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51778
The UK Constitution
Description
Politics Mind Map on The UK Constitution, created by sallybooth on 20/04/2013.
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politics
politics
Mind Map by
sallybooth
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
sallybooth
over 11 years ago
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Resource summary
The UK Constitution
What is a Constitution?
Codified
Single source
Clear and everyone can access it
Parts of the UK constitution are codified e.g Human Rights Act
US and most other countries
Uncodified
UK has a single tier legal system
e.g Israel, UK, New Zealand
May or may not be written down in a single document
Entrenchment
Set in stone
Hard to change
Characteristics of the UK Constitution
Party control
Party government
Uncodified nature
Has statutes
Unwritten conventions, traditions, common law
Royal prerogative
Parliamentary sovereignty
HOC & HOL
Sources of the UK Constitution
Europe
Take some points from the EU
The UK has to fit with EU laws
Common Law
Generally acknowledged
Development of laws through historical use
Historical Principles
Old so not questioned
Developed over time
Binded on political community
Tradition
Always happens
Old so not questioned
Parliamentary Statutes
A law passed by parliament
Limits power of HOL
Creates constitutional ideas
Constitutional Conventions
Everyone expected to know
Unwritten rule
Binded on political community
Constitutional Reform
Labour's Reform
Democratisation
e.g HOL
Decentralisation
Dispersing power away from the government
Restoration of rights
Human Rights Act
Modernisation
Parliamentary Reform
Human Rights Act
Active citizenship
Bringing the UK in line
The UK government kept being put before the European court of human rights which was seen as embarassing
Part of devolution settlements
Electoral Reform
New labour wanted to change it due to the way teh conservatives are usually quite dominant
Modernise it
Different types used for different things
Local Government
Lack of autonomy from central government
Lack of accountability to local electorates
Very low public interest in local gov and politics
Should Britain have a codified constitution?
Yes
Would clarify the nature of politics to citizens
2 tier legal system so laws would be more clarified
Judicial review would be more precise
Would help safe guard citizens rights
Might prevent drift towards executive power
Would bring UK in line with other countries
No
Uncodified constitutions are flexible and can adapt to changes easier
Conservatives say it's fine as it is so why change it?
Some UK conventions may be difficult to put into writing
Lack of constraints allows executive government to be strong and decisive
A codified constitution means unelected judges
The British Constitution
For
Not heavily entrenched so it is flexible and adaptable, so can be changed in reaction to circumstances e.g women being allowed the vote
The UK has never suffered major political unrest which suggests the constitution is enduring
Parliament / government are not restricted in how they act
Contains traditional elements which help maintain the public's support
Against
Lack of restraints of parliament / government could be dangerous on rights
Contains outdated institutions such as unlecected HOL and unecessary monarchy
Government often dominates parliament due to lack of seperation of powers
Many people are ignorant of the constitution due to it's uncodified nature
Devolution
For
Growing in popular demand
National regions have different needs to England as a whole
There will be less demands for indpendence
More democratic, gov closer to the people
'Europe of the regions'
Against
May lead to the break up of the UK (conservative concept)
Demand for it is over exaggerated
Creates more government which costs more
May lead to confusion
Judicial Review
In codified constitutions it takes place with close reference to the constitution
Judges are required to interpret, re interpret or clarify
Strictly codified / entrenched constitutions always evolve due to judges new rulings
British judges may interpret as they wish however parliament does overrule
When judges have made their ruling they have effectively 'rewritten' the constitution
Sovereignty
Legal
Ultimate power to make laws that will be enforced
Lies firmly with parliament in the UK
Political
Determining what political decisions are made
Government in the UK
Sometimes the electorate when they vote etc.
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