Executive Primacy, Populism, and Public Law
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Authors
Cane, Peter
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Volume Title
Publisher
Pacific Rim Law and Policy Journal
Abstract
As the articles in this Symposium suggest, populism and
authoritarianism present ongoing challenges not only to liberal democracy but also to its
legal underpinnings. Manipulation, avoidance, evasion, and outright rejection of the
constitutional and legal frameworks of liberal democracy are features of populist
authoritarianism. The basic argument of this article is that liberal-democratic public law
and legal theory no longer satisfy human needs and desires because they were conceived
in worlds that no longer exist, when the main pre-occupation was to secure liberty, not
equality. The aim of the article is to explain the inherited structure of our public law and
theory and the main events and developments that have produced this mismatch between
public law and social aspiration.
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Washington International Law Journal
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Free Access via publisher website
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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