Free Expression and Judicial Power in Colombia, India, and South Africa
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Published:2020-11-10
Issue:2
Volume:46
Page:331-363
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ISSN:0897-6546
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Container-title:Law & Social Inquiry
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Law Soc. Inq.
Author:
Botero Sandra,Ellett Rachel,Keck Thomas M.,Stohler Stephan
Abstract
The growth of judicial power globally has renewed scholarly debates about who benefits from increased judicial authority. Using original data, we examine the full universe of constitutional free expression decisions issued by three apex courts—in Colombia, India, and South Africa—across three categories of disputes that feature a diverse array of rights claimants. By so doing, we shed light on the limits of elite-driven accounts of judicial empowerment. We find that even where constitutional courts are empowered by elites seeking to advance their own interests, activist courts can develop a practice of rights-protection that benefits a diverse range of less powerful actors. Moreover, regardless of whether the speech claimants are elite or non-elite actors, these three apex courts regularly rule in favor of free expression for dissenting or unorthodox speech acts. In sum, where issues are peripheral to the governing regime’s core interests, relatively powerless actors are sometimes able to use legal processes to advance their rights and interests.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,General Social Sciences
Reference131 articles.
1. Du Plessis v. De Klerk, 1996 (3) SA 850.
2. Raj Kapoor v. Laxman, AIR 1980 SC 605.
3. The Success1 of Judicial Review and Democracy
4. Courts and Power in Latin America and Africa
5. Films and Publications Act, No. 65 of 1996 (South Africa).
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