Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Marques Neto, Pedro
Data de Publicação: 2018
Tipo de documento: Dissertação
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional do FGV (FGV Repositório Digital)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10438/24125
Resumo: This research analyses and contrasts the arguments employed by the Brazilian and American constitutional courts on the constitutionality of campaign finance regulation. The judicialization of campaign finance disputes poses two issues: (i) first, to determine under which circumstances judicial intervention on the organization of electoral politics is legitimate; (ii) second, to lay down how constitutional courts should reason when - and how they have been reasoning about - they oversee the organization of democratic politics. These issues have at their core the relationship between constitutional jurisdiction and democratic politics in terms of the role displayed by the Judiciary in the (institutional) design of democracy. This research claims that constitutional courts can legitimately intervene in the organization of democracy in order to minimize democratic harms caused by institutional designs that promote domination in the electoral sphere, in accordance with the antidomination model of judicial oversight of democracy proposed by Yasmin Dawood. My argument is that constitutional courts should develop a structural conception of democratic rights focused on the minimization of democratic harms, in contrast with individual conception of such rights or structural conceptions focused on the maximization of democratic goods. Thus, I contrast the antidomination model with the concrete experience of the Brazilian and American constitutional courts. While the Supreme Court of the United States’ approach focuses on the protection of individual rights, I claim that the Supreme Federal Court of Brazil’s approach focuses on the maximization of democratic goods. I claim that both approaches distort the judicial oversight of campaign finance regulation by the Brazilian and the American constitutional courts and so I propose alternative answers based on the antidomination model, according to which courts are more deferential, though not submissive, to the political choices of the legislative body.
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spelling Marques Neto, PedroEscolas::DIREITO SPSilva, Virgílio Afonso daGlezer, Rubens EduardoDimoulis, Dimitri2018-06-15T21:15:20Z2018-06-15T21:15:20Z2018-05-23http://hdl.handle.net/10438/24125This research analyses and contrasts the arguments employed by the Brazilian and American constitutional courts on the constitutionality of campaign finance regulation. The judicialization of campaign finance disputes poses two issues: (i) first, to determine under which circumstances judicial intervention on the organization of electoral politics is legitimate; (ii) second, to lay down how constitutional courts should reason when - and how they have been reasoning about - they oversee the organization of democratic politics. These issues have at their core the relationship between constitutional jurisdiction and democratic politics in terms of the role displayed by the Judiciary in the (institutional) design of democracy. This research claims that constitutional courts can legitimately intervene in the organization of democracy in order to minimize democratic harms caused by institutional designs that promote domination in the electoral sphere, in accordance with the antidomination model of judicial oversight of democracy proposed by Yasmin Dawood. My argument is that constitutional courts should develop a structural conception of democratic rights focused on the minimization of democratic harms, in contrast with individual conception of such rights or structural conceptions focused on the maximization of democratic goods. Thus, I contrast the antidomination model with the concrete experience of the Brazilian and American constitutional courts. While the Supreme Court of the United States’ approach focuses on the protection of individual rights, I claim that the Supreme Federal Court of Brazil’s approach focuses on the maximization of democratic goods. I claim that both approaches distort the judicial oversight of campaign finance regulation by the Brazilian and the American constitutional courts and so I propose alternative answers based on the antidomination model, according to which courts are more deferential, though not submissive, to the political choices of the legislative body.Esta pesquisa analisa e compara os argumentos empregados pelas supremas cortes de Brasil e Estados Unidos a respeito da constitucionalidade de medidas legislativas que permitem, limitam ou vedam o financiamento privado de campanha eleitoral. A judicialização do tema coloca problemas de duas ordens: (a) determinar quais circunstâncias legitimam a intervenção das supremas cortes na organização do processo político-eleitoral; e (b) estabelecer como as supremas cortes deveriam raciocinar e como elas têm raciocinado ao supervisionarem a organização do sistema democrático. No cerne dessas questões encontram-se os contornos da relação entre jurisdição constitucional e política em termos do papel a ser desempenhado pelo Poder Judiciário no desenho institucional da democracia. Este trabalho sustenta que cortes constitucionais estão legitimadas a intervir na organização da democracia para minimizar danos democráticos causados por desenhos institucionais que promovam a dominação na esfera político-eleitoral, conforme modelo proposto por Yasmin Dawood. O argumento é de que cortes constitucionais devem raciocinar a partir de uma concepção estrutural dos direitos democráticos focada na minimização de danos democráticos, em contraposição a concepções individuais dos direitos democráticos ou concepções estruturais focadas na maximização de bens