The Collaborative Constitution
In this book, Aileen Kavanagh offers a fresh account of how we should protect rights in a democracy. Departing from leading theoretical accounts which present the courts and legislature as rivals for constitutional supremacy, Kavanagh argues that protecting rights is a collaborative enterprise between all three branches of government - the Executive, the legislature, and the courts. On a collaborative vision of constitutionalism, protecting rights is neither the solitary task of a Herculean super-judge, nor the dignified pronouncements of an enlightened legislature. Instead, it is a complex, dynamic, and collaborative endeavour, where each branch has a distinct but complementary role to play, whilst engaging with each other in a spirit of comity and mutual respect. Connecting constitutional theory with the practice of protecting rights in a democracy, this book offers an innovative understanding of the separation of powers, grounded in the values and virtues of constitutional collaboration.
- Uses concrete examples from the UK, Canada and other jurisdictions to demonstrate how protecting rights is a collaborative enterprise between all three branches of government
- Offers in-depth analysis of leading theoretical debates and connects these with constitutional practice
- Engages with comparative constitutional law scholarship, showing how the UK system both instantiates and contradicts dominant comparative law perspectives
Product details
June 2025Paperback
9781108717533
508 pages
229 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from May 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction: the Call for Collaboration
- Part I. Institutions and Interactions:
- 1. Constitutionalism beyond manicheanism
- 2. The promise and perils of dialogue
- 3. The case for collaboration
- Part II. Rights in Politics:
- 4. Governing with rights
- 5. Legislating for rights
- 6. Legislated rights: from domination to collaboration
- Part III. Judge as Partner:
- 7. Judge as partner
- 8. The HRA as partnership in progress
- 9. Calibrated constitutional review
- 10. Courting collaborative constitutionalism
- Part IV. Legislatures in Response:
- 11. Underuse of the override
- 12. Declarations, obligations, collaborations
- Conclusion: the currency of collaboration.