Weak Courts, Strong Rights: Judicial Review and Social Welfare Rights in Comparative Constitutional Law

Weak Courts, Strong Rights: Judicial Review and Social Welfare Rights in Comparative Constitutional Law

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Author/Contributor(s): Tushnet, Mark
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Date: 08/09/2009
Binding: Paperback
Condition: NEW

"Tushnet puts flesh on the bones of the claim that constitutionally guaranteed social rights, judicially enforced, are already a part of the jurisprudence of the United States and other countries of interest. He takes this argument some distance beyond where any other scholar has taken it, so far as I know, and he does so with considerable refinement. This book gives a full and strong manifestation of the style, intelligence, and learning that have earned Tushnet his eminence as a scholar of American constitutional law and comparative constitutionalism."--Frank I. Michelman, Harvard Law School

"This is an important contribution to an important debate in the United States about the possibility and prospects for the courts to play a more modest role in politics and policy. Tushnet demonstrates that, by a nice twist, a more modest judicial role could lead to a more robust set of social rights. And his comparative cases show that this is not purely theoretical, but that it has worked out to some degree in other systems."--Gordon Silverstein, University of California, Berkeley