Comparative Judicial Review and Public Policy - (Contributions in Political Science) by Donald Jackson & C Tate (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This is one of the few book-length analyses of judicial review and public policy in very different parts of the world today.
- About the Author: DONALD W. JACKSON is the Herman Brown Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University.
- 232 Pages
- Freedom + Security / Law Enforcement, Courts
- Series Name: Contributions in Political Science
Description
About the Book
This is one of the few book-length analyses of judicial review and public policy in very different parts of the world today. Donald W. Jackson and C. Neal Tate have gathered together respected scholars and set forth a framework for comparative analysis into the origins of judicial review, its use as a policy tool, and its exercise and impact in the policy-making process. Political scientists, public policy analysts, and public administrators will find this a thought-provoking study in comparative politics and public administration and a useful classroom text.
The text opens with an overview and a delineation of basic concepts and closes with a framework for analyzing the exercise of judicial review in policy making. The major part of the book offers case studies and analyses of the establishment of judicial review as a policy tool, and the impact of judicial review in various types of legal situations. These studies cover twelve countries, including the United States, Great Britain, Japan, India, Israel, and the USSR, among others. Chapter reference lists and a selected bibliography at the end of the book refer readers to current studies of importance.
Book Synopsis
This is one of the few book-length analyses of judicial review and public policy in very different parts of the world today. Donald W. Jackson and C. Neal Tate have gathered together respected scholars and set forth a framework for comparative analysis into the origins of judicial review, its use as a policy tool, and its exercise and impact in the policy-making process. Political scientists, public policy analysts, and public administrators will find this a thought-provoking study in comparative politics and public administration and a useful classroom text.
The text opens with an overview and a delineation of basic concepts and closes with a framework for analyzing the exercise of judicial review in policy making. The major part of the book offers case studies and analyses of the establishment of judicial review as a policy tool, and the impact of judicial review in various types of legal situations. These studies cover twelve countries, including the United States, Great Britain, Japan, India, Israel, and the USSR, among others. Chapter reference lists and a selected bibliography at the end of the book refer readers to current studies of importance.Review Quotes
?Written for a college senior- or graduate-level audience with some knowledge of law and political science, the book adds much to our knowledge of the policymaking activities of judges in liberal democracies. The overall quality of the essays is quite high.?-Perspectives on Political Science
"Written for a college senior- or graduate-level audience with some knowledge of law and political science, the book adds much to our knowledge of the policymaking activities of judges in liberal democracies. The overall quality of the essays is quite high."-Perspectives on Political Science
About the Author
DONALD W. JACKSON is the Herman Brown Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University. He has served as Judicial Fellow at the U.S. Supreme Court, and his teaching and research cover a broad range of topics on American and comparative judicial processes.
C. NEAL TATE is Regents' Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas and the immediate past Chair of the Research Committee on Comparative Judicial Studies of the International Political Science Association. He has published extensively on the courts of the Philippines and the United States.