The Constitutional Orders of ‘One Country, Two Systems’
263
8.5.3. Proportionality Analysis in the Hong Kong and Macau SARs
It is noteworthy that the principle of proportionality has, following the con-
tinental European tradition, been established in the administrative law of
Macau. By contrast, the traditional common law approach to judicial review
of administrative action in Hong Kong has been based on the triple grounds
of illegality, procedural impropriety and irrationality (Wednesbury unreasona-
bleness). With the development of constitutional protection of human rights,
it has now become possible to apply principles of proportionality to judicial
review of administrative actions that restrict human rights.
114
As discussed
above in this chapter, the Hong Kong courts have, since the 1990s, practised
constitutional judicial review of legislative restrictions on constitutionally
guaranteed rights by applying principles of proportionality, and have devel-
oped a considerable body of jurisprudence in this regard. By contrast, there
is relatively little case law in the MSAR on the application of proportionality
analysis in the review of legislative, as distinguished from administrative, acts.
This can be explained by the fact that there have been in the MSAR relatively
fewer cases of constitutional judicial review of legislation as compared with
Hong Kong.
115
Supra note 1, 816, 818–20. In this chapter, we have focused on the legal and institutional reasons
for the development of the judicial power to review legislative enactments in the HKSAR and the
MSAR, though we acknowledge the relevance of the myriad of factors discussed in Ip’s article,
including in each case of Hong Kong and Macau the SAR’s economy, the SAR’s international
connections and significance, the identity of the SAR’s population with ‘Chinese’ identity, the
organisation and orientation of the SAR’s civil society, the likelihood of opposition politics and
social movements in the SAR extending the arena of struggles to the courts, and the organi-
sation and outspokenness of the SAR’s legal profession. See also, in this regard, Sir Anthony
Mason, ‘The Rule of Law in the Shadow of the Giant: the Hong Kong Experience’ (2011) 33
Sydney Law Review 623. We also note that Ip has not tested his hypotheses quantitatively, stat-
ing that ‘[it] will be difficult to obtain empirical evidence that judges anticipate the responses
of the regime if the latter has never retaliated’: Ip, Supra note 1, 824. Although Ip has (at 826–7)
touched upon the TUI’s repeated reversal of the ‘assertive’ TSI’s judgment in the series of cases
on administrative regulations beginning with the Burmeister case, and suggested that TUI did
so ‘in order to survive in the face of an implied and credible political threat or retaliation’, we
are unable to confirm Ip’s proposition in this regard in light of the comprehensive judgment of
the TUI surveying and analysing the relevant constitutional sources (including citing cases
of the Portuguese Constitutional Court) and the complexity of the controversy in question,
which was best settled by the enactment of a law (lei) by the MSAR’s legislature.
114
See Leung Kwok Hung, Supra note 32.
115
Relevant factors affecting the number of cases in the MSAR include the size of the economy
and society, both in terms of the economic and social interactions and the legal service sector,
and features of the MSAR judiciary, including the size of the establishment, the delays in
rendering court rulings, the erratic holding of hearings in contentious cases and general effi-
ciency; see Wei Dan, Supra note 57, at 248.
264
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |