What is a constitution
Foundational charter (legal documents) and supreme laws that form the basis of a legal system and political society
True or false constitutions lays out jurisdiction
True
Constitutions have come to symbolize ____
The social contracts that societies make to constitute themselves in which the people confer authority to political actors in exchange for the establishment of order
Forms of constitutions
Written, hybrid (combination of written and unwritten) and Unwritten (grounded in customs)
What country has a written form of constitution
US
What country had a hybrid form of constitution
Canada
What constitution is unwritten
UK
Elements of Canadian constitution
Social contract
Constitutions tend to
-express founding principles and shared values
-establish the political system
-establish fundamental laws of society
-Confer power to particular actors and or institutions
-outlined the basic rights and obligations of citizens
-highlight a particular history
-contain aspirations
Constitutional design
Particular features of constitutions
Constitutional varies
Are constitutions made difficult to change
Yes I order to counter any overstretch of authority and establishes a political a society
Most constitutions
-have a particular amendment processes
-many constitutions specify judicial review
-many constitutions omit important political structures and legal processes
most constitutions diffuse authority of the state through a
Authority may be diffused _____ and _____
Horizontally and vertically
Vertical diffusion of power
Horizontal diffusion of power
-separation of power on a system of cheques and balances, judiciary makes ultimate decision
What diffusion of power does Canada exhibit
Hybrid of vertical and horizontal
Separation of powers
What are the 3 branches in government
Federalism
-a political system with multiple levels of government each with a degree of autonomy with specialized jurisdiction
What parts of the BNA reflects federalism
Section 91 and 92 of the BNA
Unitarism
A political system with no sub national governments processing delegated authority/ jurisdiction (no provinces)