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The Israeli Supreme Court and the Human Rights Revolution
Courts as Agenda Setters
This book explains the reciprocal relations between the Supreme Court and the Israeli political system.
Assaf Meydani (Author)
9781107674837, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 30 May 2013
222 pages, 7 b/w illus. 3 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.2 cm, 0.3 kg
"The Israeli Supreme Court and the Human Rights Revolution is a marvelous book. Not only will it inform future accounts of this fascinating Court, it will serve as a foundational resource for all work examining the role courts play in their societies."
- Lee Epstein
Provost Professor of Law and Political Science & Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law, University of Southern California
This book explains the reciprocal relations between the Supreme Court and the Israeli political system. It is based on a unique approach that contends that the non-governability of the political system and an alternative political culture are two key formal and informal variables affecting the behavior of several political players within the Israeli arena. The analysis illustrates the usefulness of such a model for analyzing long-term socio-political processes and explaining the actions of the players. Until this model changes significantly, the decisions of the High Court of Justice express the values of the state and enable Israel to remain a nation that upholds human rights. The Court's decisions determine the normative educational direction and reflect Israel's democratic character with regard to the values of human rights.
1. Introduction
2. The intervention of the Israeli High Court of Justice in government decisions: an empirical, quantitative study with paradoxical results
3. Law and politics: theoretical aspects
4. The Supreme Court as a political entrepreneur in the process of institutional change - an analysis based on shared mental models and political entrepreneurship
5. Israeli public law
6. Israel in light of structural and cultural variables
7. The Supreme Court and the political system in light of social and political processes in Israel during 1948–99
8. The struggle for a new conservative constitutional court (2000): redefining the guarantor of human rights in Israel - the role of the Israeli Supreme Court
9. The rule of 'who governs' as electoral capital (1999–2007): the Supreme Court as an agenda setter in Israel
10. The Supreme Court of Israel as an agenda setter: three cases
11. On law, society and policy design - towards a reform in the relationship between the High Court of Justice and the Knesset
12. Conclusion and normative implications.
Subject Areas: Constitutional & administrative law [LND], Law [L], Human rights [JPVH]