| M. Stuart Madden - 2005 - 508 páginas
...references. that also could have been achieved by the legislature. Walter Bagehot famously stated that "the efficient secret of the English Constitution may be described as the close union . . . of the executive and legislative powers" in the Cabinet.3 Yet even more widely, throughout the... | |
| Gregory Claeys - 2004 - 791 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Stephen Buckley - 2006 - 231 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Mark Goldie, Robert Wokler - 2006 - 944 páginas
...Walter Bagehot proclaimed in 1867 to be 'the efficient secret of the English constitution', namely 'the close union, the nearly complete fusion, of the executive and legislative powers' (Bagehot 2001, pp. 8-9). In spite of all the voices of opposition that were heard in the decades after... | |
| Peter Leyland - 2007 - 267 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Colin Turpin, Adam Tomkins - 2007 - 903 páginas
...edn 1999), pp 276-81. (e) Parliament and the executive As long ago as 1867 Walter Bagehot highlighted 'the close union, the nearly complete fusion, of the executive and legislative powers' (The English Constitution (1963 edn), p 65). The executive is headed (under the Queen as formal and... | |
| Pennsylvania Bar Association - 1911 - 472 páginas
...confusion of mind on the part of the great publicist in dealing with this subject. Bagehot declares that "the efficient secret of the English constitution...fusion, of the executive and legislative powers." Perhaps Montesquieu meant to connote the division of powers rather than to condemn their co-ordination,... | |
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