The Puzzle of State Constitutions

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Buffalo Law Review Pub Date : 2006-03-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.878560
Jim Rossi
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Abstract

In his new book, Interpreting State Constitutions: A Jurisprudence of Function in a Federal System (University of Chicago Press, 2005), James Gardner positions state constitutions and their interpretation within federalism, in contrast to others who see state constitutions as largely independent of the federal constitution or as meriting primacy as their own interpretive texts. As Gardner suggests, understanding state constitutions within the larger national system challenges theorists to focus on the function that state constitutions, and sub-national constitutions more generally, perform within a national system. Gardner argues that a functional approach licenses courts to interpret state constitutions instrumentally to facilitate state resistance to national power. He endorses a rebuttable presumption that construes state judicial power to resist federal authority broadly, envisioning a bolder role than alternative theories for state courts in promoting federalism. After summarizing Gardner's approach, I will discuss two possible objections to it. First, his account is based on the primary goal of federalism as protecting liberty (broadly defined) against intrusion by national authorities. This liberty-based understanding of federalism, however, ignores or downplays that federalism may be understood in ways that are agnostic towards national authority. A broader understanding of federalism would give state courts clearer direction in implementing the goals of federalism and also would allow Gardner to extend his interpretive theory to subnational constitutional interpretation contexts outside of the U.S., where the protection of liberty may not have claim to being a primary historical rational for the recognition of state power. Second, even if we accept Gardner's account of federalism, his approach sees the core interpretive problem of state constitutionalism as centered around judicial power to resist the reach of national power. This court-centered approach downplays other important features of state constitutionalism. For example, as the recent disputes over same-sex marriage in California and Oregon remind us, other branches of government, such as the legislature or executive, could have a superior claim to interpreting a state constitution. Further, in some contexts there are strong reasons for understanding state constitutions as being focused on facilitating, not resisting, federal power. To the extent Gardner's approach views courts as resistors rather than facilitators of national authority, his interpretive tools may be limited in their ability to serve the goals of state constitutions - as where a state branch other than a court resists federal power and courts support it. Gardner's interpretive account does little to help courts solve such conflicts, thus inviting courts and scholars to do further interpretational groundwork. Notwithstanding these concerns, the broader framework Gardner lays out is the strongest starting place for a theory of state constitutional interpretation. His innovations for state constitutionalism allows scholars and courts to conceptualize a state constitution as something more than a positivist text in a jurisdictional vacuum, without rendering state constitutions irrelevant given the existence of national power in a federalist system. Gardner's functionalist approach and presumptions should be taken as a challenge for state courts, even though I believe that a mature enterprise of state constitutional interpretation must do more than adhere to a liberty-based notion of federalism or focus exclusively (or necessarily even primarily) on judicial interpretation.
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州宪法之谜
在他的新书《解读州宪法:联邦制度中的功能法理》(芝加哥大学出版社,2005年)中,詹姆斯·加德纳将州宪法及其解释置于联邦制之中,而其他人则认为州宪法在很大程度上独立于联邦宪法,或者作为他们自己的解释文本享有至高无上的地位。正如加德纳所言,在更大的国家体系中理解州宪法,挑战理论家们关注州宪法,以及更普遍的地方宪法在国家体系中所发挥的作用。加德纳认为,一种功能方法允许法院对州宪法进行工具性解释,以促进州对国家权力的抵抗。他支持一种可反驳的假设,即广泛地解释州司法权以抵抗联邦权威,设想州法院在促进联邦制方面发挥比其他理论更大胆的作用。在总结了加德纳的方法之后,我将讨论两种可能的反对意见。首先,他的描述是基于联邦主义的主要目标,即保护自由(广义上的定义)不受国家当局的侵犯。然而,这种以自由为基础的对联邦制的理解忽视或淡化了联邦制可能以对国家权威不可知的方式被理解。对联邦制更广泛的理解将给州法院在实施联邦制目标时提供更清晰的方向,也将使加德纳将他的解释理论扩展到美国以外的地方宪法解释环境中,在那里,保护自由可能不是承认国家权力的主要历史理性。其次,即使我们接受加德纳对联邦制的解释,他的方法也将州宪政的核心解释问题视为以司法权为中心,以抵制国家权力的扩张。这种以法院为中心的做法淡化了州宪政的其他重要特征。例如,最近加州和俄勒冈州关于同性婚姻的争议提醒我们,其他政府部门,如立法机关或行政部门,在解释州宪法方面可能有更高的权利。此外,在某些情况下,有充分的理由将州宪法理解为侧重于促进而不是抵制联邦权力。在某种程度上,加德纳的方法将法院视为国家权力的反对者而不是促进者,他的解释工具可能在为州宪法的目标服务的能力上受到限制——在州分支机构而不是法院抵制联邦权力而法院支持联邦权力的情况下。加德纳的解释性解释对法院解决此类冲突几乎没有帮助,因此要求法院和学者做进一步的解释基础。尽管存在这些担忧,但加德纳提出的更广泛的框架是州宪法解释理论的最有力的起点。他对州宪法主义的创新使学者和法院能够将州宪法概念化,而不仅仅是司法真空中的实证主义文本,而不会因为联邦制度中存在国家权力而使州宪法变得无关紧要。加德纳的功能主义方法和假设应该被视为对州法院的挑战,尽管我认为,一个成熟的州宪法解释企业必须做的不仅仅是坚持以自由为基础的联邦制概念,或者只关注(或必须甚至主要)司法解释。
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1951, the Buffalo Law Review is a generalist law review that publishes articles by practitioners, professors, and students in all areas of the law. The Buffalo Law Review has a subscription base of well over 600 institutions and individuals. The Buffalo Law Review currently publishes five issues per year with each issue containing approximately four articles and one member-written comment per issue.
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