JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS IN INDIA AND PAKISTAN: THE NEED FOR RESPONSIVE JUDICIAL REVIEW AND INSTITUTIONAL DIALOGUE
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NLUJ
Abstract
Judicial Appointments were and continue to remain a hotly contested issue even after four
landmark pronouncements by the Supreme Court. In the latest judgement on judicial
appointments in 2015, the Supreme Court of India (‘SCI’), in SCORA v. Union of
India declared the National Judicial Appointment Commission, brought in by the 99th
Amendment, as unconstitutional for violating the basic structure. The judgement has
been highly criticised by scholars for ignoring the principles of separation of powers and
ignoring “parliamentary supremacy” by striking down a constitutional amendment in
toto. Interestingly, the Supreme Court of Pakistan (‘SCP’) was faced with a similar
question in Nadeem Ahmed regarding the constitutional validity of the 18th
Amendment, which, inter alia, introduced a Judicial Appointments Commission. The
SCP acted in stark contrast to the SCI by engaging in institutional dialogue as opposed
to striking down the Amendment. This paper attempts to provide multiple suggestions
and ways as to how the SCI could have decided the case differently by drawing on
jurisprudence from Pakistan. The article attempts to compare and contrast the approach
adopted by the SCI with that of the SCP and argues for engaging in institutional dialogue
on questions like judicial appointments, which do not form the “democratic minimum
core” in a democracy.
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8 (1) CCAL (2024)
