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- Title
CONFLICT AVOIDANCE IN CONSTITUTIONAL LAW.
- Authors
Barzun, Charles L.; Gilbert, Michael D.
- Abstract
Hard cases present a dilemma at the heart of constitutional law. Courts have a duty to decide them--to vindicate rights, to clarify law--but doing so leads to errors (judges do not know the "right answer") and strains the credibility of courts as impartial decision makers. Theories of constitutional adjudication tend to embrace one horn of this dilemma. We explore a principle for deciding hard cases that appreciates both. We argue that courts should decide hard cases against the party who could have more easily avoided the conflict in the first place. This is the conflict-avoidance principle. The principle builds on and systematizes "least cost avoidance" in private law and myriad constitutional doctrines. We apply the principle to several cases, generating insights into discrimination, affirmative action, religion, and so on. The principle represents a form of common-law constitutionalism, and it reveals connections between rights, markets, and State power. It also invites objections, to which we respond. Conflict avoidance is not "value-neutral," and it cannot resolve every hard case. But it can resolve many in a practical way.
- Subjects
CONSTITUTIONAL law; CIVIL law; COMMON law; CONSTITUTIONALISM; ADMINISTRATIVE procedure
- Publication
Virginia Law Review, 2021, Vol 107, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0042-6601
- Publication type
Article