The Constitution of Independence traces constitutional theory in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand from early domination by British Imperial ideas, through contemplation of constitutional equality, to the eventual achievement of irreversible constitutional independence in the 1980s. In these countries, a series of fascinating developments have been under way for more than a decade, characterized by independent thinking, experimentation, and cross-Commonwealth borrowing of constitutional ideas.
The Constitution of Independence traces constitutional theory in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand from early domination by British Imperial ideas, through contemplation of constitutional equality, to the eventual achievement of irreversible constitutional independence in the 1980s. In these countries, a series of fascinating developments have been under way for more than a decade, characterized by independent thinking, experimentation, and cross-Commonwealth borrowing of constitutional ideas.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Peter Crawford Oliver is Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, King's College London.
Inhaltsangabe
1: Introduction Part I: the Imperial Constitution 2: The Imperial Dominions 3: Parliamentary Sovereignty in the Empire and Commonwealth: Dicey's Dominions and Dogmas 4: Theories of Parliamentary Sovereignty after 1931: New and Revised Part II: Constitution to Independence 5: canada I: Confederation and the Imperial Theory 6: Canada II: An Independent Constitutional Theory 7: Canada III: The Patriation Reference 8: New Zealand: Waitangi, Westminster, and Wellington 9: Australia I: Colonies, Conventions, and Canberra 10: Australia II: Westminster to Canberra Part III: Constitutional Independence 11: Legal Continuity or Disguised Revolution? 12: Theoretical Approaches to Sovereignty and Legal System 13: Constitutional Continuity and Constitutional Independence 14: Conclusion
1: Introduction Part I: the Imperial Constitution 2: The Imperial Dominions 3: Parliamentary Sovereignty in the Empire and Commonwealth: Dicey's Dominions and Dogmas 4: Theories of Parliamentary Sovereignty after 1931: New and Revised Part II: Constitution to Independence 5: canada I: Confederation and the Imperial Theory 6: Canada II: An Independent Constitutional Theory 7: Canada III: The Patriation Reference 8: New Zealand: Waitangi, Westminster, and Wellington 9: Australia I: Colonies, Conventions, and Canberra 10: Australia II: Westminster to Canberra Part III: Constitutional Independence 11: Legal Continuity or Disguised Revolution? 12: Theoretical Approaches to Sovereignty and Legal System 13: Constitutional Continuity and Constitutional Independence 14: Conclusion
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