
Michael J. Perry, Emory University (School of Law); University of San Diego (School of Law and Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies, 2009-2012)
Abstract:
At the beginning of my career as a law professor, in the mid-1970s, I
was principally engaged by—and I remain engaged by—constitutional
controversies closely aligned with moral controversies: the
constitutional controversy, for example, over laws banning abortion. (I
have also been engaged by the related question of the courts' proper
role--especially the U.S. Supreme Court's proper role--in resolving
such controversies.) I was soon confronted by the question of the
proper relationship of morality to constitutional law. Because for most
citizens of the United States morality is religiously grounded, another
question—one that would become for me a scholarly obsession—quickly
came into view: the proper role of religion in the politics and law of
a liberal democracy. Before long I was in the grip of this large
question: Can any worldview that is not religious support—embed—the
twofold claim to which liberal democracy is, as such—as liberal
democracy—committed, namely, that each and every human being has equal
inherent dignity and is inviolable?
I
can now see, in retrospect, that each of the principal questions that
have engaged me over the course of my career concerns one or another
aspect of the political morality of liberal democracy; in particular,
each question concerns either (a) the grounding, (b) the content, (c)
the implications for one or another political-moral controversy, or (d)
the judicial enforcement of the political morality of liberal democracy.
In
my new book, The Political Morality of Liberal Democracy (Cambridge
Univ. Press, 2010), I address all four aspects: grounding, content,
implications—in particular, implications for the political-moral
controversies over abortion and same-sex marriage—and judicial
enforcement. In the book, I am particularly concerned with the
proper--and properly limited--role of religious faith in the politics
and law of a liberal democracy.
Those interested in seeing the
table of contents and reading the introduction to The Political
Morality of Liberal Democracy can download this document, here.
[Update: The paper is *now* available for download. Sorry about that.]
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/01/the-political-morality-of-liberal-democracy.html