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Memory, Past Evils and Constitutional Justice. Lessons from the United States, Germany and South Africa

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Review essay on Justin Collings, Scales of Memory: Constitutional Justice and Historical Evil (Oxford University Press 2021)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2024

Francesco Biagi*
Affiliation:
University of Bologna, Italy, email: [email protected]
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Introduction: the book in context

Justin Collings’ book Scales of Memory. Constitutional Justice and Historical Evil is about constitutional justice and the memory of past evils. More specifically, it investigates how the Supreme Court of the United States, the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany and the Constitutional Court of South Africa have grappled, respectively, with the legacies of slavery, Nazism, and apartheid. The book shows that these courts have been ‘mnemonic actors’ and ‘agents of collective memory’,Footnote 1 and have thus contributed enormously to shaping these countries’ constitutional identities.

In general terms, Collings’ work represents an important contribution to an underdeveloped field of research, namely that of comparative constitutional history. Indeed, while the scholarly literature in comparative constitutional law is large and growing, the studies on comparative constitutional history continue to be quite scarce.Footnote 2 Recently, there has been an effort to address this shortcoming,Footnote 3 but the overall impression is that comparative constitutional history still struggles to fully emerge as a distinct and independent field of study.

Within the macro-category of comparative constitutional history, this book focuses in particular on the use of history in constitutional interpretation. In the United States, the use of history as an interpretative resource in construing and applying the provisions of the Constitution is a topic that has received enormous attention from scholars. As is well known, today much of that attention centres around theories of constitutional originalism. Comparative studies of uses of history in constitutional adjudication are, by contrast, less common. While some scholars – notably Renáta Uitz,Footnote 4 Daphne Barak-Erez,Footnote 5 Ozan O. Varol,Footnote 6 and Jamal Greene and Yvonne TewFootnote 7 – have explored how different national courts engage with historical arguments,Footnote 8 there remains considerable work to be done in the area. Scales of Memory, which focuses on narratives and memory in constitutional adjudication, is undoubtedly a welcome addition to this strand of research.

Collings’ book is also in conversation with scholarly works in transitional studies, and more specifically in transitional justice, which refers – according to the definition of Ruti G. Teitel – to ‘the conception of justice associated with periods of political change, characterized by legal responses to confront the wrongdoings of repressive predecessor regimes’.Footnote 9 Constitutional courts often played an important role in the processes of transition from autocratic regimes to democratic forms of government,Footnote 10 and in their case law they frequently (but not always, as will be shown below) invoked past evils, such as Nazism, Fascism, Communism, military regimes, colonialism or apartheid. These memories can be important legitimating resources, both for the courts themselves and for the state at large. As argued by Alec Stone Sweet, constitutional courts ‘can provide a focal point for a new rhetoric of state legitimacy, one based on respect for democratic values and rights, and on the rejection of former rhetoric (of fascism, military or one-party rule, legislative sovereignty, the cult of personality, and so on)’.Footnote 11

The United States, Germany and South Africa as case studies

In Scales of Memory, Collings looks at three constitutional experiences: the United States, Germany, and South Africa. The bulk of the book revolves around the analysis of these case studies. Indeed, in addition to the introduction and the conclusion, the book consists of three parts: Part I ‘After Slavery’, Part II ‘After Auschwitz’, and Part III ‘After Apartheid’. As the author readily admits, whenever he discussed his book project with colleagues, he was asked, almost immediately, the same question: ‘Why these three cases and not others?’Footnote 12 Comparative scholars know very well that the selection of case studies is usually extremely challenging. The main reasons put forward by Collings to justify his choice to analyse these three case studies are convincing. In the first place, each country object of analysis ‘has a powerful and influential constitutional court that has frequently and prominently invoked an evil past’, and in each country ‘the Constitution itself is a powerful source of constitutional identity’.Footnote 13 Second, from an historical-temporal perspective, the constitutional texts of these countries are representative of three generations of constitutions: a first-generation constitution (the US), a second-generation constitution (Germany), and a third-generation constitution (South Africa).Footnote 14 Third, these constitutions represent, in terms of their origins, a revolution-based constitution (the US), a war-based constitution (Germany), and a pact-based constitution (South Africa).Footnote 15 Fourth, the three courts analysed in the book are also representative from a geographical standpoint: one court is from North America, one from Europe, and one from the ‘global South’.Footnote 16 The impression is that Collings’ choice of these three case studies was very much informed by what Ran Hirschl calls the ‘prototypical cases principle’, where the cases under discussion ‘serve as exemplars of other cases with similar characteristics’.Footnote 17

