The Global Expansion of Judicial Power / / ed. by C Neal Tate, Torbjorn Vallinder.

In Russia, as the confrontation over the constitutional distribution of authority raged, Boris Yeltsin's economic program regularly wended its way in and out of the Constitutional Court until Yeltsin finally suspended that court in the aftermath of his clash with the hard-line parliament. In Eu...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter New York University Press Archive eBook-Package Pre-2000
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Place / Publishing House:New York, NY : : New York University Press, , [1995]
©1995
Year of Publication:1995
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contents
  • 1. The Global Expansion of Judicial Power: The Judicialization of Politics
  • PART I CONCEPTS AND CONDITIONS
  • 2. When the Courts Go Marching In
  • 3. Why the Expansion of Judicial Power?
  • PART II WESTERN COMMON-LAW DEMOCRACIES
  • The United States and the United Kingdom
  • 4. The United States
  • 5. The United Kingdom
  • Australia
  • 6. Judicial Intrusion into the Australian Cabinet
  • 7. The Executive, the Judiciary, and Immigration Appeals in Australia
  • Canada
  • 8. Social Progress and Judicial Power in Canada
  • 9. Canadian Constraints on Judicialization from Without
  • PART III EUROPEAN ROMANO-GERMANIC DEMOCRACIES
  • Cross-National Analyses
  • 10. Training the Legal Professions in Italy, France and Germany
  • 11. The Judicialization of Judicial Salary Policy in Italy and the United States
  • 12. Complex Coordinate Construction in France and Germany
  • The Italian Case
  • 13. Italy: A Peculiar Case
  • 14. Judicial Independence and PolicyMaking in Italy
  • 15. Legal Politics Italian Style
  • France and Germany
  • 16. France
  • 17. Germany
  • 18. Reunification and Prospects for Judicialization in Germany
  • The Smaller Democracies
  • 19. Sweden
  • 20. The Netherlands: Toward a Form of Judicial Review
  • 21. The Judiciary and Politics in Malta
  • 22. Israel
  • PART IV RAPIDLY CHANGING NATIONS
  • Post -Communist States
  • 23. The Attempt to Institute Judicial Review in the Former USSR
  • 24. Legal Reform and the Expansion of Judicial Power in Russia
  • Troubled Democracies
  • 25. The Philippines and Southeast Asia
  • 26. The Judicialization of Namibian Politics
  • CONCLUSION
  • 27. Judicialization and the Future of Politics and Policy
  • Contributors
  • Index