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Artículo

Emergencies Revisited: The Enduring Legacy of the Police Power

Legarre, SantiagoIcon
Fecha de publicación: 04/2021
Editorial: Belmont University
Revista: Belmont Law Review
ISSN: 2688-0792
e-ISSN: 2688-0792
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de recurso: Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Derecho

Resumen

It is sometimes thought that the police power belongs with the history of constitutional and administrative law. Section I of my contribution to this Symposium on Contemporary Issues of Administrative Law shows that that impression is partly correct. As I explore the historical background of the police power, I invite the reader to join me in an excursion into the past indeed. Pufendorf, Blackstone, Vattel, and other fairly old-fashioned authors, deal with “police” in ways that prefigure the police power of the states in America.1 Nevertheless, the police power is ever present, under different names, in contemporary jurisprudence; the current coronavirus pandemic is unquestionably providing strong regulatory powers an opportunity to shine again in the legal firmament. Section II starts by underlining how “police” landed in the nascent United States, where it became known as “police power,” courtesy of an ever-creative Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall. This section also tracks the evolution of the police power in United States case law, distinguishing a broad from a narrow conception of police power and pointing out how the police power also received other names, such as “power of regulation” or “regulatory power.” Section III of this article explains the ways in which the police power plays a significant role in international law, in particular in what has to do with foreign investment. The distinction between expropriation (including indirect takings) and non-compensable regulatory measures has been clearly accepted in bilateral investment treaties as well as in other sources of international law. Section IV of this Article explores the moral dimension of the police power, with particular focus on the law of overruling necessity, both as a principle concerning the dispensation of rules and as a principle concerning the restriction of rights. Two examples are examined in some detail. The first, coming from Argentina (the author’s country of origin), involves the exceptional dispensation of the principle of separation of powers – a constitutional rule in Argentina, as well as in other countries, including of course the United States. The second, coming from the U.S., involves the restriction of property rights during emergencies, tracking the economic crisis around the great depression of 1930. Section V of this Article emphasizes the importance of having tools that help readers of this Article understand the legal aspects of the present Covid crisis, concluding that the history of the police power and its moral dimensions are of crucial importance with a view to understanding the present.
Palabras clave: Emergency , Law , Police Power , Natural Law
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11336/165470
URL: https://repository.belmont.edu/lawreview/vol8/iss2/4/
Colecciones
Articulos(SEDE CENTRAL)
Articulos de SEDE CENTRAL
Citación
Legarre, Santiago; Emergencies Revisited: The Enduring Legacy of the Police Power; Belmont University; Belmont Law Review; 8; 2; 4-2021; 408-426
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