Constitutional Amendment Essay

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    decision processes, including town meeting, recall elections, initiatives, and referendums. The referendum is a process that allows the citizens to approve or reject laws of constitutional amendments proposed by the government. On the opposite side of a referendum, an initiative is the proposal of a new law or constitutional amendment by the ordinary citizens to the state government. No more than half of the states offer options of either, with twenty-five states offering popular referendum and only eight-teen

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    guaranteed by the Constitution, and the conservative view towards crime (Wallace & Roberson, 2016). The area of victims’ rights had its most significant development with the Victim’s Rights Constitutional Amendment proposal by President Bill Clinton in 1996 (Wallace & Roberson, 2016). The Victims’ Rights Constitutional Amendment was not passed until 2004 when Senators Jon Kyl and Dianne Feinstein created another proposal (Derene, Walker, & Stein, 2010). This statute “allowed the general rights of restitution

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    A Constitutional Amendment: The Only Way to Protect Parental Rights to Direct the Upbringing and Education of Their Children English 1020 May 1, 2008 Outline Thesis: In order to ensure that parental rights concerning the upbringing and education of their children remain fundamental rights in America, there must be an amendment to the United States Constitution explicitly stating parental rights. I. Parental rights are not specifically protected under the United States Constitution

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    Constitution in 1946. According to Maki the reason why Meiji constitution is because as he stated “The national tragedy of a physically and spiritually devastating lost wars brought the old constitutional order to an end.” (Maki, 1990). In the new Constitution, it states that Japan shall have a constitutional monarchy, in which the Emperor is the head of the state but serves only as the symbol of the state with no power. (NYU, 2006). Moreover, the Japanese Government consists of three branches including

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    Constitution is a body of fundamental principles that sets out a framework of precedent which 'regulates the functions, powers and duties ' amongst the organs of the government. It provides authority to how such organs as the executive, legislative and judiciary must operate under a constitution law. The fundamental purpose of a constitution is being able to establish the roles and powers of different branches of a state alongside the perspectives and rights of its citizens. The United Kingdom

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    Thailand, a nation located in Southeast Asia, is well-known for its complex and turbulent political history. Similar to the United Kingdom, the country’s current form of government is based on a constitutional monarchy. A hereditary Thai king serves as the head of state while a Prime Minister is elected by a parliamentary government. Since the infamous 1932 revolution conducted by Royal Thai Army officers and members of the country’s wealthy, elite bureaucracy that put an end to the country’s absolute

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    without amendments, defining the basic rules of the state. More recent written constitutions derive from the grant – or devolution – of legislative power from previously imperial powers to former colonies and dominions, whether secured as a result of peaceful settlement or violent revolution. . A written constitution is generally rigid and a procedure separate from that of enacting ordinary law is provided for its amendment or revision. In other words a distinction between constitutional law and

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    Discuss and analyse the arguments for and against adopting a codified constitution in the UK. A constitution is a set of rules that seek to establish the duties, powers and functions of the various institutions of government. They also regulate the relationship between and among the institutions and define the relationship between the state and the individual. There are many different types of constitutions. The constitution that is in place in the UK is an uncodified one. In other words, it is

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    already mostly Republican with the only Monarchial elements remaining being the concentration of Royal powers in the Ministry. (http://www.aph.gov.au/senate/general/republic.htm#aussie) In any event, ‘severing the Royal ties’ is not that easy, as amendments to the Australian Constitution Acts 1900(U.K) can only be passed in Parliament in accordance with section 128. (Chisholm et.al 1997, p.61) Section 128 prescribes that changes can only be implemented by referendum. To hold a referendum a Bill

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    1. Introduction The Southeast Asia region, especially in the late 1980s and the late 2000s, was widely viewed as a model of democratization in the developing world. Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, and the Philippines were all ranked as “partly free” or “free” by Freedom House. Countries such as Cambodia and Myanmar had also taken great steps forward in terms of democracy during this period. However, lately democracy in the region proved to be more fragile. Thailand, as a case in point,

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