The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation

The present paper focuses on the issue of territorial principle in a bicameral system which has remained until today the prevailing element in the development of the second chamber of parliament. By presenting its role in the Slovenian and comparable legal systems, the paper suggests that the territ...

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Main Author: Miloš Senčur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani) 2009-10-01
Series:Central European Public Administration Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uni-lj.si/CEPAR/article/view/20282
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author Miloš Senčur
author_facet Miloš Senčur
author_sort Miloš Senčur
collection DOAJ
description The present paper focuses on the issue of territorial principle in a bicameral system which has remained until today the prevailing element in the development of the second chamber of parliament. By presenting its role in the Slovenian and comparable legal systems, the paper suggests that the territorial second chamber of parliament is ever more becoming an indispensable condition also for unitary states with a high level of decentralisation, blurring the distinction between unitary and federal states in such respect. The differences in the role and position of the second chamber are mainly related to the level of decentralisation or development of the local government and, occasionally, to the form of state power. In fact, the weakening of the parliament's role in relation to the executive also diminishes the role and position of the second chamber. Nevertheless, the significance of bicameral decisionmaking in theory and in practice remains unchanged.
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publishDate 2009-10-01
publisher University of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani)
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spelling doaj-art-c760dba2ea2047d982c571e3af7250cd2025-01-22T10:56:02ZengUniversity of Ljubljana Press (Založba Univerze v Ljubljani)Central European Public Administration Review2591-22402591-22592009-10-017310.17573/cepar.v7i3.263The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisationMiloš Senčur0University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Administration, SloveniaThe present paper focuses on the issue of territorial principle in a bicameral system which has remained until today the prevailing element in the development of the second chamber of parliament. By presenting its role in the Slovenian and comparable legal systems, the paper suggests that the territorial second chamber of parliament is ever more becoming an indispensable condition also for unitary states with a high level of decentralisation, blurring the distinction between unitary and federal states in such respect. The differences in the role and position of the second chamber are mainly related to the level of decentralisation or development of the local government and, occasionally, to the form of state power. In fact, the weakening of the parliament's role in relation to the executive also diminishes the role and position of the second chamber. Nevertheless, the significance of bicameral decisionmaking in theory and in practice remains unchanged.https://journals.uni-lj.si/CEPAR/article/view/20282parliamentdecentralisationbicameral system
spellingShingle Miloš Senčur
The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
Central European Public Administration Review
parliament
decentralisation
bicameral system
title The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
title_full The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
title_fullStr The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
title_full_unstemmed The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
title_short The bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
title_sort bicameral system as a successor to decentralisation
topic parliament
decentralisation
bicameral system
url https://journals.uni-lj.si/CEPAR/article/view/20282
work_keys_str_mv AT milossencur thebicameralsystemasasuccessortodecentralisation
AT milossencur bicameralsystemasasuccessortodecentralisation