Available Formats
Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law: Constitutions in an Age of Crisis
By (Author) Dr Alan Greene
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
5th April 2018
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Law: Human rights and civil liberties
Comparative law
342.0628
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
522g
Permanent States of Emergency and the Rule of Law explores the impact that oxymoronic permanent states of emergency have on the validity and effectiveness of constitutional norms and, ultimately, constituent power. It challenges the idea that many constitutional orders are facing permanent states of emergency due to the objective nature of threats facing modern states today, arguing instead that the nature of a threat depends upon the subjective assessment of the decision-maker. In light of this, it further argues that robust judicial scrutiny and review of these decisions is required to ensure that the temporariness of the emergency is a legal question and that the validity of constitutional norms is not undermined by their perpetual suspension. It does this by way of a narrower conception of the rule of law than standard accounts in favour of judicial review of emergency powers in the literature, which tend to be based on the normative value of human rights. In so doing it seeks to refute the fundamental constitutional challenge posed by Carl Schmitt: that all state power cannot be constrained by law.
Greenes is a timely book addressing issues which so obviously affect legal systems across the world. It is theoretically robust. It is intellectually honest and willing to engage with counter-positions. It sets a challenge and rises to it. -- Fergal Davis, Kings College, London * The Irish Jurist *
Alan Greene is an Assistant Professor in Law at Durham University.