respect of the protection of individual rights or resistance to both express and
implied forms of rights-based judicial review.
Constitutional Implications in Australia
375
including formal features of the written or visible constitution, such as its lan-
guage and structure and more informal aspects of local constitutional culture,
including a constitution’s history and relationship to contemporary legal and
political understandings. Ultimately these factors intersect and interact in
complex ways, and cannot be analysed independently. But they are important
factors to consider if we are to try to understand the invisible constitution in
comparative perspective.
In Australia, we suggest, the current dualism in the High Court’s role in
protecting constitutional structure versus individual rights is sustained by a
combination of a legal interpretive orthodoxy that emphasises the importance
of ‘text and structure’ in the interpretation of the Constitution, prior textual
and structural choices by the drafters of the Australian Constitution, which
give limited express support to individual rights and political-cultural obsta-
cles to achieving change to this position via either formal or informal means.
136
If any one of these three dimensions explaining Australian constitutional prac-
tice were to change, we believe, it might be enough to create a more robust
rights-based invisible constitution in Australia. But without such a change,
it seems likely that the trajectory of ‘the invisible constitution’ in the form of
constitutional implications in Australia will remain firmly bifurcated.
136
Compare Roux, Supra note 91.
376
13.1. Introduction
Religion has become the great fault line of the Malaysian constitutional order.
Contemporary Malaysian politics and adjudication are divided by competing
views over the constitutional identity of the modern Malaysian state as secular
or Islamic. At the heart of this debate is Article 3(1) of the Federal Constitution
of Malaysia, which declares ‘Islam is the religion of the Federation; but other
religions may be practised in peace and harmony’. Over the last two decades,
the clause constitutionalising Islam as the state religion has increasingly been
pitted as being in tension with the right of religious freedom guaranteed under
Article 11(1).
1
This chapter considers the invisible constitution in connection
with the Malaysian Constitution’s religion clauses. It explores the conceptual
aspect of the unwritten, extra-textual influences surrounding the interpreta-
tion of the religion clauses, and also examines the deeper foundations of the
constitutional framework underlying the visible text of Article 3(1).
Malaysia’s religion clauses provide a focal point for examining the invisible
constitution in two main ways. The first aspect of invisibility is connected to
the expansion of Islam’s position in the constitutional order by political and
judicial actors through means outside textual constitutional change. Although
the text of Article 3(1) has remained unchanged since the nation’s found-
ing, Islam’s role in the Malaysian Constitution has been expanded through
unwritten, extra-textual means in contemporary constitutional discourse. The
invisible elevation of Islam’s supremacy in recent decades has taken place
through expansive judicial interpretations of Article 3(1) by prioritising Islam’s
place over other constitutional norms. This approach, in effect, amounts
to a claim that Article 3(1) gives rise to an implication of Islam’s primacy in
Malaysia’s constitutional order. The invisible Islamisation of judicial discourse
1
Fed. Const. (Malay.), Article 11(1) (‘[e]very person has the right to profess and practice his
religion . . .’).
13
Malaysia’s Invisible Constitution
Yvonne Tew