Abstract

Introduction: сonstitutional interpretation is not a scientific interpretation of a text or texts, known as the constitution. Constitutional interpretation is a norm-creation process; it is a process that establishes the constitution as a norm. Before interpretation occurs, there is no norm and, therefore, there is no constitution. Moreover, this means that interpreters can create constitution as a meaning, as a valid source, as well as they create the hiererchy of norms deriving from the constitution. This paper confronts three appraoches of that topic, namely formalistic (constitutionalism), apparently antiformalistic (neo-constitutionalism) and truly antiformalistic (realism). It discusses the political issue whether what is the most adequate theory if man wants to guarantee democracy and human rights and analyses judicial activism from this perspective. It demonstrates that, using the so-called “reasonable” reasoning grounded in democratic legitimacy, a court created by a constitution can decide not only what constitutional powers can achieve within the constitution, but also what powers (including powers that were formally democratically elected) shall do to enact a new constitution. That is to create a clause of eternity of the valid constitution, inconsistent with any conception of democracy.

Details

Title
Constitutional Interpretation as Norm Creation
Author
Millard, Eric
Section
TOPICAL ISSUE
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Oct 2017
Publisher
Volgograd State University
ISSN
25878115
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English; Russian
ProQuest document ID
2091841846
Copyright
© 2017. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://j.jvolsu.com/index.php/en/archive-en/399-legal-concept-pravovaya-paradigma-vol-16-no-4/topical-issue/1899-millard-e-constitutional-interpretation-as-norm-creation.