This has helped me understand the background to Dr David Starkeys information about how much Tony Trotsky Blair and 2 Tier Harmer has damaged British christain heritage democracy thank you
+Shammah Amaewhule Hi. These videos are a composite of a number sources Shammah. Have a look in the description of the video to get a few references I’ve used. If you’re interested, I conduct a one-on-one Masterclass to prepare students for submissions and other coursework. Drop a message on the official Law Simplified Facebook page: facebook.com/TheLawSimplified
Hi Sultana. The concept of Separation of Powers refers partly to each arm of government being to conduct themselves within the powers vested with them. Thus, for instance, the Judiciary can’t question an Act of Parliament, nor can Parliament question a judgement/decision of the Judiciary. Hope that clears it up! If you’d like to discuss further, drop me an email: shaveen@outlook.com
@@TheLawSimplifiedthis is a very simple way of explaining it though - Parliament can just as easily pass a law overruling the Supreme Court (HM Treasury vs Ahmed 2010, for instance). The Supreme Court can also question Parliament - by Declarations of Incompatibility (with the HRA), albeit the latter is unbinding. Separation ≠ No Communication.
Thanks for the feedback. Yes! This was one of the first set of videos I uploaded. I noticed the typo recently but alas I cannot change an uploaded video 😊
Thankyou for your invaluable lessons always..am getting very clear understanding of the law now
2:00 The monarch is the head of state. The prime minister is the head of government.
This has helped me understand the background to Dr David Starkeys information about how much Tony Trotsky Blair and 2 Tier Harmer has damaged British christain heritage democracy thank you
The PM is not head of state. He is head of government. The queen (Crown) is the head of state.
thank you so much...this helped me a lot...was a bit confused about this topic...its now cleaaaar...keep up the good work
Thanks keep it up
please where did you get your definition of separation of powers from? I need to reference it for a coursework.
+Shammah Amaewhule Hi. These videos are a composite of a number sources Shammah. Have a look in the description of the video to get a few references I’ve used. If you’re interested, I conduct a one-on-one Masterclass to prepare students for submissions and other coursework. Drop a message on the official Law Simplified Facebook page: facebook.com/TheLawSimplified
*Independence!
*independently!
Where we can get full classes in regarding administrative law
Hi. You can have a look at my complete set of courses here: udemy.com/u/shaveenbandaranayakekariyawasam
What is an administrative court ?
Do administrative courts have authority ?
I would very much appreciate any response you can supply .
really thanks. it helped me so much for my final examination.
+Suhaidah Zaimie I'm glad these were helpful 😊
fuck off dumbfuck
Please let the whole flow chart visible.
what do you mean by no criticism of Judiciary by Parliament? i thought the judiciary cannot question validity of parliament?
Hi Sultana. The concept of Separation of Powers refers partly to each arm of government being to conduct themselves within the powers vested with them. Thus, for instance, the Judiciary can’t question an Act of Parliament, nor can Parliament question a judgement/decision of the Judiciary. Hope that clears it up! If you’d like to discuss further, drop me an email: shaveen@outlook.com
@@TheLawSimplifiedthis is a very simple way of explaining it though - Parliament can just as easily pass a law overruling the Supreme Court (HM Treasury vs Ahmed 2010, for instance). The Supreme Court can also question Parliament - by Declarations of Incompatibility (with the HRA), albeit the latter is unbinding. Separation ≠ No Communication.
thank you massive help !
Thank you this really helped
+Kingsamalama I'm glad it was useful. All the best! Cheers, Shaveen :)
+Kingsamalama Google legal Name Fraud - it's illegal to use a Legal Name.........
We have fusion of powers, not separation of powers in the UK.
This has helped so much. Thank you!
I'm glad these videos have been helpful. All the best to you in your assignments and exams :) - Shaveen
*separation!
Very helpful to law students I Evan want to take full classes on regards constitutional law whole
A lecture on seperation of powers. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm, you may want to spell the word right if you are going to give a lecture on it.
Thanks for the feedback. Yes! This was one of the first set of videos I uploaded. I noticed the typo recently but alas I cannot change an uploaded video 😊
@@TheLawSimplified its spelt with an A not an E, he does have it right
seperation
why not tagalog!!!!!