The Use of Foreign Law in Constitutional Interpretation
In: in Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law (Eds., a. Sajó and M. Rosenfeld), Oup, 2012.
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In: in Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law (Eds., a. Sajó and M. Rosenfeld), Oup, 2012.
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In a statewide referendum, voters approved a change to the Oklahoma state constitution, adopting restrictions on state judges' ability to use of foreign law. Dubbed the "Save Our State" ("SOS") Amendment, the measure forbade Oklahoma state judges from considering or using international or foreign law, except where required to do so by federal statutes or treaties. The SOS Amendment particularly prohibited the use of Sharia law. Similar measures (usually without specific references to Sharia law) have been proposed or adopted elsewhere. These Amendments, as well as other developments in American politics, reflect a vigorous new strain of a deep-seated tendency in the political, legal, and cultural thought of the United States: a commitment to U.S. national "exceptionalism." This article examines the idea of U.S. legal exceptionalism in the context of the recent wave of state Anti-Foreign-or-International-Law ("AFIL") laws. It focuses on the role of exceptionalism and the impact AFIL statutes could have on U.S. courts.
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In: Michigan State Law Review, Forthcoming
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In: European Review of Private Law, Band 21, Heft 3, S. 683-685
ISSN: 0928-9801
In: International legal materials: ILM, Band 9, Heft 3, S. 477-483
ISSN: 1930-6571
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 54, Heft 1, S. 162-163
ISSN: 2161-7953
In: Courts and Comparative Law, S. 536-551
In: The British yearbook of international law, Band 55, Heft 1, S. 111-131
ISSN: 2044-9437
In: 2007 Utah Law Review 167 (2007)
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In: Gideon Sapir, Daphne Barak-Erez & Aharon Barak (Eds.), Israeli Constitutional Law In The Making 151 (Hart 2013)
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In: Irish Journal of Legal Studies Vol. 4(1), 2014
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This book chapter proposes a typology of the different ways that domestic courts may use foreign law — as binding law, as a nonbinding norm, as an interpretive aid, as a basis for functional comparison, and as factual information — and it explores the implications of these different uses for judicial internalization of external norms. The chapter argues that domestic courts play a key role in transnational processes of norm internalization and diffusion, and it draws on political science scholarship to develop hypotheses about how different uses of foreign law by domestic courts affect these processes.
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This book chapter proposes a typology of the different ways that domestic courts may use foreign law — as binding law, as a nonbinding norm, as an interpretive aid, as a basis for functional comparison, and as factual information — and it explores the implications of these different uses for judicial internalization of external norms. The chapter argues that domestic courts play a key role in transnational processes of norm internalization and diffusion, and it draws on political science scholarship to develop hypotheses about how different uses of foreign law by domestic courts affect these processes.
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