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Presidential legislation in India the law and practice of ordinances

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Comparative constitutional law and policyPublication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2014ISBN:
  • 9781107444348
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • KNS2220 .D36 2014
Other classification:
  • LAW018000
Contents:
The transplant effect : early origins of ordinances in England and India -- Legislative surrogacy : cabinets and ordinances, 1952--2009 -- Negotiating the text : ordinances, article 123 and the interpretative deficit -- Reading minds : presidential satisfaction and judicial review of ordinances -- The power of no : presidents, cabinets and the making of ordinances.
Summary: "The legislative process in India's parliamentary system, like elsewhere, is a shared exercise: the executive and the legislature partake in it. Ordinarily, proposals for legislation originate in the cabinet. If the cabinet decides that a law is necessary, a bill is drafted, on occasions, with external inputs. After it is introduced in the two houses, the bill goes through several 'readings', committee hearings and amendments. The final draft is debated and voted on. If a bill secures the requisite majority in both houses, it is sent to the president for assent, upon which the bill becomes an Act. Parliament, in this formal view, is central to the legislative process, and legislation are products of among other things a rational-legal scrutiny and vote. In practice, parliament is less than central; the legislative process rarely confirms to the constitutional ideal type. Take, for example, political parties and their influence on the legislative process. The party to which a government belongs can have a disproportionate say in policy and legislative matters. Indeed, depending on the personalities involved, legislative proposals may even originate and take shape in party headquarters. Or consider a coalition government. A cabinet's decision to introduce a bill may be evidence of compulsion, not necessity. It may be a price for keeping the coalition together or a political maneuvering to secure new allies. Also, consider the influence of non-representative actors and their ability to direct legislative proposals"--
Item type: Print
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library Special Collection - Soli J Sorabjee 328.54077 DA-P (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available From personal library of Late Soli Jehangir Sorabjee 017742
Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library General Books 328.54077 DA-P (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 138727
Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library Textbooks 328.54077 DA-P (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan (Restricted Access) 138726

Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-252) and index.

The transplant effect : early origins of ordinances in England and India -- Legislative surrogacy : cabinets and ordinances, 1952--2009 -- Negotiating the text : ordinances, article 123 and the interpretative deficit -- Reading minds : presidential satisfaction and judicial review of ordinances -- The power of no : presidents, cabinets and the making of ordinances.

"The legislative process in India's parliamentary system, like elsewhere, is a shared exercise: the executive and the legislature partake in it. Ordinarily, proposals for legislation originate in the cabinet. If the cabinet decides that a law is necessary, a bill is drafted, on occasions, with external inputs. After it is introduced in the two houses, the bill goes through several 'readings', committee hearings and amendments. The final draft is debated and voted on. If a bill secures the requisite majority in both houses, it is sent to the president for assent, upon which the bill becomes an Act. Parliament, in this formal view, is central to the legislative process, and legislation are products of among other things a rational-legal scrutiny and vote. In practice, parliament is less than central; the legislative process rarely confirms to the constitutional ideal type. Take, for example, political parties and their influence on the legislative process. The party to which a government belongs can have a disproportionate say in policy and legislative matters. Indeed, depending on the personalities involved, legislative proposals may even originate and take shape in party headquarters. Or consider a coalition government. A cabinet's decision to introduce a bill may be evidence of compulsion, not necessity. It may be a price for keeping the coalition together or a political maneuvering to secure new allies. Also, consider the influence of non-representative actors and their ability to direct legislative proposals"--

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