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This chapter traces judicial decision making under the Human Rights Act 1998, examining how courts approach their tasks of interpreting legislation compatibly with rights, on the one hand, or, if that is not possible, making a declaration of incompatibility instead. Though the declaration of incompatibility is not legally binding on the Government and Parliament, this chapter uncovers ’the hidden strengths of weak-form review’, highlighting the multiple ways in which declarations of incompatibility tie the hands of the political branches of government. It concludes that declarations of incompatibility are not aptly portrayed as opening gambits in a constitutional conversation, as dialogue scholars would lead us to believe. Instead, they are authoritative decisions in a collaborative constitutional scheme, where judicial determinations of the higher courts that legislation violates rights are entitled to constitutional comity and respect. It concludes by noting the current trend towards ’autochthonous constitutionalism’ under the common law, in preference to litigation under the HRA.
This chapter examines the power of the legislature to have ’the last word’ under section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights, and the UK Human Rights Act 1998. In both cases, the democratically elected legislature is empowered to legislate notwithstanding rights. Whilst both of these provisions have been hailed as the lynchpin of a New Commonwealth model of constitutionalism, or as an instance of weak-form review, this chapter observes that they have hardly ever been used. The task of the chapter, then, is to examine and explain ’the underuse of the override’. Departing from the dominant narrative that the legislature wanted to use the override but was thwarted by exogenous political costs, this chapter argues that the rare use of the override was part of the original design of both systems from the outset. Instead of being a tragic thwarting of democratic dialogue, or an unfortunate atrophy of constitutional powers, rare use of the override was a feature, not a bug in both systems. Supplementing the historical narrative with normative argument, the chapter defends the rare use of the override as a vindication of the collaborative constitutional ideal.
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