在公民自由主义与行政单边主义之间:战时权利的制度过程研究

Q1 Social Sciences Theoretical Inquiries in Law Pub Date : 2020-12-31 DOI:10.2202/1565-3404.1084
S. Issacharoff, R. Pildes
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在公民人身安全面临更高风险的时期,民主国家不可避免地会重新调整其机构和程序,并重新解释现有的法律规范,与“正常”时期相比,更加强调安全,而不是个人自由。本文探讨了美国法院在危机时期如何应对公民自由与国家安全之间的紧张关系。这段历史表明,法院拒绝了在这些问题上形成公共话语特征的两种极端立场。公民自由主义者认为,在这个时代,政治机构太容易被激情、歇斯底里和自我利益所控制,因此法院应该在保护自由方面发挥核心作用。行政单边主义者认为,行政部门的独特特征,如果断、获取信息和效率,必须在这些时刻占据主导地位,以至于很少有检查(如果有的话)应该限制行政特权。奇怪的是,公民自由主义者和行政单边主义者在以下观点上找到了隐含的共识:在战争时期,法院往往不会在监督行政权力方面发挥重要作用。我们的观点恰恰相反:从历史上看,美国在战争时期确实存在重要的司法审查宪法传统。但这种审查并不采取法院对自由的内容或其他声称的宪法权利作出一级实质性判决的形式。它也不采取司法评估的形式,评估行政部门的国家安全主张有多重要或有多可信。相反,司法监督的重点是保持就这些问题作出决策的体制结构和程序。司法的作用集中在二级问题上,即是否使用了正确的制度程序来作出有争议的决定,而不是基本权利的内容应该是什么。这种做法历来拒绝或抵制大多数行政单边主义的主张。当法院支持政府的行为时,他们只有在国会和行政部门都支持该行为的判决之后才会这样做。这种方法也否定了公民自由主义的框架。当法院找到双边机构的支持时,他们通常会接受关于自由和安全应该如何权衡的共同政治判断。通过关注国会对紧急措施的认可,法院为以国家安全名义采取的行动建立了广泛的政治问责制。我们认为,即使在某些情况下,国会的认可比实际的更明显,对这种修辞辩护结构的司法维护也维持了对政治结构的理想理解。由于总统和国会在总统制而不是议会制下来自不同的政治选区,我们还提出了一个问题,即美国对这些问题的司法方法是否应限于行政权和立法权分立的政治制度。
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Between Civil Libertarianism and Executive Unilateralism: An Institutional Process Approach to Rights during Wartime
Times of heightened risk to the physical safety of their citizens inevitably cause democracies to recalibrate their institutions and processes and to reinterpret existing legal norms, with greater emphasis on security, and less on individual liberty, than in "normal" times. This article explores the ways in which the American courts have responded to the tension between civil liberties and national security in times of crises. This history illustrates that courts have rejected both of the two polar positions that characterize public discourse on these issues. Civil libertarians argue that political bodies are too easily gripped by passions, hysteria, and self-interest in these times and that courts therefore ought to play a central role in protecting liberty. Executive unilateralists argue that the qualities that uniquely characterize the executive branch, such as decisiveness, access to information, and efficiency, must become so dominant in these moments that few checks, if any, should constrain executive prerogatives. Oddly, civil libertarians and executive unilateralists find implicit consensus in the view that, in times of war, courts have tended not to play a significant role in overseeing executive power. We argue to the contrary: historically, a significant constitutional tradition of judicial scrutiny in the United States during times of war does exist. But this scrutiny does not take the form of courts making first-order substantive judgments about the content of liberty or other claimed constitutional rights. Nor does it take the form of judicial assessment of how significant or credible the national security claims of the executive branch might be. Instead, judicial oversight has been focused on preserving the institutional structures and processes through which decisionmaking on these issues takes place. The judicial role has centered on the second-order question of whether the right institutional processes have been used to make the decisions at issue, rather than on what the content of the underlying rights ought to be. This approach has historically rejected or resisted most claims of executive unilateralism. When courts have upheld the government's actions, they have done so only after a judgment that Congress, as well as the executive, has endorsed the action. This approach has also rejected the civil libertarian framework. When courts find bilateral institutional endorsement, they have typically accepted the joint political judgment of how liberty and security tradeoffs ought to be made. By focusing on congressional endorsement of emergency measures, the courts have created a broad-based political accountability for the actions taken in the name of national security. We suggest that even if congressional endorsement is more apparent than real in some of these contexts, the judicial maintenance of this structure of rhetorical justifications sustains desirable understandings of political structure. Because the President and Congress draw from different political constituencies in a presidential rather than a parliamentary system, we also raise questions about whether the American judicial approach to these questions should be limited to political systems with separated executive and legislative powers.
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来源期刊
Theoretical Inquiries in Law
Theoretical Inquiries in Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.50
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0.00%
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23
期刊介绍: Theoretical Inquiries in Law is devoted to the application to legal thought of insights developed by diverse disciplines such as philosophy, sociology, economics, history and psychology. The range of legal issues dealt with by the journal is virtually unlimited, subject only to the journal''s commitment to cross-disciplinary fertilization of ideas. We strive to provide a forum for all those interested in looking at law from more than a single theoretical perspective and who share our view that only a multi-disciplinary analysis can provide a comprehensive account of the complex interrelationships between law, society and individuals
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