Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia

In parliamentary systems which are based on democratic constitutional order (with democratic elections, for example) position of the government is well-marked. Government is the primary political authority in these states. With such position of the government, constitutional systems of Hungary and o...

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Main Author: Orlović Slobodan P.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Law 2012-01-01
Series:Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2012/0550-21791203257O.pdf
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spelling doaj-07dfb29467814e68bc6782f6ed8d25952020-11-24T23:32:27ZengUniversity of Novi Sad, Faculty of LawZbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu0550-21792406-12552012-01-0146325727010.5937/zrpfns46-30340550-21791203257OConstitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of SerbiaOrlović Slobodan P.0University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Law, Novi Sad, SerbiaIn parliamentary systems which are based on democratic constitutional order (with democratic elections, for example) position of the government is well-marked. Government is the primary political authority in these states. With such position of the government, constitutional systems of Hungary and of Serbia are not exceptions because the constitution grants to their governments a first class role in country governing. It is one of the similarities in the position of government in Hungary and in Serbia. But observing specific provisions about competence, about relation with the president of the republic and with the parliament, there are many specific differences. Those differences of constitutional norms do not impede the conclusion that both governments are practically superior to the parliament, as long as they have a majority in parliament. It is, after all, a characteristic of all parliamentary systems. Second characteristic which is important for government's position is its relation with the head of the state who is some kind of practical competitor for predominance in executive power. For the evaluation of that relation, every specific constitutional provision is important as well as the level of its feasibility since these provisions are the elaboration and the extension of the general formulation that in parliamentary systems government has executive power.http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2012/0550-21791203257O.pdfgovernmentConstitutionHungaryRepublic of Serbia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Orlović Slobodan P.
spellingShingle Orlović Slobodan P.
Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
government
Constitution
Hungary
Republic of Serbia
author_facet Orlović Slobodan P.
author_sort Orlović Slobodan P.
title Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
title_short Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
title_full Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
title_fullStr Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
title_full_unstemmed Constitutional position of the government of Hungary and the government of Serbia
title_sort constitutional position of the government of hungary and the government of serbia
publisher University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Law
series Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
issn 0550-2179
2406-1255
publishDate 2012-01-01
description In parliamentary systems which are based on democratic constitutional order (with democratic elections, for example) position of the government is well-marked. Government is the primary political authority in these states. With such position of the government, constitutional systems of Hungary and of Serbia are not exceptions because the constitution grants to their governments a first class role in country governing. It is one of the similarities in the position of government in Hungary and in Serbia. But observing specific provisions about competence, about relation with the president of the republic and with the parliament, there are many specific differences. Those differences of constitutional norms do not impede the conclusion that both governments are practically superior to the parliament, as long as they have a majority in parliament. It is, after all, a characteristic of all parliamentary systems. Second characteristic which is important for government's position is its relation with the head of the state who is some kind of practical competitor for predominance in executive power. For the evaluation of that relation, every specific constitutional provision is important as well as the level of its feasibility since these provisions are the elaboration and the extension of the general formulation that in parliamentary systems government has executive power.
topic government
Constitution
Hungary
Republic of Serbia
url http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2012/0550-21791203257O.pdf
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