Looking for the Public in Public Law

University of Chicago Law Review, forthcoming

Columbia Public Law Research Paper No. 4936682

56 Pages Posted: 23 Sep 2024

See all articles by Nikhil Menezes

Nikhil Menezes

Princeton University - Department of Politics

David Pozen

Columbia University - Law School

Date Written: October 02, 2024

Abstract

The “public” is everywhere and nowhere in contemporary public law. Everywhere, in that the term is constantly invoked to justify and explain existing arrangements. Nowhere, in that serious attempts to identify a relevant public and elicit its input are few and far between. Scholars and officials depict the American public as playing myriad roles in governance—checking, guiding, approving, repudiating—without offering an account of how public preferences are formed or how they exercise influence on the questions of interest.

This Article seeks to identify and call attention to the foundational dilemmas underlying this disconnect, to clarify their normative contours and intellectual history, and to propose a pragmatic response—grounded in the recovery of the public’s role as an author and not just a monitor of public law. We first detail how public law’s stylized appeals to the public reflect analytic imprecision and inattention to the values, views, and votes of actual people. We then show how these omissions and obfuscations leave public law vulnerable to critiques from both the left and the right, which have been gaining force on account of broad transformations in the administrative state, social structure, and public sphere. It may not be possible to resolve these dilemmas fully or to redeem the public writ large as an agent in public law. But drawing on recent political science work on deliberative democracy, we outline a research and reform agenda for identifying, constructing, and empowering coherent publics (plural) capable of legitimating legal change.

Keywords: public opinion, public interest, public participation, constitutional law, administrative law, deliberative democracy, monitory democracy, mini-publics, citizens' assemblies, Lippmann, Dewey

Suggested Citation

Menezes, Nikhil and Pozen, David E., Looking for the Public in Public Law (October 02, 2024). University of Chicago Law Review, forthcoming , Columbia Public Law Research Paper No. 4936682, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4936682 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4936682

Nikhil Menezes

Princeton University - Department of Politics ( email )

United States

David E. Pozen (Contact Author)

Columbia University - Law School ( email )

435 West 116th Street
New York, NY 10025
United States

HOME PAGE: http://www.law.columbia.edu/faculty/david-pozen

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