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  1. 'What is constitutional monarchy and what is its role in the UK?' by Lisa James and Robert Hazell (24 April 2024) The Role of Monarchy in Modern Democracy by Robert Hazell and RM Morris (Hart 2020) Reforming the Prerogative by Robert Hazell and Tim Foot (Bloomsbury 2022)

  2. Australia, like Britain, is a constitutional monarchy. The King is Australia's head of state and acts in accordance with the Australian Constitution. In Australia, the powers of the King have been delegated – given – to his representative, the Governor-General. As well as being a constitutional monarchy, Australia is also a representative ...

  3. If the Constitution does not empower the Parliament to make laws in a certain area, then the responsibility to make laws sits with the state parliaments. This is why each state has different laws when it comes to buying and renting property, hospitals, liquor licensing, policing, and roads. Each state can make laws unique to their circumstances.

  4. Jul 2, 2024 · Behind this, it is thought that the ideas of GHQ/SCAP officials, who had envisioned a British constitutional monarchy as an “ideal”, played a role. Moreover, many of them, probably as Takayanagi guessed, showed signs of having learned from Bagehot’s The English Constitution and the actual state of the British constitutional monarchy.

  5. Sep 15, 2022 · Read More: How Queen Elizabeth II Showed Why Britain Still Has a Monarchy. If Britain ever did decide to get rid of the monarchy, it would be a constitutional matter requiring legislation from ...

  6. Background: constitutional monarchy. The United Kingdom (UK) is a democratic constitutional monarchy. What does this description mean? A monarchy is typically a system under which the head of state – the person formally at the summit of public life – inherits their office from their parents, holding it until they die (or perhaps retire), when it passes down to their heir.

  7. Apr 24, 2024 · Constitutional monarchies are governed by elected parliaments and governments; but a monarch remains head of state and plays various important roles. Lisa James and Robert Hazell explain the UK monarchy’s constitutional role, its impact, and the questions that would need to be addressed should the UK ever decide to replace it.

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