Collings is obviously well aware also of the differences among the three experiences. The 1949 Basic Law of Germany and the Constitutions of South Africa (both the 1993 provisional Constitution and the 1996 permanent Constitution) are ‘never-again’ constitutions, as they define themselves ‘in opposition to an antecedent evil’Footnote 18 (Nazism in Germany, apartheid in South Africa), and represent a response – in Kim Lane Scheppele’s words – to the previous ‘regimes of horror’.Footnote 19 Both the German Bundesverfassungsgericht and the South African Constitutional Court – as well as many other constitutional courts operating in post-authoritarian regimes (such as the constitutional courts of Central and Eastern Europe after the fall of the Communist regime)Footnote 20 – presented themselves from the outset as the guardians of constitutions that celebrated and solemnised the end of illiberal rule.

The 1789 US Constitution, on the other hand, coexisted with slavery for several decades, and the Supreme Court tolerated it.Footnote 21 As underlined by Collings, ‘[t]he U.S. Constitution had been in force for 77 years when the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery and for 165 years when the Supreme Court [in Brown v Board of Education Footnote 22 ] condemned racial apartheid in public schools’.Footnote 23 As a consequence, ‘[w]hereas the German and South African Courts could stake their early legitimacy on aggressive responses to the recent past, that posture was unavailable to their American counterpart. In the United States, the evil past was, in calamitous part, the Court’s own’.Footnote 24 In Germany and South Africa the constitutional courts were ‘immaculate’ bodies that represented – in the eyes of the framers – a necessary instrument to mark a clean break with the previous illiberal regime. In the US, by contrast, the Supreme Court had long been ‘complicit in the evil’.Footnote 25

Modes of judicial memory

Collings argues that, while referring to past evils, courts employ two modes of constitutional memory: the parenthetical mode and the redemptive mode. The parenthetical mode – which builds on the works by Edmund Burke and Benedetto Croce – considers the evil era as an exception to an otherwise worthy and unifying past. This period is viewed as a ‘baleful aberration’Footnote 26 from an otherwise noble constitutional tradition. Therefore, the constitutions adopted after an illiberal era do not represent a revolution. Rather, they are aimed to restore an older, glorious tradition. By contrast, the redemptive mode – which relies on the ideas of Thomas Paine – directly confronts the past evil and responds to it aggressively. The purpose of this mode of constitutional memory is not only to mark a clean break with the previous illiberal rule, but also to establish a new regime based on diametrically opposed principles and values.Footnote 27

In an extremely careful and sophisticated analysis of the case law of the American, German and South African constitutional courts, Collings shows that all three bodies have used both modes of constitutional memory, but the US Supreme Court has mainly relied on the parenthetical framework, the South African Constitutional Court has employed particularly the redemptive mode, and the case law of the German Federal Constitutional Court has been characterised by a parenthetical-redemptive hybrid. A fascinating aspect of the book is that landmark judgments handed down by these courts – such as Brown,Footnote 28 Luth Footnote 29 and Makwanyane Footnote 30 (but the list is obviously much longer) – are revisited under a different lens than the traditional one. Now the focus is not so much on how and why these decisions were crucial in guaranteeing the protection of people’s rights, but rather on how courts, through their rulings, looked at past evils, how they became agents of collective memory, and how they thus contributed to shaping the constitutional identity of the countries in which they operated. This perspective allows the reader not only to discover a new significance of these key rulings, but also to look at the history of the country in which the decisions are made under a different light.

