What happens if you need to mount a constitutional challenge and you don’t have any money or standing to sue? Despite the grand-sounding notion of ‘the constitutional guarantee of judicial review’ the obstacles to access to constitutional justice are real, and have impeded the objectives of marginalised people and groups in society. In this book, Patrick Keyzer reviews the rules governing access to constitutional justice in Australia in light of the philosophies of identity developed by Anthony Kwame Appiah and Charles Taylor and the philosophy of democratic processes favoured by Jurgen Habermas and John Stuart Mill. He develops a new theory to replace the private law paradigm of litigation, providing a foundation for the achievement of the objectives of equal respect and equal dignity within Australian constitutional law. Keyzer argues that an application for the judicial review of legislative action should be characterised as an exercise of political free speech, and that the rules governing standing and costs are incompatible with that freedom and should be abolished in constitutional cases. He demonstrates that the constitutional guarantee of judicial review gives rise to a right to know whether a law is constitutionally valid, providing a further rationale for open access. Such open access would supply our constitutional courts with a wider normative horizon, and lend legitimacy to judicial review and its outcomes.
Keyzer
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CONTENTS Problems with access to constitutional justice Rules that restrict access to constitutional justice The impact of access rules on the realisation of identity Representation of the Public Interest by Attorneys-General Theorising open constitutional courts in Australia Can amici curiae improve access to constitutional justice? Procedures in an open constitutional court Why we should have open constitutional courts Index