Judicial Roles in Global Perspective
Diana Kapiszewski
In the early twenty-first century, courts have become
versatile actors in the governance of many constitutional democracies, and
judges play a variety of roles in politics and policy making. Assembling papers
penned by academic specialists on high courts around the world, and presented
during a year-long Andrew W. Mellon Foundation John E. Sawyer Seminar at the
University of California, Berkeley, this volume maps the roles in governance
that courts are undertaking and the ways they have come to matter in the
political life of their nations. It offers empirically rich accounts of
dramatic judicial actions in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East and Asia,
exploring the political conditions and judicial strategies that have fostered
those assertions of power and evaluating when and how courts' performance of
new roles has been politically consequential. By focusing on the content and
consequences of judicial power, the book advances a new agenda for the
comparative study of courts.