Collings rightly emphasises the exceptionality of the parenthetical mode in the American context, which largely departs from its ideal type. Indeed, as also discussed above, US constitutional tradition did not pre-date slavery. Rather, there was for a long time a concomitance between the two. In this country, the parenthetical mode, which relies on the idea of continuity, ‘has proved particularly – irresistibly – attractive’.Footnote 31 The Supreme Court rejected, for example, to treat the Reconstruction Amendments (i.e. the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, adopted between 1865 and 1870) as the basis of a new, redemptive postbellum Constitution. Instead, the Court posited ‘a single, unitary constitutional tradition – interrupted, to be sure, by the parenthetical of slavery and secession, but resumed after a brief period of Reconstruction and a resounding closed parenthesis’.Footnote 32 The Supreme Court’s failure to sufficiently rely also on the redemptive mode, Collings contends, has prevented the country from fully coming to terms with its past. The consequence is that the ‘constitutional revolution [i.e. the ‘anti-slavery imperative’] so long remained – and, to an intolerable extent, still remains – unfinished’.Footnote 33

In Germany, one of the most important decisions made by the Federal Constitutional Court during its first years of activity was Civil Servants.Footnote 34 Despite the fact that the so-called ‘131 Law’ provided for a large reinstatement of Nazi-era civil servants who lost their posts when the War ended, and awarded generous back-pay, several of these civil servants were unsatisfied. In their opinion, they had never rightfully lost their jobs and wanted a full back-pay. The Court answered – in Colling’s words – ‘with a bombshell’.Footnote 35 Indeed, the constitutional justices argued that the Nazi-era civil servants had no claims at all on the new Republic, and what they had received in terms of reinstatement and compensation only depended on the ‘benevolence’ of Parliament. It was not something that they were entitled to receive from a legal or constitutional point of view. In order to reach this conclusion, the Court largely relied on an historical analysis of the Third Reich, stressing that the civil administration had been completely penetrated and corrupted by the Nazi regime. The Court also made it clear that the new constitutional order would have been diametrically opposed to the previous one. This case is particularly relevant also because it sheds light on one of the most complicated issues in countries experiencing a transition from an autocratic rule, namely that of the continuity (or non-continuity) of the state, especially in terms of public officials.Footnote 36

Among the numerous rulings of the German Constitutional Court analysed by Collings, it is also worth recalling those related to the constitutionality of political parties. The Basic Law grants the Bundesverfassungsgericht the power to declare the unconstitutionality of parties ‘that, by reason of their aims or the behaviour of their adherents, seek to undermine or abolish the free democratic basic order or to endanger the existence of the Federal Republic of Germany …’ (Article 21(2)). It is above all by virtue of this provision (aimed to avoid the repetition of what was considered to be one of the decisive errors committed by the Weimar Republic, that is to tolerate ‘antisystem’ parties) that Germany became a ‘militant democracy’, to use the well-known expression coined by Karl Loewenstein in 1937.Footnote 37 This constitutional provision did not remain a dead letter. In the first years of its activity the Court declared the unconstitutionality of a political party in two cases: in 1952 it ruled against a party of Nazi inspiration (the Socialist Reich Party),Footnote 38 and in 1956 it dissolved the Communist Party of Germany.Footnote 39 Collings rightly compares these two rulings with a judgment delivered in 2017, in which the Court decided not to ban a party of Nazi inspiration, despite the fact that its ideology was clearly incompatible with the Basic Law. The context made the difference. Indeed, as underscored by the author, ‘2017 was not 1956’.Footnote 40 Now Germany is a mature, consolidated democracy that can tolerate antisystem parties that do not represent a concrete threat to the free basic order, whereas during the 1950s the country had just emerged from a totalitarian regime and therefore the need to preserve the democratic character of the new system was all the greater.

In its largely redemptive jurisprudence, the South African Constitutional Court played a key role in marking a clean break with the segregationist past. During its first phase, the Court mainly ruled on criminal cases, cases involving various forms of discriminations, and cases involving ‘negative’ freedoms (such as free speech),Footnote 41 but it subsequently also invoked apartheid memory in the contexts of socio-economic rights.Footnote 42 Interestingly, some of Court’s decisions have become ‘myths’, both within the country and abroad. This is the case, for example, with Makwanyane,Footnote 43 in which the Court declared the unconstitutionality of the death penalty. Collings describes it as ‘an epic judgment’, in which the justices ‘didn’t just abolish the death penalty. They chanted a redemptive credo for post-apartheid South Africa’.Footnote 44 Although the judgment was unanimous, all 11 justices wrote separate opinions, a fact that further strengthened the redemptive tone of this landmark decision.