democráticos. Assim, contrasto a abordagem proposta pelo modelo antidominação com as práticas das supremas cortes de Brasil e Estados Unidos. Enquanto a Suprema Corte dos Estados Unidos raciocina na linha da abordagem proposta pelo modelo de proteção de direitos individuais, sustento que o Supremo Tribunal Federal raciocina na linha da abordagem proposta pelo modelo de maximização de bens democráticos. Argumento que, em ambos os casos, os modelos adotados produzem equívocos nas decisões das cortes sobre a constitucionalidade do financiamento privado de campanhas eleitorais, sugerindo, então, respostas alternativas com base no modelo antidominação, mais deferentes, embora não submissas, às escolhas políticas do Poder Legislativo.porJudicial oversight of democracyCampaign financeAntidomination modelSupreme Court of the United StatesSupreme Federal CourtSupervisão judicial da democraciaFinanciamento de campanha eleitoralModelo antidominaçãoSuprema Corte dos Estados UnidosSupremo Tribunal FederalDireitoDireito constitucionalFundos para campanha eleitoralPoder judiciário e questões políticasBrasil. Supremo Tribunal FederalEstados Unidos. 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dc.title.por.fl_str_mv Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
title Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
spellingShingle Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
Marques Neto, Pedro
Judicial oversight of democracy
Campaign finance
Antidomination model
Supreme Court of the United States
Supreme Federal Court
Supervisão judicial da democracia
Financiamento de campanha eleitoral
Modelo antidominação
Suprema Corte dos Estados Unidos
Supremo Tribunal Federal
Direito
Direito constitucional
Fundos para campanha eleitoral
Poder judiciário e questões políticas
Brasil. Supremo Tribunal Federal
Estados Unidos. Supreme Court
title_short Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
title_full Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
title_fullStr Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
title_full_unstemmed Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
title_sort Supervisão judicial do financiamento de campanha eleitoral: proteção de direitos individuais, maximização de bens democráticos e modelo antidominação
author Marques Neto, Pedro
author_facet Marques Neto, Pedro
author_role author
dc.contributor.unidadefgv.por.fl_str_mv Escolas::DIREITO SP
dc.contributor.member.none.fl_str_mv Silva, Virgílio Afonso da
Glezer, Rubens Eduardo
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Marques Neto, Pedro
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Dimoulis, Dimitri
contributor_str_mv Dimoulis, Dimitri
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Judicial oversight of democracy
Campaign finance
Antidomination model
Supreme Court of the United States
Supreme Federal Court
topic Judicial oversight of democracy
Campaign finance
Antidomination model
Supreme Court of the United States
Supreme Federal Court
Supervisão judicial da democracia
Financiamento de campanha eleitoral
Modelo antidominação
Suprema Corte dos Estados Unidos
Supremo Tribunal Federal
Direito
Direito constitucional
Fundos para campanha eleitoral
Poder judiciário e questões políticas
Brasil. Supremo Tribunal Federal
Estados Unidos. Supreme Court
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Supervisão judicial da democracia
Financiamento de campanha eleitoral
Modelo antidominação
Suprema Corte dos Estados Unidos
Supremo Tribunal Federal
dc.subject.area.por.fl_str_mv Direito
dc.subject.bibliodata.por.fl_str_mv Direito constitucional
Fundos para campanha eleitoral
Poder judiciário e questões políticas
Brasil. Supremo Tribunal Federal
Estados Unidos. Supreme Court
description This research analyses and contrasts the arguments employed by the Brazilian and American constitutional courts on the constitutionality of campaign finance regulation. The judicialization of campaign finance disputes poses two issues: (i) first, to determine under which circumstances judicial intervention on the organization of electoral politics is legitimate; (ii) second, to lay down how constitutional courts should reason when - and how they have been reasoning about - they oversee the organization of democratic politics. These issues have at their core the relationship between constitutional jurisdiction and democratic politics in terms of the role displayed by the Judiciary in the (institutional) design of democracy. This research claims that constitutional courts can legitimately intervene in the organization of democracy in order to minimize democratic harms caused by institutional designs that promote domination in the electoral sphere, in accordance with the antidomination model of judicial oversight of democracy proposed by Yasmin Dawood. My argument is that constitutional courts should develop a structural conception of democratic rights focused on the minimization of democratic harms, in contrast with individual conception of such rights or structural conceptions focused on the maximization of democratic goods. Thus, I contrast the antidomination model with the concrete experience of the Brazilian and American constitutional courts. While the Supreme Court of the United States’ approach focuses on the protection of individual rights, I claim that the Supreme Federal Court of Brazil’s approach focuses on the maximization of democratic goods. I claim that both approaches distort the judicial oversight of campaign finance regulation by the Brazilian and the American constitutional courts and so I propose alternative answers based on the antidomination model, according to which courts are more deferential, though not submissive, to the political choices of the legislative body.
publishDate 2018
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2018-06-15T21:15:20Z
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