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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
1 THE JUDGE IN A DEMOCRACY is a substantially expanded version of an article that originally appeared in the Harvard Law Review. See Barak, Aharon, Foreword: The Role of a Supreme Court in a Democracy, 116 HARV.L.REV. 16 (2002). See also Aharon Barak, The Role of a Supreme Court in a Democracy, and the Fight Against Terrorism, 58 U. MIAM. L.REV. 125 (2003).Google Scholar
2 See, e.g., Sentelle, David B., “Judicial Discretion: Is one More of a Good Thing too Much?,” 88 MICH.L.Rev. 1828 (1990) (reviewing AHARON BARAK, JUDICIAL DISCRETION (1989).Google Scholar
3 On the controversial question as to whether Israel now has a written constitution, see infra, pp. 17ff.Google Scholar
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5 Dowty, Alan, Emergency Powers in Israel: The Devaluation of Crisis in COPING WITH CRISIS: HOW GOVERNMENTS DEAL WITH EMERGENCIES (Shao-chuan Leng, 1990)1, 2; Aharon Barak, Freedom of Speech in Israel: The Impact of the American Constitution“, 8 TEL AVIV U. STUD.L. 241, 248 (1985).Google Scholar
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30 Id. at 125. In PURPOSIVE INTERPRETATION IN LAW (2005), Barak has applied purposive interpretation to the interpretation of all legal texts from contracts and wills to constitutions.Google Scholar
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50 H.C. 910/86 Ressler v. Minister of Defense, 42 P.D. 441, available at www.court.gov.il Google Scholar
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129 Morris, Jeffrey B. is a Professor of Law at the Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center of Touro College. Newman, Shari G. graduated from Touro Law School in 2006.Google Scholar