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Deliberative constitutionalism ‘without shortcuts’: On the deliberative potential of Cristina Lafont’s judicial review theory

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-04, 02:06 authored by CI Guiffré
Deliberative constitutionalism is one of the most important developments of recent decades in constitutional theory and practice. It is in this context that Cristina Lafont’s Democracy Without Shortcuts was published. Lafont’s theory provides an opportunity to advance the research agenda on deliberative constitutionalism since she offers a deliberative democratic reinterpretation of judicial review. According to this compelling and powerful idea, citizens can challenge any laws in constitutional courts and thus trigger democratic deliberation about rights. With this issue in mind, this article offers a general approach to deliberative constitutionalism, describes Lafont’s reinterpretation of judicial review, and makes explicit five tensions in this reinterpretation of judicial review vis-à-vis deliberative constitutionalism: (1) the default authority in the interim; (2) the procedural type of constitutional amendment; (3) the scope of judicial review; (4) the irrelevance of constitutional amendments; and (5) the scope of constituent power.

History

Preferred citation

Guiffré, C. I. (2023). Deliberative constitutionalism ‘without shortcuts’: On the deliberative potential of Cristina Lafont’s judicial review theory. Global Constitutionalism, 12(2), 215-233. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045381722000211

Journal title

Global Constitutionalism

Volume

12

Issue

2

Publication date

2023-07-01

Pagination

215-233

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2022-12-13

ISSN

2045-3817

eISSN

2045-3825

Language

en