No.1/03
Author:
Mitchel Lasser
Title:
Anticipating Three Models of Judicial
Control, Debate and Legitimacy: The European Court of Justice, the Cour de
cassation and the United States Supreme Court
Abstract:
This paper excerpts and summarizes
Professor Lasser's forthcoming book comparing the argumentative practices of
the European Court of Justice, the French Cour de cassation and the United
States Supreme Court. It argues that the Cour de cassation depends primarily on
an institutional approach for generating judicial control, debate and
legitimacy; that the Supreme Court depends primarily on an argumentative
approach; and that the ECJ depends on a conglomerate mode that pastes together
facets of the institutional and argumentative approaches.
The
paper claims that the discursive practices, institutional arrangements and
conceptual structures of these three courts are best understood by focusing on
a fundamental structural feature that distinguishes between the French and
American models of judicial discourse. Stated in the simplest terms, this
difference boils down to the fact that the French model bifurcates its
argumentation into two distinct discursive spheres (only one of which - the
syllogistic French judicial decision - is consistently made public), while the
American model integrates its two modes of argument in one and the same public
space, namely, in the judicial decision itself. The European Court of Justice
maintains the bifurcated French discursive model, but softens it by adopting a
systemic, "meta" teleological form of argumentation that it deploys publicly in
both its judicial decisions and its AG Opinions.
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