Nathan Brown Colloquium, 23 October 2013 at NYU School of Law: "Egypt: A Constitutional Court in an Unconstitutional settings"

Theme
Emerging From / Sliding Back into Authoritarianism

The Constitutional Transitions Colloquium

"Egypt: A Constitutional Court in an Unconstitutional settings" is a paper by nathan Brown to be discussed as one of the Fall 2013 Colloquium series, The Constitutional Transitions & Global and Comparative Law Colloquium: Emerging From / Sliding Back into Authoritarianism, co-convened by Professors Sujit Choudhry and Mattias Kumm. 

Abstract: Constitutional courts are primarily adjudicative structures that render judgments in which the meaning of constitutional clauses are at issue. As such, they would seem to be irrelevant in cases of constitutional vacuum and as at best reactive structures at times of constitutional transition. Yet because they have such a role in addressing fundamental questions, constitutional courts and their justices take on an aura that extends beyond the strictly adjudicative: they often serve as ultimate symbols of the state, as institutions that stand so far above or outside of the political process that they are the last resort for those searching for the locus of sovereignty. And paradoxically, they sometimes act not only above politics but also become enmeshed in political contests. In some transition settings—such as Hungary’s, South Africa’s or Russia’s—the constitutional court was a critical actor even as every other element of politics was in flux—or rather because every other element of politics was in flux. In this essay, I explore the role of a particularly prominent constitutional court—the Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt. No country better illustrates the potential role of a constitutional court in an unconstitutional setting than Egypt during the tumultuous events—and constitutional chaos—of the past two and one-half years.