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  2. Primary and secondary legislation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_and_secondary...

    The British English distinction between primary and secondary legislation is not used in American English, due to the American dislike of the British constitutional concept of the fusion of powers as inherently incompatible with due process and the rule of law (one of the great divergences between American and British political philosophy which ...

  3. Sources of Singapore law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sources_of_Singapore_law

    Subsidiary legislation is known by a variety of names. Section 2(1) of the Interpretation Act [42] defines "subsidiary legislation" as meaning "any order in council, proclamation, rule, regulation, order, notification, by-law or other instrument made under any Act, Ordinance or other lawful authority and having legislative effect".

  4. Subsidiarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsidiarity

    [3] [7] Subsidiarity is a general principle of European Union law. In the United States of America, Article VI, Paragraph 2 of the constitution of the United States is known as the Supremacy Clause. This establishes that the federal constitution, and federal law generally, take precedence over state laws, and even state constitutions. [8]

  5. Law of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Singapore

    Legislation, or statutory law, can be divided into statutes and subsidiary legislation. Statutes are written laws enacted by the Singapore Parliament, as well as by other bodies such as the British Parliament, Governor-General of India in Council and Legislative Council of the Straits Settlements which had power to pass laws for Singapore in ...

  6. Comparative law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_law

    Legal Systems of the World. Comparative law is the study of differences and similarities between the law and legal systems of different countries. More specifically, it involves the study of the different legal systems (or "families") in existence around the world, including common law, civil law, socialist law, Canon law, Jewish Law, Islamic law, Hindu law, and Chinese law.

  7. Subsidiarity (European Union) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsidiarity_(European_Union)

    Subsidiarity is balanced by the primacy of European Union law. The principle of subsidiarity is premised from the fundamental EU principle of conferral , ensuring that the European Union is a union of member states and competences are voluntarily conferred by Member States.

  8. List of United States federal legislation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States...

    This is a chronological, but still incomplete, list of United States federal legislation. Congress has enacted approximately 200–600 statutes during each of its 119 biennial terms so more than 30,000 statutes have been enacted since 1789.

  9. Comparative legal history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_Legal_History

    Comparative legal history is the study of law in two or more different places or at different times. [1] [2] [3] As a discipline, it emerged between 1930 and 1960 in response to legal formalism, [4] and builds on scattered uses of legal-historical comparison since antiquity. [5] It uses the techniques of legal history and comparative law. [6]