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Statute Law in Britain
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Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Mar 28, 2015

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Page 1: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Statute Law in Britain

Page 2: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Revision

Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define public v. private law?

Page 3: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

English law – video exercise

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KeKcTe4HRPs

Page 4: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Parliament

The legislative organ Constitutionally consists of the Monarch, The

House of Lords and the House of Commons The Queen in Parliament represents the

supreme authority within the United Kingdom

Page 5: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

The House of Commons

An elected and representative body 650 Members of Parliament (MPs) who

represent their constituencies Members are elected at General Elections held

every five years Members are paid a salary and an allowance

Page 6: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Speaker

Speaker of the House of Commons presides over the House

The traditional guardian of the rights and privileges of the House

Page 7: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Video exercise

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ToKcEvqXuM&list=PL7F1AFC4FF75A3725&index=5&feature=plpp_video

Page 8: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Answer the following

Who sits at the Speakers’ right side? Who is Sarjeant at Arms? What is Hansard?

Page 9: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

The House of Lords in the past

In the past mainly a hereditary body Lords Temporal (hereditary peers and

peeresses who have not disclaimed their peerage; life peers created by the Crown under the Life Peerages Act of 1958 and Lords of Appeal in Ordinary – Law Lords)

Lords Spiritual (the Archbishops of Canterbury and York and 24 senior bishops of the Church of England)

Page 10: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

The House of Lords today

The Lords currently has around 740 Members, and there are three different types:

elected hereditary Peers, life Peers (Lords Temporal) and bishops (Lords Spiritual)

Unlike MPs, the public do not elect the Lords. The majority are appointed by the Queen on the recommendation of the Prime Minister or of the House of Lords Appointments Commission.

Page 11: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Elected hereditary Peers

The right of hereditary Peers to sit and vote in the House of Lords was ended in 1999 by the House of Lords Act but 92 Members were elected internally to remain until the next stage of the Lords reform process.

Page 12: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Life Peers

Appointed for their lifetime only, these Lords' titles are not passed on to their children. The Queen formally appoints life Peers on the advice and recommendation of the Prime Minister.

Page 13: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Bishops (Lords Spiritual)

A limited number of 26 Church of England archbishops and bishops sit in the House, passing their membership on to the next most senior bishop when they retire.

Page 14: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Lord Chancellor

Speaker of the House of Lords A member of the government – Minister of

Justice Until 2009 presided over the judicial committee

of the House of Lords

Page 15: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Video exercise

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wVllfyvGfU&list=PL7F1AFC4FF75A3725&index=6&feature=plpp_video

Page 16: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

What did you learn about Life Peers? What is the role of the Lord Speaker? What is Woolsack?

Page 17: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

The Monarch

An integral part of the legislature Summons, prorogues (dismisses at the end of

a session) and dissolves Parliament Opens new sessions of Parliament with the

Royal Speech Gives Royal Assent before a Bill which has

passed all the stages in both Houses becomes a law

Page 18: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Pressure for new laws

Pressure for new laws comes from a variety of sources, mainly:

Government policy EU Law Law Commission reports Reoprts by other commissions Pressure groups

Page 19: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Pre-parliamentary process

The Government sets its legislative programme for the parliamentary session in the Queen’s Speech at the opening of Parliament

Consultation – more common in recent years (The Law Commission)

Page 20: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Types of Bill

Government Bill – introduced by the Government through the relevant Minister

Public Bill – one which relates to matters that affect the public

Private Bill – one which relates to the powers and interests of certain individuals or institutions

Hybrid Bill – one which features both a public and a private Bill

Private Member’s Bill – one introduced by a MP

Page 21: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Passing a Bill

A Bill may be started in either the House of Commons or the House of Lords, but it has to go through the same procedure in each House and pass all stages of the legislative procedure in order to become law

Page 22: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Legislative Procedure

Principal stages (for government bills) Inspiration Formulation Drafting Parliamentary Scrutiny Voting The Royal Assent Implementation

Page 23: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Inspiration

Ideas for a law come from a variety of sources (political parties, Government departments, interest groups, professional bodies)

Page 24: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Formulation

Becomes the responsibility of relevant Ministers and civil servants

Cabinet committees Consultation with experts, interest groups,

trade associations and others likely to be affected by the legislation

Page 25: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Drafting

Preparation of a draft bill Draft bills introduced to Parliament

Page 26: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Parliamentary Scrutiny

First reading (no debate) Second reading (principle debated on floor) Committee stage (clause-by-clause scrutiny in

Standing Committee) Report (amendments considered on floor) Third reading (final version debated) Voting

Page 27: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

The Royal Assent

The Queen has to sign the Bill Then it becomes an Act of Parliament The Statute Book Implementation – binding for all the courts in

the country Interpretation leads to precedents

Page 28: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Repeal

If a new statute is clearly contrary to the old one already in the Statute Book, the new one must clearly repeal those parts of the old statute

The old statute (or its parts) are no longer valid

Page 29: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Vocabulary

House of Commons – Donji dom House of Lords – Gornji dom Hereditary peerage – nasljedno plemstvo Constituency – izborna jedinica Bill – prijedlog zakona Repeal – opoziv zakona

Page 30: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Write the correct form of the verbs in brackets and insert the articles (a/an, the, /) as necessary:

Before the Norman Conquest ___ law in England ___________________ (decentralise). Fear of ___ power of local barons led ___ Henry II ____________ (create) a permanent royal court in London called the King's Bench. Judges from this court would travel the country ____________ (hear) civil and criminal cases. The central court in London decided the legal issue in a case and this _______________ (would apply) to the facts in the regional courts. In this way a judge-made system of law _____________ (develop) which was common to most parts of the country.

Page 31: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Answer key

Before the Norman Conquest the law in England was decentralised. Fear of the power of local barons led Henry II to create a permanent royal court in London called the King's Bench. Judges from this court would travel the country hearing civil and criminal cases. The central court in London decided the legal issue in a case and this would be applied to the facts in the regional courts. In this way a judge-made system of law was developed which was common to most parts of the country.

Page 32: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Fill in the blanks with the most appropriate word(s) from the list below:

bill, supreme, law, legislative, elected, dissolves, hereditary, membersParliament is the ______________ organ and is constitutionally composed of the Monarch, the House of Lords and the House of Commons. The Queen in Parliament represents the ________________ authority within the United Kingdom. The House of Commons is an _______________ and representative body, with _________________ elected at General Elections every five years. Before 1999 the House of Lords used to be a ___________________ body. The Queen summons, prorogues and ___________________ Parliament. No ______________ can become a _________ unless the Queen gives Royal Assent.

Page 33: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Answer key

 Parliament is the legislative organ and is constitutionally composed of the Monarch, the House of Lords and the House of Commons. The Queen in Parliament represents the supreme authority within the United Kingdom. The House of Commons is an elected and representative body, with members elected at General Elections every five years. Before 1999 the House of Lords used to be a hereditary body. The Queen summons, prorogues and dissolves Parliament. No bill can become a law unless the Queen gives Royal Assent.

Page 34: Statute Law in Britain. Revision Which are sources of English law? What is meant by common law? How can law be classified by type? How would you define.

Thank you for attention!