Fundamental Law, Fundamental Rights, and Constitutional Time

62 Pages Posted: 4 Mar 2023

See all articles by David McNamee

David McNamee

Sanford Heisler Sharp LLP; Princeton University - Department of Politics; State University of New York (SUNY) - Baldy Center for Law and Social Policy

Date Written: December 31, 2022

Abstract

This Article lays the groundwork for a novel theory giving citizens pride of place in constitutional interpretation—as voters and jurors, deliberators and disobedients, and more. My account adopts different answers to two basic questions that divide it from other prevailing theories: first, that citizens, rather than judges, shoulder primary responsibility for interpreting principles of fundamental law; and second, that fidelity to their Constitution requires, above all, keeping faith with their fellow citizens across constitutional time. This approach conceives of the Citizens’ Constitution as an enduring social contract. In setting the stage for this account, I advance several related claims that carry independent weight as theoretical contributions. First, the Citizens’ Constitution as Fundamental Law is a distinct and vitally important domain of constitutional principles, which are accessible and justifiable to citizens’ common reason, and which ground their pervasive disagreements. Second, propositions of fundamental law can be understood in another register—as propositions about constitutional time, relating the constitutional present to its past and future. Third, these propositions about constitutional time are moral arguments of a certain kind: arguments about constitutional justice, about what we share as citizens and participants in an enduring enterprise and what makes the Constitution worthy of our allegiance. Finally, together these claims point the way to a recognitional account of fundamental rights that deepens their connection to constitutional justice, even as it generates a measure of commonality across pitched value disagreements.

Keywords: Constitutional Theory, Citizenship, Rights

Suggested Citation

McNamee, David, Fundamental Law, Fundamental Rights, and Constitutional Time (December 31, 2022). Indiana Law Review, Vol. 55, No. 2, 2022, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4373408

David McNamee (Contact Author)

Sanford Heisler Sharp LLP ( email )

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Princeton University - Department of Politics ( email )

State University of New York (SUNY) - Baldy Center for Law and Social Policy ( email )

School of Law
528 O'Brian Hall
Buffalo, NY 14260-1100
United States
6153301521 (Phone)

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