Capa

LITIGATING THE POLITICS OF HUMAN RIGHTS IBD

SPRINGER
03 / 2025
9783031824623
Inglês

Sinopse

The cases analysed involve litigation concerning a disparate range of contemporary US culture wars áincluding equity in access to public services unrestricted by religious bias, áresistance to the teaching of historical facts relating to racial tensions in America including the so-called âÇÖcritical race theoryâÇÖ debate, the right of schoolchildren to exposure concerning a diversity of views, current USSC litigation about US university admissions policy that considers âÇÖraceâÇÖ (ethnicity) as one factor amongst many in admission, ácontemporary cases concerning the constitutionality of US abortion law grounded on Roe v Wade and the scope of State and indigenous sovereign powers áThese contemporary culture war US landmark cases are then compared to similar cases in non-US jurisdictions and courts to consider in more depth the underlying core issues in these cases.The book highlights the risk to a democracy of recasting fundamental human rights litigation as essentially nothing more than the sorting out of political quagmires and cultural conflicts best left to the discretion of government rather than the courts. Then, the major risk is that constitutional controversies will increasingly not be decided by an independent judiciary but rather by self-interested politicians as the courts more often than not decline to weigh in on highly sensitive human rights controversies. A further risk is that instead such cases will be decided through a judicial majoritarian political lens rather than a largely apolitical consensus judicial opinion constructed by both philosophically left leaning (so-called liberal) and right leaning (so-called conservative) jurists.