It should be recalled that the role played by the South African Constitutional Court in the transition from apartheid to democracy was a unicum from a comparative perspective. Indeed, this body was even required to verify the constitutionality of the permanent Constitution. More precisely, it had to adjudicate on whether the final draft of the Constitution was in line with the 34 fundamental constitutional principles (contained in the 1993 interim Constitution) that were intended to guide the Constituent Assembly. The list of the 34 principles with which the final Constitution had to comply included, inter alia, constitutional supremacy, judicial review, an independent judiciary, the protection of the right to equality, separation of powers and checks and balances, protection of human rights, and a division of powers between national and provincial government.Footnote 45 In the First Certification Judgment – which represents another example of a decision relying on the redemptive mode – the Court refused to certify the first draft of the Constitution and obliged the Constituent Assembly to implement certain changes in order to ensure compliance of the final version with the 34 principles.Footnote 46 It was only with the Second Certification Judgment, which was handed down three months later, that the Court approved the new constitutional text.Footnote 47 Interestingly, this role played by the Court gave rise to the ‘paradox of a constituted body co-participating in the constituent process’,Footnote 48 marking the end of the idea according to which the pouvoir constituant is the only free and unlimited power.Footnote 49

Which memory is better?

In the introduction Collings openly warns the readers that his book is mainly descriptive in nature (‘my aim is… to provide a thick description of how judicial memory has operated in some of the most influential and paradigmatic constitutional courts in the world…’Footnote 50 ), but while reading the volume one cannot help but also notice the normative dimension of the text. This ‘soul’ of the book clearly emerges in the conclusions, where the ‘normative instincts’Footnote 51 of the author come to the forefront. Overall, the descriptive and normative dimensions are well balanced. Collings first describes the different forms of judicial memory and then shows how they operated in practice. For each case study, he identifies strengths and weaknesses of the constitutional memory employed by the respective Court. This allows the reader to form his or her own idea about these different approaches and thus be able to better evaluate the author’s point of view. The impression is that Collings is not so much interested in convincing the reader to share his opinion on which judicial memory is better, but rather in prompting the reader to reflect on the consequences of choosing one memory over another.

Collings calls for a sort of merge between the parenthetical mode and the redemptive mode. In his opinion, the fusion between these two frameworks is the ‘ideal approach’.Footnote 52 Indeed, according to the author, ‘it is dangerous to look at a tradition without its evils; it is also dangerous to look at evils without a tradition’.Footnote 53 Collings also argues that even if the two modes should be mingled, the redemptive approach needs to come first: ‘There is a need to remember and redress, followed by a need to remember and move on.’Footnote 54 As recalled above, out of the three courts considered in the book, only the German Bundesverfassungsgericht consistently (and successfully, in Collings’ view) relied on a combination of the two modes of constitutional memory. Indeed, the Court first responded aggressively to the Nazi regime, but over time it also drew abundantly on the pre-1933 constitutional tradition. Collings suggests that the combination of the two modes is more likely to ground the constitutional identity of a country and to find broad acceptance in the population, especially in the long run.Footnote 55

By contrast, in South Africa, the largely redemptive jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court contributed, inter alia, to strengthening the perception that the Constitution was the solution to many daily problems of the citizens, a fact that often generated a sense of frustration among the population every time the promises contained in the constitutional text were not maintained. Furthermore, the redemptive jurisprudence, which is mostly negative in nature (being in opposition to past evils), might hinder the construction of the state’s positive identity. As Collings puts it, ‘redemptive memory is more powerful as a destructive than as a constructive mode’.Footnote 56 The author also warns that, if untampered, redemptive jurisprudence might be (ab)used by courts to justify a permanent judicial activism.Footnote 57 The parenthetical mode is equally (or maybe even more) problematic. Collings is right when he argues that in the American context, the dominance of this mode of constitutional memory in the Supreme Court’s case law ‘long prevented and still hinders a full reckoning with the [country’s] towering evils’.Footnote 58 Indeed, ‘noble traditions cannot be resumed until towering crimes have been squarely confronted’.Footnote 59

