ABSTRACT
The dominant paradigm of statutory-interpretation scholarship is an ‘internalist’ one. It treats statutory interpretation as a self-contained set of tools primarily deployed by lawyers and judges within the closed universe of courts. But as judges increasingly justify textualism by invoking a populist fidelity to ‘the people’, the internalist paradigm has proven too narrow to support a robust democratic theory of statutory interpretation. Urgent, foundational questions such as ‘How should laypeople engage with statutes in the first place?’ and ‘What is the relationship between statutory interpretation and power?’ are entirely illegible within an internalist, juricentric paradigm. The concept of a statute’s ‘ordinary meaning’ has in turn developed with little attention paid to laypeople’s actual participation in political processes.
In response, this Article – the second in a series – begins a new conversation in the field of legislation by developing a broader, critically ‘externalist’ perspective. The Article lays the foundations for a social and political theory of statutory interpretation that is more inclusive of diverse and historically marginalized peoples, grounded in the realities of lay politics, and capable of reflecting the social nature of statutory interpretation. An externalist perspective reveals the lived experience of statutory interpretation beyond traditional governmental actors. It sees statutory interpretation and society as mutually constitutive. It pays attention to on-the-ground manifestations of abstract values like ‘the rule of law’. And it situates statutory interpretation as a component of political culture, political economy, grassroots participation, and racial politics. This perspective reveals how statutory interpretation might frame how people imagine the possibilities of societal change. And it enables us to ask, counterintuitively, whether statutory interpretation makes social change more difficult.
To begin the work of articulating this externalist paradigm, the Article chiefly recovers a new history of expository legislation – statutes that purported to interpret previous legislative enactments – and uses that history to articulate three new frameworks …
Alexander Zhang, Externalist Statutory Interpretation (2024) 134 Yale Law Journal, November 2024.
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