Public finance and parliamentary constitutionalism / Will Bateman, Australian National University, Canberra.
Language: English Publisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2020Description: xvii, 263 pages : ill. ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- 9781108478113
- Finance, Public -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain -- History
- Constitutiona law -- Great Britain
- Constitutional law -- Commonwealth countries
- Parliamentary practice -- Great Britain
- Parliamentary practice -- Commonwealth countries
- Debts, Public -- Law and legislation -- Great Britain -- History
- 343.41 23
- KD5320 .B38 2020
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Library of People's Majlis General/ Lending | General | G-EN 343.41 BAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0000002906 |
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G-EN 342.5902 PLU Pluralist constitutions in Southeast Asia / | G-EN 342.73 MEI The relation of the judiciary to the Constitution / | G-EN 342.7308 HAL New York Times v. Sullivan : civil rights, libel law, and the free press / | G-EN 343.41 BAT Public finance and parliamentary constitutionalism / | G-EN 343.410 LIO Cyber Law in the United Kingdom / | G-EN 343.540999 FAT Cyber law in India / | G-EN 343.9409 CHO Cyber law in Australia / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Finance and constitutionalism -- History (I) : parliament and executive -- History (II): judiciary -- History (III) : exporting parliamentary public finance -- History (IV) : public finance in the modern state -- Fiscal authority -- Debt and monetary authority -- Judicial power -- Descriptive failure of parliamentary control -- Theory and practice of financial self-rule.
"The book surveys the history of public finance law in the UK, its export throughout the British Empire, and its entrenchment in Commonwealth constitutions. It explains how modern constitutionalism was shaped by the financial impact of warfare, welfare-state programs and the growth of central banking. It then provides a case study analysis of the impact of economic condition on governments' financial behaviour, focusing on the UK's and Australia's responses to the financial crisis, and the judiciary's position vis-à-vis the state's financial powers. Throughout, it questions orthodox accounts of financial constitutionalism (particularly the views of A. V. Dicey) and the democratic legitimacy of public finance. Currently ignored aspects of government behaviour are analysed in-depth, particularly the constitutional role of central banks and sovereign debt markets"-- Provided by publisher.
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