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After judgment day : under what conditions are court decisions implemented.
Author
Sitapati, Vinay
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Format
Book
Language
English
Description
vii, 274 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.
Availability
Available Online
arks.princeton.edu
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Notes
Mudd Manuscript Library - Remote Storage (ReCAP): Mudd Library Use Only
PRIN 685 2017
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Princeton University. Department of Politics
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Restrictions note
This item is not available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses.
Summary note
Scholars have noted the increasing tendency of unelected judges to pass political judgments. A less considered aspect of these judgments is their implementation. Unimplemented judgments reduce the authority of courts, make their activism less defensible. But research on judicial implementation is limited. In contrast, I examine judgments of the Indian Supreme Court. By focusing on an activist court in a developing country, fresh challenges for implementation emerge.
In my dissertation, titled 'After Judgment Day: Under What Conditions Are Court Decisions Implemented?', I argue that a political judgment is implemented when three conditions are all met: (1) there is no counter-legislation, (2) the state has the physical resources, and (3) the bureaucracy is competent. In the absence of either of the first two conditions, judges are powerless to enforce their will. When only the third condition is missing -- i.e. the bureaucracy is too incompetent to implement -- courts have an opportunity. Judges can work alongside a determined litigant-movement to monitor the bureaucracy and better implement judgments.
This argument is inducted from a legal survey of all Indian Supreme Court judgments on three politically salient issues -- caste, land, and religious conflict -- from 1993-2012. In particular focus is the implementation of one judgment from each of these issues. The first case study analyzes judgments overseeing rehabilitation for thousands of families displaced by the Narmada dam project. The lesson that emerges is that where the state lacks the resources to implement court decisions, judges are powerless. The second case study, on Hindu-Muslim conflict, examines the courts intervention in the aftermath of the 2002 Gujarat riots. I conclude that when the only problem marring implementation is an incompetent bureaucracy, movements and courts can together make the bureaucracy autonomous. The third case studies decisions limiting employment quotas for backward castes. I conclude that judgments are not implemented when politicians enact legislation to formally override judgments.
The theory that emerges is a critical account of judicial power. But I also provide the narrow but plausible circumstances when judges and movements can work together to bring about political change.
Notes
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-07(E), Section: A.
Dissertation note
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 2017.
In
Dissertation Abstracts International 78-07A(E).
ISBN
9781369557701
OCLC
991604291
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