to accept a constitutional compromise.
anced at the moment of application and/or interpretation.
In this sense, the “formal Constitution” is quite different from the “material
Constitution itself. Thus, in the words of Costantino Mortati, the “material
The Constituent Assembly was elected on June 2, 1946 with the task of writing the new Repub-
temporary effect of contrasting forces and conceptions.
The Italian Constitution was approved on December 22, 1947 and entered into force on
tutional Court of Italy: Towards a Multilevel System of Constitutional Review?” (2008) 3
Journal of Comparative Law 2, 10. See Sergio Bartole, Interpretazioni e trasformazioni della
“Additive Judgments”
459
This has been possible in part because a rich variety of judgments have
been handed down since the very early years of its activity, thanks to the need
recognized by the Constitutional Court itself to consider the impact that its
decisions have on the legal system as a whole, and on the other branches of
government. Among them, those most affected are the judiciary, through the
application of the technique known as interpretazione conforme (consistent
interpretation), which evolved in accordance with the diritto vivente (doctrine
of the living law) paradigm, and Parliament.
In particular, in its dialogue with Parliament, the Court has created a spe-
cific type of decision. The so-called “additive judgments” (sentenze additive),
are rulings whereby the Court declares a statute unconstitutional, not because
of what it provides for, but rather what it does not provide for. In this way,
the Court manages to insert new norms into the legal system that cannot be
found in any statutory text and transforms itself – or so it would appear – into a
creator of legal rules, thereby playing a role that in the Italian system belongs
almost exclusively to Parliament (with some exceptions related to regional
competences
8
and to the Government).
9
In such a context, this chapter aims to analyze the functioning of “additive
judgments” in order to see how the Italian Constitutional Court uses this type
of judgment to make visible the sense of constitutionality to which legisla-
tive power can be blind. A number of criticisms have been leveled against
“additive judgments” in legal scholarship, the first being that they contradict
the classical Kelsenian idea of constitutional justice whereby constitutional
courts must be confined to being “negative legislators.” Through “additive
judgments,” however, the Constitutional Court seems to become a “creator”
of legal norms by taking over competences that the Constitution entrusts only
to Parliament (and exceptionally the government). Other criticisms, however,
focus on the effects such rulings may have, since they are decisions that ought
not to be able to produce real legal effects, but merely represent a warning to
the legislator.
10
The following chapter, therefore, aims to provide a brief description of
the Italian constitutional model. Later on, I will describe the conditions that
the Constitutional Court itself identifies to justify the adoption of additive
judgments as the only possible constitutionally compulsory solution, and the
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