A Constitutional History of the New Zealand Monarchy

The Evolution of the New Zealand Monarchy and the Recognition of an Autochthonous Polity
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Gewicht:
511 g
Format:
220x150x20 mm
Beschreibung:

Cox, NoelNoel Cox, LLM MTheol PhD University of Auckland MA Archbishop of Canterbury Examination in Theology LTh University of Wales Lampeter FRHistS, Professor of Constitutional Law at the Auckland University of Technology (where he is Chairman of the Department of Law), and Barrister. His main area of research interest is the Crown.
The twentieth century saw the evolution of the former British Empire into a collection of independent countries. Many of these retain the Sovereign of the United Kingdom as their Queen. Using New Zealand as an example, this book examines the development of the Crown as a distinct constitutional entity. The concept of the Crown has often been of greater importance than the person of the Sovereign, or that of the Governor-General. The existence of the Crown has also contributed to, rather than impeded, the independence of New Zealand, and other realms, through the division of imperial prerogative powers. The very physical absence of the Sovereign, and the all-pervading nature of the legal concept of the Crown, have also contributed to development of that institution as a truly national organ of government. In New Zealand in particular this has been encouraged by conceptual confusion over the symbolism and identity of the Crown. The book is of value to students and researchers in constitutional law and history, indigenous rights and post-colonialism, and comparative politics.

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