Startseite Democratizing the Doctrine of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments: The Puzzle of Amending the Judiciary Branch
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Democratizing the Doctrine of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments: The Puzzle of Amending the Judiciary Branch

  • Catalina Torres-Artunduaga EMAIL logo und Santiago García-Jaramillo ORCID logo EMAIL logo
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 9. Juni 2020

Abstract

The increasing interest of legal academia on the doctrine of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments and its growing enforcement by the judiciary in different jurisdictions has started to normalize a doctrine that was considered controversial and extraordinary. This paper seeks to cast some doubts on the use of this doctrine, especially when the Court that enforces it is the subject of the amendment itself. In the first section it will question the conceptual foundations of the doctrine by recourse to legal theory, focusing not only on the idea of constituent power, but also on those of the rule of law and accountability. In the second section, some comparative cases of unconstitutional constitutional amendments will be analyzed, focusing on those where the judiciary itself was the subject of the amendment. Finally, from a normative and conceptual standpoint, a dialogic approach to the application of the doctrine will be proposed, to mitigate the fact that Constitutional Courts can become an unaccountable accountability-holder.


Corresponding authors: Catalina Torres-Artunduaga, Corte Constitucional de Colombia, Bogota, Cundinamarca, Colombia, E-mail: ; Santiago García-Jaramillo, Corte Constitucional de Colombia, Bogota, Cundinamarca, Colombia; and Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Facultad de Ciencias Juridicas, Bogota, Colombia, E-mail:

We are grateful to Cornell Law School for welcoming Santiago García as visiting scholar in spring 2019 to undertake part of this research. Several versions of this document were reviewed and received the thoughtful comments from Professor Michael C Dorf. We are thankful for his valuable comments, suggestions, and criticism. We would also like to thank Professor Larry Alexander for reviewing the draft and providing valuable comments. We are thankful to our secret peer-reviewer for the comments and suggestions that improved this research; of course any remaining mistake is only ours. We are particularly indebted to Camilo Valdivieso-León for the comments and suggestions, as well as to the young lawyer Natalia Negret-Garrido, and Law Student and TA of Constitutional Law Daniel Currea-Moncada for their superb research assistance.


Published Online: 2020-06-09
Published in Print: 2020-06-25

© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Heruntergeladen am 23.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/icl-2019-0024/html
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