Journal article

Constitutional Directives: Morally-Committed Political Constitutionalism

Tarunabh Khaitan

The Modern Law Review | Wiley | Published : 2019

Abstract

About 37 state constitutions around the world feature non-justiciable thick moral commitments (‘constitutional directives’). These directives typically oblige the state to redistribute income and wealth, guarantee social minimums, or forge a religious or secular identity for the state. They have largely been ignored in a constitutional scholarship defined by its obsession with the legitimacy of judicial review and hostility to constitutionalising thick moral commitments other than basic rights. This article presents constitutional directives as obligatory telic norms, addressed primarily to the political state, which constitutionalise thick moral objectives.

University of Melbourne Researchers