There are two great objects which every constitution must attain to be successful, which every old and celebrated one must have wonderfully achieved : every constitution must first gain authority and then use authority ; it must first win the loyalty... The English Constitution - Página 70por Walter Bagehot - 1873 - 351 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - 1898 - 884 páginas
...steady growth of respect for the national government, and it illustrates Bagehot's principle that "every constitution must first gain authority, and then use...then employ that homage in the work of government." — EDITOR. side of the State governments than of the federal government. So far as the disposition... | |
| John A. Ferejohn, Jack N. Rakove, Jonathan Riley - 2001 - 430 páginas
...must attain to be successful, which every old and celebrated one must have wonderfully achieved: Every constitution must first gain authority, and then use...then employ that homage in the work of government" ([1867] 1963, 61, emphasis in the original). The important point for present purposes is not Bagehot's... | |
| John Oakland - 2001 - 276 páginas
...gain authority, and then use authority'. It must, he went on, 'first win the confidence and loyalty of mankind, and then employ that homage in the work of government.' These are wise words, and they summarize very well my approach to constitutional reform (or democratic... | |
| Sudipta Sen - 2002 - 252 páginas
...of the constitution could only follow from the “dignified” parts. Bagehot has argued: “every constitution must first gain authority, and then use...then employ that homage in the work of government.” 49 Given the circumstances of imperial expansion, whether such a view applies Introduction xix mutatis... | |
| Sudipta Sen - 2002 - 252 páginas
...parts of the constitution could only follow from the "dignified" parts. Bagehot has argued: "every constitution must first gain authority, and then use...mankind, and then employ that homage in the work of government."'1 Given the circumstances of imperial expansion, whether such a view applies mutatis mutandis... | |
| James Roland Pennock, John William Chapman - 490 páginas
...which every old and celebrated one must have wonderfully achieved: every constitution must first gam authority, and then use authority; it must first win...mankind, and then employ that homage in the work of government.7 Accordingly, Bagehot pointed out that every constitution has "dignified" parts, which... | |
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