Posted by Eric Posner:
The Constitution in 2020?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_26-2009_08_01.shtml#1248723176


   A new [1]book edited by Jack Balkin and Reva Siegel collects essays
   that envision a progressive constitution by 2020. The odd thing about
   the book is that the editors stipulate that Warren Court-style
   judicial activism is dead, while still insisting that a progressive
   constitution in eleven years is possible or even likely. Hence they
   and their contributors have the formidable task of imagining how a
   progressive constitution could emerge without judicial involvement or
   with limited judicial involvement, or even in the teeth of resistance
   by a right-wing supreme court. The upshot is that some contributors
   advocate judicial restraint so that courts will not block progressive
   legislation duly coughed up by legislatures�a backhanded kind of
   progressivism if that counts as progressivism at all�while others
   simply advocate progressive legislation of various flavors without
   saying much about the courts at all, hoping that this legislative
   activity will have constitutional implications. Others address a third
   way, but with mixed results. Adrian Vermeule and I wrote a review for
   The New Republic, which you can read [2]here. Some of Balkin�s blog
   posts on the book can be found [3]here, [4]here, and [5]here.

   If there is any lesson of the last twenty-eight years of supreme court
   jurisprudence, it is that supreme court justices�on left and
   right�have no interest in judicial restraint. Certainly, they have no
   incentive to engage in restraint; no one of any importance advocates
   it. As Obama loads up the federal courts with liberals�and especially
   if he has the chance to appoint a few more supreme court
   justices�academics will need to supply the theories that rationalize
   their decisions, an agenda that is inconsistent with the premise of
   The Constitution in 2020. Young legal academics will flock to the
   standard even if Balkin and Siegel�s contributors stick to their guns.
   The book is mistimed but that was an inevitable consequence of its
   whole conception. Balkin amusingly [6]told NPR, �My view of the
   Supreme Court is sort of like the husband in the French farce��. He�s
   always the last to know.� He thinks that the Court takes its lead from
   political developments including social movements. But a better
   candidate for the husband in the French farce is not the supreme court
   but the legal academy. Nothing to be ashamed of, but academics are
   thinkers, not prophets or even doers. �The owl of Minerva takes flight
   at dusk.�

References

   1. 
http://www.amazon.com/Constitution-2020-Jack-Balkin/dp/0195387961/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1248722744&sr=8-1
   2. 
http://www.tnr.com/booksarts/story.html?id=957c4c80-e622-44de-a31d-745196448fa8
   3. http://balkin.blogspot.com/2009/05/constitution-in-2020-published-by.html
   4. http://balkin.blogspot.com/2009/06/supreme-court-as-husband-in-french.html
   5. 
http://balkin.blogspot.com/2009/05/return-of-liberal-constitutionalism.html
   6. http://balkin.blogspot.com/2009/06/supreme-court-as-husband-in-french.html

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