Search for a command to run...
Constitutional democracies worldwide face a growing threat from the misuse of emergency powers. The Doctrine of Necessity permits governments to act beyond constitutional limits during genuine crises, yet its boundaries remain dangerously undefined. This study critically examines how courts across Pakistan, Bangladesh, Hungary, Jordan, and India apply the doctrine during constitutional emergencies. Employing qualitative doctrinal and comparative legal analysis, the research identifies four governing conditions for legitimate application unavoidable necessity, absence of constitutional alternatives, proportionality, and temporary duration. Findings reveal persistent judicial inconsistency, absent parliamentary oversight, fundamental rights vulnerability, and complete absence of constitutional codification across all examined jurisdictions. Political convenience consistently replaces genuine necessity as the primary motivation for invoking the doctrine. This study proposes a universal comparative legal framework addressing these structural weaknesses. The findings benefit legislators, constitutional drafters, judicial reformers, and citizens in emerging democracies seeking stronger protections against executive overreach during constitutional crises.
Published in: International Journal of Law and Policy
Volume 4, Issue 3, pp. 63-83
DOI: 10.59022/ijlp.475