Posted by Eric Posner:
The Foreign Law Debate: Part II. 
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_21-2009_06_27.shtml#1245939147


   Continued from [1]here.

   What divides the two groups in the foreign law debate? I will make a
   few conjectures, again with the proviso that I am supplying broad
   generalizations and do not mean to attribute any of these views to any
   particular person (including Koh) on either side of the debate.
   Doctrine. Much of the debate in the academic literature has been
   carried out at the level of doctrine. The Bradley and Goldsmith
   article I mentioned in my previous post made a doctrinal argument,
   about what courts really do or should do; their critics took issue on
   these grounds. In his series of posts criticizing Koh, [2]Ed Whelan
   also made doctrinal arguments. Whelan�s many critics made doctrinal
   arguments (you can find many of their posts at the [3]Opinio Juris
   blog). My view is that doctrine does not get you very far. There are
   too few cases, going in all directions. A dull, dispiriting, and
   inevitable debate about what the founders believed has gone nowhere.
   The passions involved tell you that more is going on than a
   disagreement about what the sources say.
   Politics. There is a clear left/right divide, with the left favoring
   the foreign law position. (In academia, �right� means something like
   center. Outside academia, though, �right� really does mean right, far-
   as well as near-.) Conservatives suspect that people on the left like
   foreign and international law because those people believe that these
   bodies of law tend to be more left-wing than American law is. (Whether
   international/foreign law is in fact farther to the left than American
   law is a question best left for another day. For too many people, the
   rest of the world consists of Europe rather than Iran, China, or
   Russia.) They note that people like Koh spend a lot of time discussing
   European attitudes toward the death penalty but not the European laws
   banning political parties or the worldwide trend toward restrictions
   on �defamation of religion.� More is going on, however. These
   political positions reflect broader ideological and institutional
   commitments.
   Institutional commitments. The left and right disagree about more
   fundamental issues, such as constitutional interpretation; these
   issues are implicated by the foreign law debate. Conservatives see an
   attack on originalism, which leaves little room for foreign law, and
   what for them is the typical liberal�s excessive faith in the
   judiciary and distrust of the executive. The pro-foreign law positions
   are mostly about how the courts can take an active role in promoting
   international law. In their darkest nightmares, conservatives see a
   new generation of liberal judges selectively importing liberal norms
   into American law by citing foreign and international law�just when
   the conservatives thought they were on the verge of winning the debate
   on originalism.
   American exceptionalism. Deeper still is the question of how Americans
   see themselves in the world. For conservatives, America is the
   exceptional nation. Other states should imitate the United States, not
   the other way around. Conservative or not, this is also mainstream
   public opinion. The pro-foreign law people, like most academics,
   reject American exceptionalism: the United States is an ordinary
   nation�good in some ways, bad in others. The United States needs to be
   disciplined and constrained, so that it is compelled to take into
   account the values and interests of other people in the world. The
   executive and legislative branches have no incentive to do this
   because only Americans can vote in U.S. elections. For this reason,
   only the courts, with their unelected, globe-trotting judges, can put
   a break on American exceptionalism.

   It is this last issue which has made the foreign law debate
   politically explosive. Liberal academics have detected in the courts
   occasional dim glimmerings of awareness that the United States does
   not treat foreigners fairly. The academics seek to nurture this little
   plant, but the real basis for their view is not doctrinal but
   cosmopolitan�the particular cosmopolitan view that the fact of one�s
   birth on one side of a border or another is morally arbitrary. This
   view throws democracy itself�at the national level�into question and
   pulls the rug out from under one of the chief rationales for
   originalism and for judicial restraint�that they prevent judges from
   interfering with democratic outcomes. Modern democratic theorists
   believe that foreigners should have a say in American policy, at least
   to the extent that American policy affects them. Their followers in
   the legal academy have taken the next logical step, concluding that if
   the political branches will not give foreigners a vote, or at least
   take their views more seriously than in the past, then the courts must
   figure out some other way to protect foreign interests. Incorporating
   foreign and international law is the way to do this.

   The problem for these people, and a problem that conservatives have
   been quick to exploit, is that cosmopolitanism has little popularity
   among Americans. Koh himself has resolved this dilemma simply by
   claiming that whatever is cosmopolitan is in America�s interest�that
   the American and global interest converge in a standard set of
   Democratic party policy prescriptions. But few will be persuaded by
   this argument.

   The foreign law position, then, is politically vulnerable, while at
   the same time philosophically coherent and highly appealing to
   liberals and indeed sophisticated people of other political stripes
   who dislike America�s thuggish behavior on the international stage. In
   this way, it has a lot in common with Warren Court constitutionalism
   and, depending on how political winds blow, may someday likewise enjoy
   a moment in the sun.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/posts/1245901072.shtml
   2. http://www.eppc.org/publications/pubID.3793/pub_detail.asp
   3. http://opiniojuris.org/

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