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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Comparative Constitutional Theory
Editor(s): Jacobsohn, Gary; Schor, Miguel
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 9781784719128
Section: Chapter 14
Section Title: Reception, context and identity: a theory of cross-national jurisprudence
Author(s): Klug, Heinz
Number of pages: 24
Abstract/Description:
Abstract: This chapter explores the impact of context in shaping the role of cross-national jurisprudence in national courts and politics. A key element for understanding how context might shape the reception of ‘foreign’ jurisprudence in any jurisdiction is the idea of constitutional identity which articulates the relationship between culture, political economy and law. Through this lens the chapter explores how cross-national jurisprudence is applied in different jurisdictions, at times as a model in support of local developments and at other times as an anti-model explaining why particular claims or arguments are unsuited to the local context. This exploration aspires to build a theory of how cross-national jurisprudence has been shaped by specific judicial and national contexts as well as how different theories that explain how constitutional ideas travel might relate to the use of these rules and ideas in national courts. If the transnational movement of constitutional ideas is recognized, a theory of cross-national jurisprudence provides an additional means of understanding the role of foreign case law in domestic courts. This theory posits that it is through the domestic courts understanding of their own constitutional identity that they translate, apply and hybridize cross-national jurisprudence. A theory of cross-national jurisprudence aspires to add another dimension to our understanding of how constitutional ideas travel.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2018/106.html