Overruled? Overruled?

Overruled‪?‬

Legislative Overrides, Pluralism, and Contemporary Court-Congress Relations

    • $69.99
    • $69.99

Publisher Description

Since the mid-1970s, Congress has passed hundreds of overrides—laws that explicitly seek to reverse or modify judicial interpretations of statutes. Whether front-page news or not, overrides serve potentially vital functions in American policy-making. Federal statutes—and court cases interpreting them—often require revision. Some are ambiguous, some conflict, and others are obsolete. Under these circumstances, overrides promise Congress a means to repair flawed statutes, reconcile discordant court decisions, and reverse errant judicial interpretations. Overrides also allow dissatisfied litigants to revisit issues and raise concerns in Congress that courts have overlooked.

Of course, promising is one thing and delivering is quite another. Accordingly, this book asks: Do overrides, in fact, effectively clarify the law, reverse objectionable judicial statutory interpretations, and broaden deliberation on contested issues? The answers provide new insights into the complex role of overrides in U.S. policy-making and in the politics of contemporary court-Congress relations.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2004
February 25
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
232
Pages
PUBLISHER
Stanford University Press
SELLER
Stanford University Press
SIZE
15
MB
Making Policy, Making Law Making Policy, Making Law
2004
Varieties of Legal Order Varieties of Legal Order
2017
Finding Pathways Finding Pathways
2014