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The Political Foundations of Judicial Independence in Dictatorship and Democracy (Hardcover)
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The Political Foundations of Judicial Independence in Dictatorship and Democracy (Hardcover)
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This book argues that explaining judicial independence-considered
the fundamental question of comparative law and politics-requires a
perspective that spans the democracy/autocracy divide. Rather than
seeking separate explanations in each regime context, in The
Political Foundations of Judicial Independence in Dictatorship and
Democracy, Brad Epperly argues that political competition is a
salient factor in determining levels of de facto judicial
independence across regime type, and in autocracies a factor of far
greater import. This is because a full "insurance" account of
independence requires looking not only at the likelihood those in
power might lose elections but also the variable risks associated
with such an outcome, risks that are far higher for autocrats.
First demonstrating that courts can and do provide insurance to
former leaders, he then shows via exhaustive cross-national
analyses that competition's effects are far higher in autocratic
regimes, providing the first evidence for the causal nature of the
relationship. Epperly argues that these findings differ from
existing case study research because in democratic regimes, a lack
of political competition means incumbents target the de jure
independence of courts. This argument is illustrated via in-depth
case study of the Hungarian Constitutional Court after the
country's 2010 "constitutional coup," and then tested globally.
Blending formal theory, observational and instrumental variables
models, and elite interviews of leading Hungarian legal scholars
and judges, Epperly offers a new framework for understanding
judicial independence that integrates explanations of both de jure
and de facto independence in both democratic and autocratic
regimes.
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