Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes

Democratic backsliding and the resurgence of authoritarianism have led to the prevalence of hybrid regimes in the twenty-first century. This ambiguous kind of authoritarian regime has complicated the traditional democracy-versus-pure-authoritarian-regime divide. Hybrid regime is the new game in town...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yam, J
Other Authors: Barber, N
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
_version_ 1826308918739992576
author Yam, J
author2 Barber, N
author_facet Barber, N
Yam, J
author_sort Yam, J
collection OXFORD
description Democratic backsliding and the resurgence of authoritarianism have led to the prevalence of hybrid regimes in the twenty-first century. This ambiguous kind of authoritarian regime has complicated the traditional democracy-versus-pure-authoritarian-regime divide. Hybrid regime is the new game in town, but can constitutional courts promote democracy in these contexts? And if so, how? Cautiously optimistic about the potential of constitutional courts, the thesis argues that this is not an empty wish. Constitutional courts are not effective substitutions of the political process. Nevertheless, they have a modest but meaningful role to play in advancing democratic norms in a hybrid regime. The thesis provides a valuable examination of hybrid regimes and constitutional courts, and offers theories and tools that aim to guide democratically committed judges in hybrid regimes. These prescriptions are not limited to the adjudicative context, and cover what judges as social actors can and should do as well. While normative theoretical in substance, the thesis is informed by comparative insights and empirical studies, and draws heavily on a wide range of disciplines including law, political theory and science, sociology and psychology. The thesis hopes to illuminate and inspire judges who are operating in politically challenging environments.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:26:25Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:e6d8c088-e75a-40c8-9320-cac531d69802
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:26:25Z
publishDate 2022
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e6d8c088-e75a-40c8-9320-cac531d698022022-11-15T17:36:04ZConstitutional courts in hybrid regimesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:e6d8c088-e75a-40c8-9320-cac531d69802Constitutional lawEnglishHyrax Deposit2022Yam, JBarber, NDemocratic backsliding and the resurgence of authoritarianism have led to the prevalence of hybrid regimes in the twenty-first century. This ambiguous kind of authoritarian regime has complicated the traditional democracy-versus-pure-authoritarian-regime divide. Hybrid regime is the new game in town, but can constitutional courts promote democracy in these contexts? And if so, how? Cautiously optimistic about the potential of constitutional courts, the thesis argues that this is not an empty wish. Constitutional courts are not effective substitutions of the political process. Nevertheless, they have a modest but meaningful role to play in advancing democratic norms in a hybrid regime. The thesis provides a valuable examination of hybrid regimes and constitutional courts, and offers theories and tools that aim to guide democratically committed judges in hybrid regimes. These prescriptions are not limited to the adjudicative context, and cover what judges as social actors can and should do as well. While normative theoretical in substance, the thesis is informed by comparative insights and empirical studies, and draws heavily on a wide range of disciplines including law, political theory and science, sociology and psychology. The thesis hopes to illuminate and inspire judges who are operating in politically challenging environments.
spellingShingle Constitutional law
Yam, J
Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title_full Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title_fullStr Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title_full_unstemmed Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title_short Constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
title_sort constitutional courts in hybrid regimes
topic Constitutional law
work_keys_str_mv AT yamj constitutionalcourtsinhybridregimes