This book brings together the views of an extraordinary range of well-known authors. It contains essays by: Chief Justice Murray Gleeson, High Court of Australia; Justice Louise Arbour, Supreme Court of Canada; Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court of USA; Dr Radhika Coomaraswamy, the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women; and Professors Saunders (Australia), Dyzenhaus (Canada), and Troper (France).
Each essay is followed by a substantial comment by a distinguished Australian juristJustices Gaudron and Hayne, Sir Anthony Mason, Elizabeth Evatt, and Professors Saunders and McCormackto highlight the relevance of the issues raised for Australia.
The essays cover issues such as:
- the debate about the meaning and application of the rule of law, nationally and internationally;
- the gaps between the theory and practice of the rule of law; relations between governments and people;
- the tensions between the judiciary and the elected branches of government (for example, ouster of the jurisdiction of the Australian courts);
- international criminal justice; and the position of women in situations of conflict and insurrection.
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1: The rule of law in comparative perspective - Professor Cheryl Saunders
CHAPTER 2: The justice of the common law: judges, democracy and the limits of the rule of law - David Dyzenhaus
CHAPTER 3: Remarks on judicial independence: the situation of the US federal judiciary - The Honourable Ruth Bader Ginsburg
CHAPTER 4: The limits of the rule of law - Professor Michel Troper
CHAPTER 5: The rule of law and the reach of accountability - Justice Louise Arbour
CHAPTER 6: Broken glass: women, violence and the rule of law - Radhika Coomaraswamy
References
Index