The relevance of the parenthetical mode and the redemptive mode obviously transcends the three case studies on which the book focuses. Thus, for example, in an interview given to the Italian newspaper Il Corriere della Sera in which he discussed his volume, Collings masterfully applied these modes of constitutional memory to the case of Italy:

Parenthetical memory is important because it is difficult to construct a political identity without some positive historical foundation. For example, one could call post-World War II Italy an ‘anti-fascist’ Republic, but this is a purely negative foundation. You also need something else – Dante Alighieri and Francesco Petrarca, for instance, the masters of the Renaissance and the liberal ideas of the Risorgimento. Being Italian is a problematic identity if it only means not being fascist. On the other hand, one cannot simply set aside the fascist era as an exceptional divergence – ‘a parenthesis’ – in the course of the history of Italian liberalism.Footnote 60

Collings, who gave this interview in January 2021, anticipated a heated debate that would erupt about a year and a half later, following the September 2022 elections, with the establishment of the most right-wing government in Italy’s post-World War II history. Indeed, the clear victory of Giorgia Meloni, leader of Fratelli d’Italia (a party that has its roots in the Movimento Sociale Italiano, a neo-fascist-inspired party),Footnote 61 immediately channelled the political debate into questions such as: What does it mean to be a fascist? Is the current government to be considered neo-fascist? Or post-fascist? Or neither? Can fascism and communism be equated? Is it necessary for a politician to publicly declare him/herself anti-fascist? These questions – which were often the subject of instrumentalisation by all political forces – are extremely controversial in todays’ Italy,Footnote 62 a fact that shows that the country has yet to fully come to terms with its past. But if reckoning with past evils is delayed, Collings warns in the same interview, ‘the debts increase with interest’.Footnote 63

What the book does not say

There is only one aspect of Collings’ book that has left me somewhat puzzled, an aspect related to what the book does not say. In this volume (and also in a subsequent work),Footnote 64 Collings rightly stresses that constitutional courts often invoke historical evil as a powerful legitimating resource. This was certainly the case of constitutional justices in the US, Germany and South Africa, whose appeals to constitutional memory were a very important way to strengthen their decisions. What the book could and should have better explained is that many other courts in the world decided not to rely on history in their decisions, even in those cases which were strictly connected with the legacies of the previous illiberal regime. In this respect, the case of Italy is emblematic. In this country, most of the key judgments dealing with the country’s authoritarian past were based on purely legal reasoning, technical considerations with little scope for historical or political analysis. The example par excellence is the judgment of the Italian Court of Cassation of 7 February 1948, relating to transitional justice. In that case, in upholding prosecution of Fascist crimes notwithstanding the ban on retroactivity (provided for by Article 25 of the 1948 Constitution), the Court introduced for the first time a distinction between ‘programmatic constitutional provisions’ (i.e. provisions that exist only as ‘programs’ for the legislator, and which thus could not be immediately enforced) and ‘preceptive constitutional provisions’ (i.e. provisions that could be immediately enforced), and deemed Article 25 to be programmatic. Historical references to the previous Fascist regime were entirely lacking.Footnote 65 Not even in the Constitutional Court’s first decision (no. 1 of 1956, a truly landmark judgment), in which for the first time the Court struck down a piece of legislation enacted under the previous dictatorship, had the judges made historical considerations relating to the Fascist regime.Footnote 66

Among the various reasons that explain the different approaches towards the use of history in constitutional interpretation, one might include the composition of the courts. In Germany and South Africa (but also in other countries),Footnote 67 constant references to past evils can also be explained by the fact that the first constitutional courts’ judges personally symbolised the repudiation of the previous illiberal regimes.Footnote 68 Albie Sachs, who was a justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa from 1994 to 2009, is probably the best-known example.Footnote 69 In Italy, by contrast, the continuity with the past was much more evident, also because the purges of public officials (including judges) produced only limited effects. Not even all members of the first Constitutional Court were above suspicion. Indeed, the authoring judge who drafted the first judgment of the Court was Gaetano Azzariti, who played a leading role in the Fascist administration: he was the head of the Legislative Office at the Ministry of Justice for more than 20 years, taking part in the drafting of Fascist legislation, including the racial laws, and was appointed president of the Racial Tribunal (Tribunale della Razza) in 1939. In spite of his involvement in the regime, in 1955 he was appointed by the President of the Republic as a Constitutional Court judge, and it was actually Azzariti (and here the paradox is astonishing) who drafted Judgment no. 1 of 1956, declaring for the first time the unconstitutionality of a Fascist-era piece of legislation.Footnote 70

