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05. Institutions 2 - The Crown and the Royal Prerogative

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05. Institutions 2 - The Crown and the Royal Prerogative

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  • August 22, 2017
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BEK Chapter 12 – The Crown and the Royal Prerogative


THE MONARCHY

TERMINOLOGY
 The Crown, the Monarch, the King/Queen
o What is the difference?
o Crown = historically that was vested in the personality of the monarch, but today it
is about the context of the country (no recognition of the word “state”)  Crown is
synonymous with the State, i.e. collective authority of the government/state, of
which the Monarch is a part of, but not the only part
 Lord Ried – Chandler case
o Monarch = particular office of state, which is currently held by Queen Elizabeth II
o King/Queen = the individual who holds the office of Monarch on behalf of the Crown
o 2 problems which arises:
 1. Sometimes other territories use “the Sovereign” to refer to the Monarch
of the Queen, which is a misrepresentation (inappropriate to use in this
context)
 2. Confusion in legislation
 Crown Estates Act 1961  Act of Parliament used the term Crown
according to definition
 HOWEVER, more recent legislation such as Succession to the Crown
Act uses the Crown as referring to the Monarch
 Sovereign Grants Act 2011  talking about public financing of the
Monarchy
 Queen’s Courts  Not literally the Queen’s court, but it is
effectively the Crown Courts, i.e. the state’s court BUT there is
already the Crown Courts

INTRODUCTION
 Most advance liberal democracies have moved to a republican system (i.e. with president as
head of state)
 Britain  Head of State = Monarch

TITLE TO THE CROWN
 Derived from Act of Settlement 1700
 Hereditary Principle of the Monarch  inheritance as a basis for the Monarch
o Hereditary Principle is anachronistic, since most heads of states are elected
 Principle of inheritance
o HOWEVER, there are other countries (a large number of countries in the
Commonwealth) that have a hereditary monarch, e.g. Australia, NZ, Canada
 E.g. Japan also

FUNCTIONS AND DUTIES OF MONARCH
 Had to define role of monarch in modern constitutional principles
 Sir William, 1986 (Queen’s Private Secretary)

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