美国公法的现代化:医疗改革与大众宪政。

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences Stanford Law Review Pub Date : 2014-04-01
David A Super
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《患者保护和平价医疗法案》(ACA)在重要方面改变了美国公法,其影响远远超出了医疗保健。与全国独立企业联合会诉西贝利厄斯案带来的理论转变一样重要的是,如果ACA对公法的结构性改变变得根深蒂固,它们可能会被证明要重要得多。围绕平价医疗法案的斗争引发了一种“宪法时刻”,自禁酒令惨败以来,这种时刻在很大程度上取代了宪法第五条的正式修正程序。最高法院参与了这一过程,但这些宪法时刻的结果的决定性和持久性源于广泛的公众参与。不管最高法院的裁决和2012年大选的结果如何,在我们人民做出明确的决定之前,联邦和各州关于是否实施或搁置平价医疗法案的斗争将继续有增无减。ACA的成败将决定未来几十年指导联邦制、社会保险、税收政策和私有化发展的基本原则。在每一个领域,新政都给我们留下了传统主义社会价值观与经济效率和利益集团自由主义的现代化规范之间的微妙调和。这种平衡受到越来越大的压力,个别法律比新政更强烈地拒绝传统。但如果没有广泛的民众参与,就不可能确立明确的新原则。ACA的巩固将提升整个公法领域的技术官僚规范,这是自民权革命以来我国基本法的第一次变化。ACA的失败将使个人主义的、道德主义的、新政前的规范重新焕发活力,并允许反对者尝试一场反对技术官僚的反革命。
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The modernization of American public law: health care reform and popular constitutionalism.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) transformed U.S. public law in crucial ways extending far beyond health care. As important as were the doctrinal shifts wrought by National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, the ACA's structural changes to public law likely will prove far more important should they become entrenched. The struggle over the ACA has triggered the kind of "constitutional moment" that has largely replaced Article V's formal amendment procedure since the Prohibition fiasco. The Court participates in this process, but the definitive and enduring character of these constitutional moments' outcomes springs from broad popular engagement. Despite the Court's ruling and the outcome of the 2012 elections, the battle over whether to implement or shelve the ACA will continue unabated, both federally and in the states, until We the People render a clear decision. Whether the ACA survives or fails will determine the basic principles that guide the development of federalism, social insurance, tax policy, and privatization for decades to come. In each of these areas, the New Deal bequeathed us a delicate accommodation between traditionalist social values and modernizing norms of economic efficiency and interest group liberalism. This balance has come under increasing stress, with individual laws rejecting tradition far more emphatically than the New Deal did. But absent broad popular engagement, no definitive new principles could be established. The ACA's entrenchment would elevate technocratic norms across public law, the first change of our fundamental law since the civil rights revolution. The ACA's failure would rejuvenate individualistic, moralistic, pre-New Deal norms and allow opponents to attempt a counterrevolution against technocracy.

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