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				<title><![CDATA[The Indiana Law Journal &amp; The Indiana Law Journal Supplement - Articles - ]]></title>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Law &amp; Politics: The Case Against Judicial Review of Direct Democracy]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.indianalawjournal.org/articles/40/1/Law-amp-Politics-The-Case-Against-Judicial-Review-of-Direct-Democracy/Page1.html</link>
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<p>This Note argues against strong judicial review of direct
democracy. Judicial review has been the dominant answer in legal scholarship
for the perceived danger of majoritarian tyranny in any democratic system. But
Progressive movements throughout American history, as well as a growing number
of respected law professors, have questioned the assumption that courts or even
legislatures are better protectors of discrete and insular minorities than the
rights-respecting populace. Although the vast majority of legal scholarship
still displays a crippling cynicism about popular competence, this view cannot
continue to block progressives from participating in initiative campaigns.
Exclusive resort to elitist procedural mechanisms begs the question of populism
and drives a wedge between law and the people it seeks to protect. The only way
forward for progressive agendas is to engage directly with direct democracy,
fighting inevitable bad results at their source, rather than merely trying to
circumvent the results with appeals to undemocratic courts.</p>

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					  <author>no@spam.com (Corey A. Johanningmeier)</author>
					  <pubDate>Sat, 06 Oct 2007 22:32:27 EDT</pubDate>
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