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The priority of liberty : Rawls and "tiers of scrutiny"

In Thom Brooks & Martha Craven Nussbaum (eds.), Rawls's Political Liberalism. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 175-202 (2015)

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  1. The fluidity of political legitimacy: On Michelman’s C onstitutional E ssentials.Andrew Koppelman - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (7):1064-1075.
    What can constitutional law contribute to the justification of political power? Quite a lot, Frank Michelman argues in Constitutional Essentials. It can establish a publicly known framework for addressing the deep disagreements that are inevitable in any free society. Michelman’s analysis has powerful attractions, but he overclaims the clarity with which rights can be defended within the Rawlsian framework he contemplates. The interests that courts must defend will vary from one society to another, depending on what the locals happen to (...)
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  • Response.Frank I. Michelman - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (7):1155-1171.
    This response to commentaries composing a symposium on my book ‘Constitutional Essentials: On the Constitutional Theory of Political Liberalism’ (2022) includes restatements of some major themes from the book, as prompted by thoughts from the commentators.
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  • Justification by constitution and tiered constitutional design?Rosalind Dixon - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (7):1051-1063.
    Constitutions serve to legitimate the exercise of public power. Yet their scope is often subject to reasonable disagreement among citizens in a democracy. As Frank Michelman notes, this points to an understanding of democratic constitutions as a framework for contestation, rather than entrenched set of binding legal constraints. This understanding, however, arguably overlooks the difference between ordinary constitutional norms and those that protect the ‘democratic minimum core’. For the latter, there is far less scope for reasonable disagreement, and greater prudential (...)
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