Minimalism and experimentalism in American public law.doc
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1、MINIMALISM AND EXPERIMENTALISM IN AMERICAN PUBLIC LAWCharles F. Sabel* Maurice T. Moore Professor of Law, Columbia University and William H. Simon Arthur Levitt Professor of Law, Columbia UniversityMinimalism our name for some convergent themes exemplified in the work of Bruce Ackerman, Jerry Mashaw
2、, and Cass Sunstein has been the dominant liberal perspective on public law for several decades. Minimalism emphasizes public interventions that incorporate market concepts and practices and that centralize and minimize administrative discretion. It appeals to a conception of democracy that measures
3、 the legitimacy of administrative action by conformity to the previously expressed will of a unitary public. This essay appraises Minimalism in relation to a competing liberal view of the administrative state. Experimentalism emphasizes interventions in which central government affords broad discret
4、ion to local administrative units but measures and assesses their performance in ways designed to induce continuous learning and revision of standards. It appeals to a conception of democracy that emphasizes collaborative discovery by a congery of stakeholder groups. We fault Minimalist scholarship
5、for ignoring an important reorientation in public policy along Experimentalist lines in the U.S. and elsewhere since the 1990s. We also argue that Experimentalist intervention is a more promising approach in the growing realm of policy areas characterized by uncertainty about both the definition of
6、the relevant problem and its solution. I. IntroductionII. MinimalismA. General ThemesB. Limitations: RegulationC. Limitations: Social WelfareD. Limitations: CourtsE. Limitations: DemocracyIII. ExperimentalismA. Basic ArchitectureB. RegulationC. Social WelfareD. CourtsE. DemocracyF. Scale and Ambitio
7、n: Neither Bentham Nor BurkeIV. ConclusionI. IntroductionLiberal public law scholarship has been pre-occupied in recent years with rear-guard defenses of the activist state against conservative and libertarian critiques. It has spent less effort distinguishing and appraising competing perspectives a
8、mong those who affirm an ambitious role for the state in regulation, social welfare, and human rights. In this essay, we distinguish and assess two liberal perspectives on the activist state. The first, which we call “Minimalism”, appears in the most influential public law scholarship of recent deca
9、des. Perhaps its best known expositors have been Bruce Ackerman, Jerry Mashaw, and Cass Sunstein. Ackerman, Mashaw, and Sunstein have not described themselves as sharing a common perspective, and there are important differences among them. But each has elaborated important ideas that converge with o
10、r complement the others to form a coherent and powerful perspective on law, policy, and democracy. Their perspective begins with a strong defense of the core values of the New Deal and the civil rights movement. However, their view has been, on the one hand, chastened by the post-1960s critiques of
11、bureaucracy, judicial activism, and participatory democracy, and on the other, impressed by the post-1960s re-affirmation of markets as engines of economic efficiency and personal responsibility.“Minimalist” is not an entirely satisfactory term for this perspective, The term has been associated prev
12、iously with Sunstein. See Cass Sunstein, One Case at a Time: Judicial Minimalism on the Supreme Court (1999); Robert Kuttner “The Radical Minimalist,” The American Prospect (April 2009), at 28. We also illustrate Minimalism with work by Colin Diver, Goodwin Liu, and David Super that seems influenced
13、 by and convergent with that of our three primary exemplars. which is in overall aspiration quite ambitious, but the term usefully describes aspects of the attitude of these scholars toward institutions, and in particular, toward official discretion, judicial initiative, and popular participation. T
14、he Minimalists would cabin upper tier administrative discretion by forswearing “command-and-control” intervention in favor of small background interventions into existing markets (“nudges”) or the creation of new markets in public goods or bads (for example, school vouchers or tradeable emissions pe
15、rmits). They would cabin lower tier administrative discretion with simple and categorical rules. They would discipline judicial authority through interpretive methodology and proceduralist prudence. And they would limit routine popular participation in government to conventional electoral means. We
16、have both descriptive and normative reservations about Minimalism. As a descriptive matter, Minimalism fails to take adequate account of a basic set of developments in public policy in the United States, the European Union, and elsewhere since the 1990s. As a normative matter, the Minimalist approac
17、h seems inadequate to an expanding range of public problems. These are problems characterized by a high degree of diversity and fluidity. Or from a slightly different perspective, we could characterize the relevant trait as “uncertainty” in Frank Knights sense contingency that cannot be known or cal
18、culated actuarially or with formal rigor but can only be estimated impressionistically. Frank Knight, Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit (1921). In the realm of uncertainty, policy aims cannot be extensively defined in advance of implementation; they have to be discovered in the course of problem-solving
19、. Yet, the characteristic Minimalist interventions presuppose a strong distinction between the enactment or elaboration of public goals and their administrative implementation. We contrast Minimalism to an alternative perspective we call Experimentalism. Michael Dorf and Charles Sabel, “A Constituti
20、on of Democratic Experimentalism,” 98 Columbia Law Review 267 (1998). A related perspective on similar developments uses the term “new governance”. See Law and New Governance in the EU and the US (Grainne deBurca and Joanne Scott, ed.s. 2006). And the term “management-based regulation” has been used
21、 to designate a subset of the regulatory tools we associate with experimentalism. Cary Coglianese and David Lazar, “Management-Based Regulation,” 37 Law & Society Review 691 (2003). The Experimentalist view is developed in a body of recent scholarship, and in the public programs that reflect the pol
22、icy reorientation just referred to. It takes its name from John Deweys political philosophy, which aims precisely to accommodate the continuous change and variation that we see as the most pervasive challenge of current public problems. “Policies should be experimental in the sense that they will be
23、 entertained subject to constant and well-equipped observation of the consequences they entail when acted upon, and subject to ready and flexible revision in the light of observed consequences,” he wrote. John Dewey, The Public and Its Problems 203 (1927). At the same time he rejected standardized b
24、ureaucratic solutions and urged responses that combined respect for local context with centralized structure and discipline. 107-13. Aside from education, where he was an active reformer, Dewey offered little by way of concrete illustrations of his proposals, but recent reforms in many areas connect
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