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What's the hurry? : urgency in the New Zealand legislative process 1987-2010 / Claudia Geiringer, Polly Higbee and Elizabeth McLeay.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Wellington [N.Z.] : Victoria University Press, 2011Description: xii, 177 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour) ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0864737726
  • 9780864737724
Other title:
  • What is the hurry?
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 328.93 23
Contents:
1. Introduction -- 2. Urgency and the Legislative Process -- 3. The Reasons why Governments use Urgency -- 4. How Governents use Urgency -- 5. The Constraints on the Use of Urgency -- 6. Urgency, Time and Democratic Legitimacy -- 7. Conclusion and Options for Reform -- The Research Team -- Appendix A. List of Interviewees and Interview Topics -- Appendix B. Bills not Sent to Select Committee 1996 - 2010.
Review: "For more than a century, New Zealand governments have periodically put the House of Representatives into "urgency". As its name suggests, urgency is a device by which legislation can be passed in a hurry if there is a genuine need to do so. But it also serves a more generic function. Urgency is used to extend the House's sitting hours from time to time, so that the government of the day can get more done during its term in office than it would otherwise have time to. In short, urgency is a technique for prioritising government business in the House over other activities that we expect MPs to perform (both inside and outside Parliament). What's the Hurry is the first in-depth study of the use of urgency in New Zealand. The authors document every use of urgency over a 24-year period (1987-2010) and analyse how, when, how much and why urgency is used. They conclude that, while some uses of urgency are relatively unproblematic, others are deeply troubling--particularly when urgency is used to avoid select committee scrutiny of legislation. They commend Parliament's Standing Orders Committee for recommending changes to the regulatory framework governing urgency but wonder whether those changes go far enough." -- Publisher's information.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 328.93 GEI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A499398B
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 328.93 GEI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A499394B

"Law Foundation, New Zealand.".

Includes bibliographical references.

1. Introduction -- 2. Urgency and the Legislative Process -- 3. The Reasons why Governments use Urgency -- 4. How Governents use Urgency -- 5. The Constraints on the Use of Urgency -- 6. Urgency, Time and Democratic Legitimacy -- 7. Conclusion and Options for Reform -- The Research Team -- Appendix A. List of Interviewees and Interview Topics -- Appendix B. Bills not Sent to Select Committee 1996 - 2010.

"For more than a century, New Zealand governments have periodically put the House of Representatives into "urgency". As its name suggests, urgency is a device by which legislation can be passed in a hurry if there is a genuine need to do so. But it also serves a more generic function. Urgency is used to extend the House's sitting hours from time to time, so that the government of the day can get more done during its term in office than it would otherwise have time to. In short, urgency is a technique for prioritising government business in the House over other activities that we expect MPs to perform (both inside and outside Parliament). What's the Hurry is the first in-depth study of the use of urgency in New Zealand. The authors document every use of urgency over a 24-year period (1987-2010) and analyse how, when, how much and why urgency is used. They conclude that, while some uses of urgency are relatively unproblematic, others are deeply troubling--particularly when urgency is used to avoid select committee scrutiny of legislation. They commend Parliament's Standing Orders Committee for recommending changes to the regulatory framework governing urgency but wonder whether those changes go far enough." -- Publisher's information.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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