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Are constitutional rights based exclusively in uniquely American considerations, or are they based at least in part on principles that transcend the boundaries of any particular country, such as the requirements of freedom or dignity? By viewing constitutional law through the prism of this fundamental question, Universal Rights and the Constitution exposes an overlooked difficulty with opinions rendered by the Supreme Court, namely, an inherent ambiguity about the kinds of arguments that count in constitutional interpretation, which weakens the foundations of our most cherished rights.

Rejecting current debates over constitutional interpretation as flawed, Stephen A. Simon offers an innovative framework designed to provide clearer foundations for rights interpretations while preserving a meaningful but limited role for universal arguments. He reveals the vital connections among contemporary debates over such matters as the right to privacy, the constitutionality of the death penalty, and the role of foreign law in constitutional interpretation.
Acknowledgments

1. Introduction

2. Universal Arguments in American Constitutionalism

3. Universal Arguments in Constitutional Law

4. Universal Arguments in Constitutional Theory

5. A Role for Universal Arguments

6. Conclusion: Universal Rights Discourse

Note
References
Index
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Date de parution

11 mars 2014

Nombre de lectures

0

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9781438451879

Langue

English

Universal Rights and the Constitution
SUNY series in American Constitutionalism
—————
Robert J. Spitzer, editor
Universal Rights and the Constitution
Stephen A. Simon
Published by State University of New York Press, Albany
© 2014 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
For information, contact State University of New York Press, Albany, NY www.sunypress.edu
Production by Ryan Morris Marketing by Fran Keneston
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Simon, Stephen A., 1966–
Universal rights and the constitution / Stephen A. Simon.
pages cm. — (SUNY series in American constitutionalism)
Revision of dissertation (Ph. D.—University of Maryland, College Park, 2007) issued under title: Human rights or American privileges? : the Supreme Court’s evolving use of universal reasoning.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4384-5185-5 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. Constitutional law—United States. 2. International and municipal law—United States. 3. Natural law—United States. 4. Human rights—United States. 5. Law—United States—Foreign influences. I. Simon, Stephen A., 1966–Human rights or American privileges? II. Title.
KF4581.S57 2014 342.7308’5—dc23
2013025960
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my parents, James F. Simon and Ann Vardaro Simon, with love and gratitude
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Universal Arguments in American Constitutionalism
3 Universal Arguments in Constitutional Law
4 Universal Arguments in Constitutional Theory
5 A Role for Universal Arguments
6 Conclusion: Universal Rights Discourse
Notes
References
Index
Acknowledgments
This book began as my dissertation at the University of Maryland. I am very grateful to Mark Graber and Wayne McIntosh, my principal teachers and mentors in graduate school, who were continuing sources of advice and encouragement. Herman Belz, Charles Butterworth, and Stephen Elkin also offered critical comments and support.
My colleagues at the University of Richmond have been extraordinarily generous in offering suggestions on reworking the dissertation into a book. Richard Dagger, Dan Palazzolo, and Andrea Simpson read and commented on entire drafts and offered valuable input in too many ways to list.
I also want to express my gratitude to the many others who have read and commented on this work. Ronald Den Otter offered suggestions on matters ranging from the big picture to significant details. Paul Chen, Kevin Cherry, and David Lefkowitz were especially helpful regarding the philosophical portions of the discussion. Many thanks to Lief Carter, Frank Colucci, Justin Dyer, Stephen Feldman, David Forte, Scott Gerber, Corinna Lain, Shmuel Lissek, Gary McDowell, Wayne Moore, John Pagan, and Ellis West, for offering helpful feedback on outlines or chapter drafts at various stages of this project.
I am fortunate to have excellent editors at SUNY Press, Michael Rinella and Ryan Morris. Additional thanks to the editorial assistant, Rafael Chaiken, and to the administrative coordinator at the University of Richmond Political Science Department, Beth Ann Howard, for all of the assistance throughout with formatting and other matters that facilitated completion of the book.
1
Introduction
This book critically examines a fundamental ambiguity in the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence regarding the reasoning behind its constitutional rights decisions. The confusion concerns whether the opinions rest exclusively on the nation’s particular history and context or whether they rest at least in part on a basis that is independent of that history and context. I argue that this ambiguity can be understood as a product of the justices’ flawed response to a central tension in American constitutionalism regarding the foundations of individual rights. After describing a parallel source of confusion in contemporary constitutional theory, I propose an alternative approach to constitutional interpretation, which is designed to provide clearer foundations for constitutional rights decisions, while preserving a meaningful but limited role for universal arguments in constitutional law.
