Strong upper houses are a distinctive and important part of Australia\u27s constitutional heritage. While the Senate is the most visible and celebrated example, state upper houses (the legislative councils) are now also vital components of Australian democracy. Bruce Stone audits the state upper houses and finds electoral reform is the key to improved performance in legislative review and executive scrutiny, and that some houses are simply too small to be effective
Distinctive aspects of Australian democracy-high levels of participation, aggregative voting systems...
Australia has developed a unique semi-parliamentary system of government, writes Steffen Ganghof, wh...
This purpose of this paper is to explore the political relevance of parliamentary upper houses. The ...
Steffen Ganghof has described the Australian system at both national and state levels as ‘semi-parli...
The British government recently proposed to replace the House of Lords with an upper house that is l...
It is desirable for a constitution, as a power-limiting device, to possess significant rigidity or, ...
The principle of political equality has always been central to democracy and to the way democracy w...
Notwithstanding the differences, the Australian and American Senates are comparable in being among t...
Paper 1: What is a house of review? (John Uhr) Speakers from Canberra might be expected to address ...
If Australians, Canadians and Americans are, like Britons, living under ‘elective dictatorships’ the...
The Constitution (Parliamentary Reform) Bill 2003, which passed the Victorian Legislative Council on...
This thesis presents an examination of bicameralism as it operates in Australia. The specific focus ...
If Australians, Canadians and Americans are, like Britons, living under ‘elective dictatorships’ the...
This study compares senators as a group of political representatives with members of the House of Re...
The framers of the Australian Constitution adopted a set of institutions which they called responsib...
Distinctive aspects of Australian democracy-high levels of participation, aggregative voting systems...
Australia has developed a unique semi-parliamentary system of government, writes Steffen Ganghof, wh...
This purpose of this paper is to explore the political relevance of parliamentary upper houses. The ...
Steffen Ganghof has described the Australian system at both national and state levels as ‘semi-parli...
The British government recently proposed to replace the House of Lords with an upper house that is l...
It is desirable for a constitution, as a power-limiting device, to possess significant rigidity or, ...
The principle of political equality has always been central to democracy and to the way democracy w...
Notwithstanding the differences, the Australian and American Senates are comparable in being among t...
Paper 1: What is a house of review? (John Uhr) Speakers from Canberra might be expected to address ...
If Australians, Canadians and Americans are, like Britons, living under ‘elective dictatorships’ the...
The Constitution (Parliamentary Reform) Bill 2003, which passed the Victorian Legislative Council on...
This thesis presents an examination of bicameralism as it operates in Australia. The specific focus ...
If Australians, Canadians and Americans are, like Britons, living under ‘elective dictatorships’ the...
This study compares senators as a group of political representatives with members of the House of Re...
The framers of the Australian Constitution adopted a set of institutions which they called responsib...
Distinctive aspects of Australian democracy-high levels of participation, aggregative voting systems...
Australia has developed a unique semi-parliamentary system of government, writes Steffen Ganghof, wh...
This purpose of this paper is to explore the political relevance of parliamentary upper houses. The ...