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20. The Netherlands: Toward a Form of Judicial Review

  • Jan Ten Kate and Peter J. Van Koppen
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The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
This chapter is in the book The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
© 2022 New York University Press, New York, USA

© 2022 New York University Press, New York, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Acknowledgments vii
  3. Contents ix
  4. 1. The Global Expansion of Judicial Power: The Judicialization of Politics 1
  5. PART I CONCEPTS AND CONDITIONS
  6. 2. When the Courts Go Marching In 11
  7. 3. Why the Expansion of Judicial Power? 27
  8. PART II WESTERN COMMON-LAW DEMOCRACIES
  9. The United States and the United Kingdom
  10. 4. The United States 39
  11. 5. The United Kingdom 67
  12. Australia
  13. 6. Judicial Intrusion into the Australian Cabinet 79
  14. 7. The Executive, the Judiciary, and Immigration Appeals in Australia 101
  15. Canada
  16. 8. Social Progress and Judicial Power in Canada 115
  17. 9. Canadian Constraints on Judicialization from Without 137
  18. PART III EUROPEAN ROMANO-GERMANIC DEMOCRACIES
  19. Cross-National Analyses
  20. 10. Training the Legal Professions in Italy, France and Germany 151
  21. 11. The Judicialization of Judicial Salary Policy in Italy and the United States 181
  22. 12. Complex Coordinate Construction in France and Germany 205
  23. The Italian Case
  24. 13. Italy: A Peculiar Case 231
  25. 14. Judicial Independence and PolicyMaking in Italy 243
  26. 15. Legal Politics Italian Style 261
  27. France and Germany
  28. 16. France 287
  29. 17. Germany 307
  30. 18. Reunification and Prospects for Judicialization in Germany 325
  31. The Smaller Democracies
  32. 19. Sweden 343
  33. 20. The Netherlands: Toward a Form of Judicial Review 369
  34. 21. The Judiciary and Politics in Malta 381
  35. 22. Israel 403
  36. PART IV RAPIDLY CHANGING NATIONS
  37. Post -Communist States
  38. 23. The Attempt to Institute Judicial Review in the Former USSR 417
  39. 24. Legal Reform and the Expansion of Judicial Power in Russia 441
  40. Troubled Democracies
  41. 25. The Philippines and Southeast Asia 461
  42. 26. The Judicialization of Namibian Politics 485
  43. CONCLUSION
  44. 27. Judicialization and the Future of Politics and Policy 513
  45. Contributors 529
  46. Index 535
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