My critique of the court’s constitutional rights jurisprudence is not focused on doctrine, but on the kinds of arguments that the justices use to justify decisions. The American inclination to translate grievances against the government into the language of rights places a premium on understanding the considerations that carry weight in discerning the meaning of constitutional rights. 1 Apart from the outcomes of specific constitutional disputes, it matters a great deal which kinds of arguments we count as legitimate in the debate. 2 The content of judicial opinions is significant not only because it outlines the reasoning supporting the decision at hand, but also because it sends signals to other legal actors regarding the proper approach to interpretation. Moreover, the kinds of arguments we offer in constitutional debate are interconnected with questions about the authority of the Constitution and the exercise of judicial review. 3
This book is concerned especially with one of the most significant questions regarding the arguments that are deemed admissible in constitutional discourse. One kind of argument appeals to the nation’s particular political and legal context, including its history, enactments, and popular understandings, whether past or present (for brevity, referred to here as “particular arguments”). Another kind of argument appeals to considerations that extend beyond the particular context of the United States (referred to here as “universal arguments”). Reliance on particular arguments is pervasive and taken for granted in the American judicial system, which is not surprising given that judges are institutional actors empowered by, and operating within, a particular community governed by its enacted laws. However, since American constitutionalism has viewed rights both as natural principles and as popularly enacted laws, a crucial question is whether universal arguments may figure in the interpretation of rights. The judiciary’s approach to this question is paramount because the courts, for better or worse, have assumed primary responsibility for elaborating the legal effect of constitutional rights. 4 Due to the legal force of precedent, opinions provide cues to litigants, who potentially play an integral role in the shaping of law by crafting arguments that build on the justices’ own reasoning. I focus on the Supreme Court because of its unparalleled influence on constitutional jurisprudence. 5
Constitutional theory often has been framed around dichotomies that fail to capture the vital distinction between universal and particular arguments. Beginning around the mid-1970s, for example, a good deal of scholarship was centered around the distinction between interpretivism and noninterpretivism, with the former referring to the view that constitutional meaning derived exclusively from ideas explicitly or implicitly indicated by the text. 6 Many scholars, though, moved away from this way of framing the debate because they realized that virtually any approach to interpretation could be presented as deriving meaning from the Constitution; the telling disagreements concerned conceptions of the Constitution and how the document connected with outcomes in specific cases. More recently, debate has been framed around the distinction between originalism and nonoriginalism (or “living constitutionalism”). 7 Widely varying approaches, however, can be presented as in some sense relating back to the document’s original meaning. 8 After all, viewing the Constitution as embodying extremely broad principles, such as freedom or equality, affords wide latitude in treating conclusions as following from principles that are original to the document. 9 Thus, theorists who agree on treating broad concepts embedded in the text as the starting point nevertheless may rely on fundamentally different kinds of arguments to draw out the meaning of those concepts. The originalism-versus-nonoriginalism paradigm frames debate around the first reference point in discerning constitutional meaning. Regardless of whether we characterize interpretation as traceable to the text or original meaning, though, we must provide reasons explaining why one interpretation is better than another; the distinction between universal and particular arguments captures a crucial fault line regarding the kinds of reasons that are accepted as legitimate in constitutional debate.
Natural Law and Universal Arguments
The subject of universal arguments is vital to the study of constitutional law and theory regardless of one’s ideology or research agenda. Unfortunately, however, scholars often neglect the contemporary salience of universal arguments. One reason is the marginalization of natural law in contemporary discourse more generally. Universal principles commonly are associated with the concept of “natural law,” 10 the most familiar term referring to norms with a basis independent of any particular community. 11 While natural law ideas have had tremendous influence historically, 12 explicit reliance on natural law or natural rights has declined since the American Founding, especially during the twentieth century. 13 Moreover, reliance on n

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