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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

American balancing and German proportionality: The historical origins

TLDR
The origins of balancing and proportionality in American and European constitutional systems were examined in this paper. But the origins of proportionality and balancing were very different in the United States and Europe.
Abstract
American and European constitutional systems have two similar doctrines: balancing and proportionality. Both resemble each other in important aspects and are often discussed in tandem. However, balancing has never attained the status of an established doctrine in American constitutional law in the same way that proportionality has in European constitutional law. Moreover, balancing has always been the subject of fierce criticism and is very much a controversial concept in American constitutional law. European proponents of proportionality are perplexed by this American resistance which is sometimes viewed as based on American isolationalism and unilateralism. In this article we suggest an original, and often overlooked, explanation to the difference between balancing and proportionality – the historical origins of the two concepts. We examine the ways in which proportionality developed in Germany and balancing in the United States and show that the origins of both concepts were very different. For instance, proportionality was originally developed in administrative law, and was only tangentially (if at all) related to private law, whereas balancing arose in private law and was only later extended to public law; proportionality was created as part of an attempt to protect individual rights, whereas balancing was created for the exact opposite purpose – to check overzealous protection of rights by the Supreme Court during the Lochner era. We suggest that these differences may go a long way in explaining current disparities in attitudes and current barriers to dialogue and convergence between these two concepts.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Proportionality and the Culture of Justification

TL;DR: Proportionality is essentially a requirement for justification, which represents a profound shift in constitutional law on a global level as discussed by the authors, following South African scholar Etienne Mureinik, and suggests an intrinsic one.
Book

The Politico-Legal Dynamics of Judicial Review: A Comparative Analysis

TL;DR: The Politico-legal dynamics of judicial review is studied in this paper, where the authors test a typological theory of the evolution of the judicial review regimes -complexes of legitimating ideas about the law/politics relation.
Book

Proportionality and Deference in Investor-State Arbitration: Balancing Investment Protection and Regulatory Autonomy

TL;DR: In this paper, the development of an institutionally sensitive approach to proportionality analysis in investor-state arbitration is discussed. But, the approach is not suitable for the analysis of investment tribunals in regulatory disputes.
Book

A Critique of Proportionality and Balancing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a critique of the proportionality test and propose an alternative understanding of fundamental rights and their limits, arguing that proportionality is generally taken for granted or enthusiastically promoted or accepted with minor qualifications.