You may have noticed that courts have and wield power. This judicial power bears on questions big and small. Courts have decided who qualifies as Jewish in Israel, determined whether wearing a headcover at universities was allowed in Turkey, and, in Hungary, derailed a government’s International Monetary Fund loan, to cite just three examples of many. This course introduces you to the sources and manifestations of judicial power, and how judicial power influences policy and politics. It does so from a comparative perspective. Understanding judicial power in one context or within one set of national borders shall illuminate the paths taken or avoided in another setting, or in a dramatically altered environment (as we will see with sovereignty-challenging “supra-national” courts at the end of the course). The class is a core course in the Law, Societies and Justice program.
We begin by critically examining the (ideal) functions of courts. We then turn to constitutional politics surveying some various origins and conceptions of judicial review. Next, we study the development and diverse paths of constitutional courts in countries that are undergoing transitions to democracy, transitioning to some as yet undefined system, as well as those in non-democracies. The final section of the course is devoted to law and courts in supranational and international contexts. You will explore an increasingly powerful supranational court, the European Court of Justice, which we will compare with the European Court of Human Rights. The course concludes with an examination of a relatively young international court that is in the news a lot recently: the International Criminal Court.
The course is online and asynchronous. The grade will be based on one mid-term paper, one research papers, and much shorter participation assignments.
Required Reading: All required readings will be posted for free on Canvas. There are no required textbooks.