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Constitutional Law. Introduction Law and State Questions Overview: 1.Examine constitutions 2.Debates.

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Presentation on theme: "Constitutional Law. Introduction Law and State Questions Overview: 1.Examine constitutions 2.Debates."— Presentation transcript:

1 Constitutional Law

2 Introduction Law and State Questions Overview: 1.Examine constitutions 2.Debates

3 Constitutions 1 Executive…. Body or bodies that put the law into effect Legislature…. Body or bodies that make laws Judiciary …. Body or bodies that settle disputes arising from application or interpretation of the laws

4 Constitutions 2 Federal Various powers of government are divided between different geographical units and a central government Unitary Ultimate power is held by a central government

5 Constitutions 3 Unicameral A single law making authority Bicameral Two legislative assemblies which act as a check on the other

6 Constitutions 4 Split into 4 groups and given a constitution Have 15 minutes to determine: The name/names of the executive, legislature and the highest judicial body/bodies Whether constitution is federal or unitary Whether constitution is unicameral or bicameral N.B. If time also consider the above in relation to the UK

7 Constitutions 5 What does the UK constitution look like? It is uncodified Made up of legislation/cases/conventions Executive = The Government Legislative = Parliament Judiciary = Supreme Court It is unitary (but devolution) It has a bicameral system (House of Commons and House of Lords)

8 Separation of Powers Separation of powers is…. 1. The separation of personnel and functions of government 2. Bodies providing ‘checks and balances’ on the power of other bodies

9 Debates Twenty minutes to prepare in your groups Five minutes for each group to present (up to you how you present) Time for each group to respond Other two groups vote whether to approve the motion or not

10 Debate Motions Motion 1: Scotland should become an independent country Motion 2: The judiciary should be representative of society.

11 Scottish Independence Historically a separate country Crowns were united in 1603 (James I) and Parliaments in 1706 (Treaty of Union) Devolution occurred in 1998 (74.3% voted for it) Scottish parliament can make law on a wide range of subjects (e.g. education, the environment, health and housing) There are still numerous reserved matters (e.g. benefits, immigration, defence, foreign policy) that only the UK can legislate on SNP gained a majority in the Scottish Parliament in 2011 giving them a mandate to hold an independence referendum on 18 September 2014.

12 Scottish Independence 2 The main issues include: What currency an independent Scotland would use (pound, euro or something else) The impact on business Membership of the EU (whether Scotland would be automatically able to join or not) The economy

13 Judicial Diversity Old Boy’s Network Appointments made upon ‘merit’ and encourage diversity (ss63-64) 22.6% female and 4.2% BME (Judiciary.gov.uk)Judiciary.gov.uk Supreme Court  1 female judge and 0 BME ‘Trickle Up’ – Lord SumptionLord Sumption Positive Discrimination – Baroness HaleBaroness Hale Equality of Opportunity

14 Judicial Diversity 2 Reasons for: Different perspectives Think/Reason differently Act as role models Reflect demographics of society BUT if impartial does it matter? How far do we go to achieve diversity?

15 Debates Fifteen minutes to prepare in your groups Five minutes for each group to present (up to you how you present) Time for each group to respond Other two groups vote whether to approve the motion or not

16 Motions Motion 1: Scotland should become an independent country Motion 2: The judiciary should be representative of society.

17 Summary Constitutions – executive/legislative/judiciary Scottish independence Judicial diversity How to read legal documents Debates


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