VCE Stuff > VCE Legal Studies
Balance of power and control of the senate
brendan:
--- Quote from: costargh on February 01, 2008, 07:53:25 pm ---You may not be required to use the exact wording of 'Balance of Power' being shifted in Legal Studies but the concept definitely needs to be known and this is the way it is taught in most text books.
--- End quote ---
To refer to the division of legislative powers between the State and Federal Parliaments as simply "balance of powers" without any other clarification is sloppy terminology.
The term "Balance of power" in itself could mean http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_power_%28parliament%29 or it could mean the horizontal separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislature and judiciary). It is not entirely clear.
The study design does specifies "the division of power between State and Commonwealth Parliaments under the Commonwealth Constitution" and I would recommend that you either say that in full when referring to it, or call it the "Federal-State balance" or "Federal -state balance of power" to distinguish it from other "balances of power".
costargh:
It is made clear in Legal Studies (THIS subject) because that
--- Quote from: brendan on February 01, 2008, 08:00:39 pm ---The term "Balance of power" in itself could mean ...could mean the horizontal separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislature and judiciary). It is not entirely clear.
--- End quote ---
is called the separation of powers.
Elephantperson (I forgot your real screen name), just remember to listen to your text book. It has been written ESPECIALLY for Legal Studies so any other definitions that may be used will merely complicate things and confuse you. Me and Goose have done this so stick to what we've told you and if you have any further questions, ask.
Pencil:
--- Quote from: brendan on February 01, 2008, 08:00:39 pm ---To refer to the division of legislative powers between the State and Federal Parliaments as simply "balance of powers" without any other clarification is sloppy terminology.
The term "Balance of power" in itself could mean http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_power_%28parliament%29 or it could mean the horizontal separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislature and judiciary). It is not entirely clear.
The study design does specifies "the division of power between State and Commonwealth Parliaments under the Commonwealth Constitution" and I would recommend that you either say that in full when referring to it, or call it the "Federal-State balance" or "Federal -state balance of power" to distinguish it from other "balances of power".
--- End quote ---
hm i think in all the prac exams etc i did i always said something like 'the balance of power between the states and the clth' to make it clear.
brendan:
--- Quote from: costargh on February 01, 2008, 08:05:36 pm ---
--- Quote from: brendan on February 01, 2008, 08:00:39 pm ---the horizontal separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislature and judiciary). It is not entirely clear.
--- End quote ---
is called the separation of powers.
--- End quote ---
Yes that's what i said.
Bottom Line
If you see these quoted terms by themselves without any further clarification then:
"Balance of power" commonly refers to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_power_%28parliament%29
"Division of powers" commonly refers to the division of legislative power between State and Federal Parliaments under the Australian Constitution, sometimes referred to as the "vertical division of powers".
"Separation of powers" commonly refers to the horizontal separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislature and judiciary)
--- Quote from: ElephantStew on January 31, 2008, 04:24:17 pm ---can somebody help me define both "balance of power" and "control of the senate".
--- End quote ---
ElephantStew, If you read "balance of power" and "control of the senate" in the same text or passage, I am 99% sure that in that context "balance of power" was referring to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_power_%28parliament%29
costargh:
Quite right. Refer to above Legal Students. However be aware of the context of which the question is using the "Balance of Powers". It is pretty obvious when it says the "Balance of power" between State and Fed.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version