ON THE BALANCING OF RIGHTS AND THE PROPORTIONALITY OF JUDICIAL DECISIONS: IS IT NOT MORE FICTION THAN REALITY?

Authors

  • Luis Renato Vedovato
  • Josué Mastrodi Neto

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17768/pbl.y5.n7-8.p194-209

Abstract

This is a research paper on the prevalence of interests and values of the highest social groups against the interests and values of subordinate social groups, such as migrants, even in judicial decisions of apparently individual conflicts involving only plaintiff and defendant. Individual rights, on which the modern Government was structured, tend to prevail over social rights. This prevalence is crucial even in the context of the theory of constitutional rights of Robert Alexy, who states equal importance to individual or social rights and that, because of the proportionality, there would be a chance that social rights would prevail. It is even possible to say that each collision of rights will be determined proportionally and differently, but the proportionality does not confer rationality to the discretion needed to justify the decision. The proportional decision has more to do with the chosen criterion than the conflicting rights.

Author Biographies

Luis Renato Vedovato

Ph.D. Universidade de São Paulo. Professor at the Master Law Program of Universidade Nove de Julho. Professor Doctor at UNICAMP.

Josué Mastrodi Neto

Ph.D. Universidade de São Paulo. Professot at Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Campinas.

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Published

2018-06-06

How to Cite

Vedovato, L. R., & Mastrodi Neto, J. (2018). ON THE BALANCING OF RIGHTS AND THE PROPORTIONALITY OF JUDICIAL DECISIONS: IS IT NOT MORE FICTION THAN REALITY?. PANORAMA OF BRAZILIAN LAW, 5(7-8), 194–209. https://doi.org/10.17768/pbl.y5.n7-8.p194-209