I obviously did not expect Collings to add as a separate case study a country whose constitutional court had opted for a very different approach compared to that followed by the US, German, and South African counterparts. This would have likely shifted the focus of the book.Footnote 71 However, regardless of what the advantages and disadvantages of this judicial approach may be, some references (maybe in the introduction or in the conclusions) to the constitutional courts that have decided not to put historical evil at the heart of their case law would have offered a broader and more complete picture of courts’ action in transitional settings, and would have contributed to better clarifying that invocation of past evils is not necessarily a standard practice.

The second book of a trilogy?

Collings’ book is solid from a methodological point of view, thorough in its analysis, convincing in its arguments, and original in its approach. These qualities can hardly be found in works dealing with such an extremely complicated issue as the relationship between law and time. It is true that work on memory never ends and that questions related to the past have no obvious answers. Scales of Memory, however, undoubtedly has the great merit of facilitating this work and helping to provide answers. Collings shows that there are no easy solutions, but clearly indicates what are the consequences of choosing one type of memory over another.

In order to fully appreciate this book, it should also be emphasised that Scales of Memory is not an ‘isolated monad’, but fits within a well-defined academic project. In an article published in 2017,Footnote 72 Collings proposed three possible approaches to the study of comparative constitutional history. The first approach, called ‘perspectival history’, focuses on a single jurisdiction. It will be comparative ‘thanks to the author’s unique perspective and intended audience’.Footnote 73 The prototype of this first approach is Tocqueville’s Democracy in America: thanks to his external perspective, Tocqueville produced a (mainly implicit) comparison between France and the US. Collings’ first book, Democracy’s Guardians. A History of the German Federal Constitutional Court 1951–2001,Footnote 74 is another example of perspectival history. Indeed, in examining the history of the Bundesverfassungsgericht, Collings was writing not only ‘as an American’, but also ‘as a comparative constitutional historian’.Footnote 75

The second approach to comparative constitutional history, which is called by Collings ‘thematic history’, focuses on a single theme (that might be of a doctrinal, institutional, procedural, or theoretical nature) across different jurisdictions, following a diachronic analysis.Footnote 76 This is where Scales of Memory is situated. Indeed, as discussed in this review, Collings’ second book compares three case studies ‘that are contrasting, distant, and diachronic’.Footnote 77

The third approach to the comparative study of constitutional history, which is defined by Collings as ‘relational history’, examines ‘multiple jurisdictions within a single chronological frame’, attempting ‘not merely to compare the jurisdictions with one another, but also to identify mutual influences, both reciprocal and external’.Footnote 78 Collings does not provide for a hierarchy among the three approaches to comparative constitutional history, but he sees relational history as the ultimate goal to strive for: ‘I believe that some of the best work in our field will be relational; but relational histories … will have to build on the foundation of previous perspectival and thematic work’.Footnote 79 Specifically, Collings’ intention would be that of writing ‘a portion of the history of global constitutionalism on an integrated, relational basis’.Footnote 80 This would represent the third book of a ‘trilogy’ on comparative constitutional history. Expectations can only be sky high.

References

1 J. Collings, Scales of Memory. Constitutional Justice and Historical Evil (Oxford University Press 2021) p. 2.

2 In 1962 Klaus Epstein observed that ‘the study of comparative constitutional history is still in its infancy’: K. Epstein, ‘A New German Constitutional History’, 34(3) The Journal of Modern History (1962) p. 308. More than 60 years later, his observation remains topical.

