Constitutional theory, Earl Maltz argues, has reached a critical
impasse marked by a largely unproductive stalemate between
originalists and nonoriginalists regarding the proper role of
judicial review. It's time, he says, for both sides to rethink
their positions if any hope for a more viable model of judicial
review is to be realized. This book is his answer to the dilemma.
Maltz reorients the debate between originalists (those who
believe that judges should be bound by the original understanding
in constitutional adjudication) and nonoriginalists (those who
believe the original understanding should not be binding).
Advocates of both sides, he shows, generally proceed from three
misguided premises: that originalism is linked to both judicial
deference and political conservatism; that originalism is the sole
alternative to some less deferential approach to judicial review;
and that the question of "legitimacy" is the central unresolved
issue facing nonoriginalist theorists. This book challenges each of
these premises.
Maltz's contribution is threefold. First, going beyond the
influential writings of authors such as Raoul Berger and Robert
Bork, he reformulates the justification for originalist review and
refines originalist theory itself. Second, he argues that a pure
originalist approach mandates excessive judicial intervention under
the Constitution; as he points out, the same argument that
justifies interventionism in individual rights cases might also
require the court to limit sharply the power of the federal
government to regulate the economy. Third, he shows that--even
leaving aside problems of legitimacy--most nonoriginalist theorists
have failed to provide a sufficient functional justification for
nonoriginalist intervention.
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