Constitution Of Finland

The Constitution of Finland defines the government and its shape, the relationship between the different topmost branches of the commonwealth and the rights of the individual. The original constitution took force in 1919, soon after Finland's declaration of independence in 1917, but the version of the constitution currently in use took force on 1 March 2000. The judicial and constitutional system in Finland has been thoroughly criticized for failing to correctly implement the separation of powers. Laws cannot be ruled unconstitutional in the supreme courts of the judicial branch, but they are previewed by the legislative branch itself and voted on whether they are constitutional or not. This is unique, as the Netherlands and the United Kingdom are the only other countries which also lack a constitutional court - the UK doesn't have a constitution, and the Netherlands has in the views of many still implemented the separation of powers correctly. However, the new constitution has given some power to supreme courts to dismiss a case if they find it unconstitutional, even though this power is explicitly denied to mean the supreme courts have interpretive rights on constitutional issues.

Links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
lunar year
baxterwood priory
charley horse
sahy
bandh
liptovsky mikulas
signal hill (newfoundland and labrador)
charles borah
the half gallon quarter acre pavlova paradise
sofitel
henry russell
whitcombe and tombs
the 10th kingdom
gnaeus cornelius cinna magnus
south polar skua
lotf ali
tokaj (region in slovakia)
robert kiesel
sadabad palaces
vclav vojta
harry b. smith
ludwig bemelmans
lee shau kee
emmett toppino
fort amherst (disambiguation)
reflexlocomotion
rimavska sobota
wladyslaw dziewulski
abandoned railway stations
the firebird
mosonmagyarvr
zvpl
szentes
railbuff
deadbolt (band)
felicjan kepnski
will d. cobb
hector dyer
bouie v. city of columbia
jan sniadecki
atlante internazionale del touring club italiano
cint
lorraine kelly
berehove