3 See the articles in the ‘Symposium: Constitutional History: Comparative Perspectives’, University of Illinois Law Review (2017) p. 475; F. Biagi et al. (eds.), Comparative Constitutional History. Volume 1: Principles, Developments, Challenges (Brill 2020); F. Biagi et al. (eds.), Comparative Constitutional History. Volume 2: Uses of History in Constitutional Adjudication (Brill 2023); W. Partlett, ‘Historiography and Comparative Constitutional Scholarship’, 1 Comparative Constitutional Studies (2023) p. 267, at https://doi.org/10.4337/ccs.2023.0014, visited 29 January 2024.

4 R. Uitz, Constitutions, Courts and History. Historical Narratives in Constitutional Adjudication (Central European University Press 2006).

5 D. Barak-Erez, ‘History and Memory in Constitutional Adjudication’, 45(1) Federal Law Review (2017) p. 1.

6 O.O. Varol, ‘The Origins and Limits of Originalism: A Comparative Study’, 44 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (2011) p. 1239.

7 J. Greene and Y. Tew, ‘Comparative Approaches to Constitutional History’, in E.F. Delaney and R. Dixon (eds.), Comparative Judicial Review (Edward Elgar 2018) p. 379 ff.

8 See also, more recently, Biagi et al. (eds.) (2023), supra n. 3.

9 R.G. Teitel, ‘Transitional Justice Genealogy’, 16 Harvard Human Rights Journal (2003) p. 69. See also R.G. Teitel, Transitional Justice (Oxford University Press 2000).

10 On the role of courts in transitional countries see in particular T. Ginsburg, Judicial Review in New Democracies. Constitutional Courts in Asian Cases (Cambridge University Press 2003); W. Sadurski (ed.), Constitutional Justice, East and West. Democratic Legitimacy and Constitutional Courts in Post-Communist Europe in a Comparative Perspective (Kluwer Law International 2002); T.G. Daly, The Alchemists. Questioning Our Faith in Courts as Democracy-Builders (Cambridge University Press 2017); F. Biagi, European Constitutional Courts and Transitions to Democracy (Cambridge University Press 2020).

11 A. Stone Sweet, ‘Constitutional Courts’, in M. Rosenfeld and A. Sajó (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law (Oxford University Press 2012) p. 827.

12 J. Collings, ‘What Should Comparative Constitutional History Compare?’, University of Illinois Law Review (2017) p. 488.

13 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 2.

14 Ibid., p. 3.

15 Ibid., p. 3, who relies on the terms coined by M. Rosenfeld, ‘Constitutional Identity’, in Rosenfeld and Sajó (eds.), supra n. 11, p. 756-776 and 766-769. According to the classification proposed by Rosenfeld, the revolution-based constitution and the war-based constitution are similar as they both result from a radical break with the previous regime. However, the war-based model, unlike the revolution-based model, ‘can only result in successful constitution-making if the citizenry of the defeated polity eventually embraces as its own the resulting constitution launched by the victors’: ibid., p. 768. In addition to the 1949 German Basic Law, another example of a war-based constitutional text is the 1946 Constitution of Japan. A pact-based constitution, on the other hand, is the outcome of negotations and agreements between the leadership of the ancien régime and the proponents of the new constitutional order. In addition to the 1996 South African Constitution, another example of a pact-based constitutional text is the 1978 Spanish Constitution (ibid., p. 769).

16 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 3.

17 R. Hirschl, Comparative Matters. The Renaissance of Comparative Constitutional Law (Oxford University Press 2014) p. 256.

18 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 301.

19 K.L. Scheppele, ‘Constitutional Interpretation after Regimes of Horror’, in S. Karstedt (ed.), Legal Institutions and Collective Memories (Hart Publishing 2009) p. 233 ff.

20 See Sadurski (ed.), supra n. 10; W. Sadurski, Rights Before Courts: A Study of Constitutional Courts in Postcommunist States of Central and Eastern Europe (Springer 2014).

21 One need only recall the infamous Dred Scott v Sandford case, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393 (1857).

22 347 U.S. 483 (1954).

23 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 301.

24 Ibid., p. 302.

25 Ibid.

26 Ibid., p. 5.

27 Ibid., p. 4-11.

28 347 U.S. 483 (1954).

29 7 BVerfGE 198 (1958).

30 S v Makwanyane (CCT 3/94) (1995).

31 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 304.

