The legitimacy of judicial review: The limits of dialogue between courts and legislatures
* Faculty of law, University of Montreal; email: luc.tremblay{at}umontreal.ca
According to the theory of "institutional dialogue," courts and legislatures participate in a dialogue aimed at achieving the proper balance between constitutional principles and public policies and the existence of this dialogue constitutes a good reason for not conceiving of judicial review as democratically illegitimate. This essay sets out to demonstrate that there are important limits to the capacity of insitutional dialogue to legitimize the institution of judicial review. To that end, it situates the theory of institutional dialogue within the debate over the legitimacy of judicial review of legislation within democracy and introduces a distinction between two conceptions of dialoguedialogue as deliberation and dialogue as conversationand examines the limits of each theory. The author does not contend that there can be no dialogue between courts and legislatures but, rather, that the kind of dialogue that would be needed to confer legitimacy on the institution and practice of judicial review does notand cannotexist. Consequently, the normative character of institutional dialogue theory, as conceived thus far, is ultimately rhetorical.