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Parliamentary Oversight Of The Executive In India, Anirudh Burman Oct 2012

Parliamentary Oversight Of The Executive In India, Anirudh Burman

Anirudh Burman

The need for a strong monitoring mechanism of the executive in India has been made clearer by recent allegations of corruption against high-ranking officials of the central government. The Indian Parliament is the ideal institution to perform such a monitoring function through oversight of the central executive. The executive in India is directly accountable to the Parliament. Making oversight by Parliament stronger and more effective would therefore increase the accountability of the executive. Additionally, an increased oversight role would allow for greater policy inputs from Parliament to the executive. It would also increase the general level of expertise within Parliament …


The Second Amendment: What "Arms" Are Protected?, James M. Ramey Jul 2012

The Second Amendment: What "Arms" Are Protected?, James M. Ramey

James M Ramey

If the Supreme Court wants to give some lasting meaning to the Heller decision and the Second Amendment, it needs to first clearly establish what criteria a firearm needs to satisfy outside the categorical rules before it will be a protected arm under the in common use test. In doing so it needs to provide factors for what makes a weapon “dangerous and unusual” (whether popularity based or otherwise) and clarify to what extent the typically possessed by law abiding citizens language gets applied to the in common use analysis in addition to what it means to be “typically possessed …


Automatic Continuing Resolutions: A Cure Worse Than The Ailment, Philip J. Candreva Jul 2012

Automatic Continuing Resolutions: A Cure Worse Than The Ailment, Philip J. Candreva

Philip J. Candreva

Nearly every year Congress fails to pass all of the appropriations acts before the start of the federal fiscal year. This necessitates the passage of a temporary spending measure – a continuing resolution – or there will be at least a partial government shutdown. Both contingencies are costly and disruptive to the efficient and effective operation of government. Over the last 30 years, there have been several legislative proposals to enact an automatic continuing resolution mechanism that would mitigate the costs to public management. Such proposals, however, are costly for political and legal reasons. This article examines the arguments for …


Standing On Holy Ground: How Rethinking Justiciability Might Bring Peace To The Establishment Clause, John M. Bickers Jan 2012

Standing On Holy Ground: How Rethinking Justiciability Might Bring Peace To The Establishment Clause, John M. Bickers

John M. Bickers

The Establishment Clause is home to both procedural and substantive disorder. Particularly when evaluating religious speech by the government, the Supreme Court has applied a number of distinct tests, with varying degrees of strictness. There has never been an overarching principle for determining which test would appear at which time; commentators, and occasionally the Justices themselves, have suspected that desired results drove the choice of tests. At the same time, the Court has articulated a series of requirements necessary for a plaintiff to have standing to challenge government action, only to ignore them in government religious speech cases. The resulting …