32 Ibid., p. 28.

33 Ibid., p. 305.

34 3 BVerfGE 58 (1953).

35 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 105.

36 On this issue see C. Pavone, Alle origini della Repubblica. Scritti su fascismo, antifascismo e continuità dello Stato (Bollati Boringhieri 1995); M. Fiorillo, La nascita della Repubblica italiana e i problemi giuridici della continuità (Giuffrè 2000).

37 K. Loewenstein, ‘Militant Democracy and Fundamental Rights’, 31(3) The American Political Science Review (1937) p. 417 ff.

38 2 BVerfGE 1 (1952).

39 5 BVerfGE 85 (1956).

40 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 189.

41 Ibid., p. 218 ff.

42 Ibid., p. 244 ff.

43 S v Makwanyane (CCT 3/94) (1995).

44 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 201.

45 See C. Murray, ‘A Constitutional Beginning: Making South Africa’s Final Constitution’, 23(3) University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review (2001) p. 813; H. Ebrahim and L.E. Miller, ‘Creating the Birth Certificate of a New South Africa. Constitution Making After Apartheid’, in L.E. Miller (ed.), Framing the State in Times of Transition. Case Studies in Constitution Making (United States Institute of Peace Press 2010) p. 120 ff.

46 See Certification of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (CCT 23/96) (1996).

47 Certification of the Amended Text of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (CCT 37/96) (1996).

48 A. Lollini, Constitutionalism and Transitional Justice in South Africa (Berghahn Books 2011) p. 63.

49 See A. Lollini and F. Palermo, ‘Comparative Law and the ‘Proceduralization’ of Constitution-Building Processes’, in J. Raue and P. Sutter (eds.), Facets and Practices of State-Building (Martinus Nijhoff 2009) p. 301 ff.

50 Collings, supra n. 1, p. 13.

51 Ibid., p. 296.

52 Ibid., p. 314.

53 Ibid., p. 315.

54 Ibid.

55 Ibid., p. 314.

56 Ibid., p. 251.

57 Ibid., p. 306.

58 Ibid., p. 312.

59 Ibid., p. 305.

60 Collings’ interview in M. Flores, ‘La giustizia che fa i conti con la storia’, Il Corriere della Sera – la Lettura (24 January 2021) p. 11.

61 See V.A. Bruno, ‘“Centre Right? What Centre Right?” Italy’s Right-wing Coalition: Forza Italia’s Political “Heritage” and the Mainstreaming of the Far Right’, in V.A. Bruno (ed.), Populism and Far-Right. Trends in Europe (EDUCatt 2022) p. 174-175.

62 Ibid., p. 176-178.

63 Collings’ interview in Flores, supra n. 60, p. 11.

64 See J. Collings, ‘Memory as Mantle. Evil Past and Judges’ Power in Germany and South Africa’, in Biagi et al. (eds.) (2023), supra n. 3. p. 71 ff.

65 See Biagi, supra n. 10, p. 176.

66 Ibid., p. 62 ff.

67 For example, the first judges of the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic had been educated abroad and/or were fierce opponents of the Communist regime (including the first President of the Court, Zdeněk Kessler). Thus, the Court was ‘anticommunist in its political make-up’: Sadurski (2014), supra n. 20, p. 22.

68 See Collings, supra n. 64, p. 91.

69 See A. Sachs, The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs (McGraw Hill 1967); A. Sachs, Soft Vengeance of a Freedom Fighter (University of California Press 2014); A. Sachs, The Free Diary of Albie Sachs (Random House 2004).

70 See Biagi, supra n. 10, p. 50.

71 In a previous article, Collings himself acknowledged that he did not include Italy as a separate case study as the ‘Constitutional Court’s invocations of fascism are comparatively quite rare’: Collings, supra n. 12, p. 489, fn. 77.

72 Collings, supra n. 12, p. 475 ff.

73 Ibid., p. 486.

74 J. Collings, Democracy’s Guardians. A History of the German Federal Constitutional Court 1951–2001 (Oxford University Press 2015).

75 Collings, supra n. 12, p. 487.

76 Ibid., p. 477 and 488.

77 Ibid., p. 489.

78 Ibid., p. 477.

79 Ibid.

80 Ibid., p. 495.