This study examines how Mexican, Brazilian, and Colombian courts shape education policies and governance, analyzing judicial decisions, legal frameworks, and policy implementation from 2004 to 2024. It reveals a significant convergence in how civil law courts act as policy architects, albeit with varied approaches and success. Colombia’s Constitutional Court is interventionist, using structural injunctions for interagency coordination. Brazil’s judiciary balances incremental interventions with federal complexities. Mexican courts show cautious activism, mainly in disability rights. The analysis proposes a “judicial synergy governance” model where courts orchestrate reform via multistakeholder coalitions, challenging traditional views on civil law constraints. This highlights how courts can drive change and respect civil law traditions and separation of powers. Effective judicialization hinges on context-specific mechanisms aligning constitutional mandates with institutional capacities and civil society participation, not mimicking common law. This research advances understanding of judicial activism in civil law systems and offers insights for promoting educational equity.
Rodolfo Gutiérrez Silva (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: