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4 - Objections, Alternatives, and Refinements

from Part I - Symmetry Explained

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2024

Zachary S. Price
Affiliation:
University College of the Law, San Francisco
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Summary

This chapter refines the concept of constitutional symmetry and anticipates some potential objections. Contrary to what skeptics might assert, judges can reliably assess whether particular constitutional understandings are symmetric or not. In addition, favoring symmetry is valuable even though political alignments may shift in the future, and arguable asymmetries in the Constitution itself are not a reason to disfavor symmetric interpretations of provisions whose meaning is debatable. Symmetric interpretation also addresses contemporary challenges better than competing proposals to embrace “proportionality” in rights adjudication, give greater weight to existing precedent, or pursue one contemporary constitutional vision or another in no-holds-barred fashion. For judges who embrace an ethic of symmetric interpretation, a preference for symmetry should hold the greatest purchase in crafting general understandings of discrete constitutional provisions rather than overall interpretive theories or case-specific results, and judges should favor symmetric understandings even if their colleagues do not.

Type
Chapter
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Constitutional Symmetry
Judging in a Divided Republic
, pp. 87 - 112
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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