The Download of the Week is How a Court Becomes Supreme by Richard Albert. Here is the abstract:
High courts around the world have increasingly invalidated constitutional amendments in defense of their view of democracy, answering in the affirmative what was once a paradoxical question with no obvious answer: can a constitutional amendment be unconstitutional? In the United States, however, the Supreme Court has yet to articulate a theory or doctrine of unconstitutional constitutional amendment. Faced with a constitutional amendment that would challenge the liberal democratic values of American constitutionalism — for instance an amendment to restrict political speech or to establish a national religion in the United States — the Court would be left without a strategy or vocabulary to protect the foundations of constitutional democracy in the United States. In this Article prepared for the annual “Constitutional Law Schmooze” at the University of Maryland, I sketch eight strategies the Court could deploy in order to defend of American constitutional democracy — and to make itself truly supreme by immunizing its judgments from reversal by constitutional amendment.
Highly recommended.
