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Politician and law professor Geoffrey Palmer recounts the events and forces that shaped him in this memoir, as well as his many adventures in reforming a wide range of institutions, laws, and policies. Reform has been a recurring theme throughout Geoffrey Palmer's life, not only during his career in politics and as a Prime Minister, but also as a law professor and law practitioner. He speaks of his early life and family background and the eventful lives of his pioneering ancestors. He examines the intellectual influences on his thinking, particularly the nature of his education both in New Zealand and the United States, and chronicles his life according to the issues: accident compensation, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Law Commission, liquor law, Maori issues, parliamentary reform, the Resource Management Act, law and order, prisons, and local government reform. Meticulously detailed and engagingly written, "Reform" is essential reading for anyone interested in New Zealand legal and political history.
"[These] broadcasts were designed so that people could better appreciate hwo the New Zealand government works, how the constitutional system is structured, how the courts function, how parliament operates, and how the executive government makes decisions. Geoffrey Palmer and Kim Hill discussed contemporary events as they occurred, putting them in context and relating them to the constitutional framework and the system of government as a whole. ..."--back cover.
This is an authoritative book on the New Zealand constitution. This new edition is updated to reflect New Zealand's experience of the MMP system of proportional representation.
"Former Prime Minister Sir Geoffrey Palmer believes New Zealand's system of government is in urgent need of reform. He says "Public cynicism and mistrust have reached levels which are dangerous for the future of democracy." ... he sets out the changes needed to improve New Zealand's system of government. Palmer covers a wide range of the most significant and contentious political and constitutional issues of the day. They include: reform of Parliament, rights, freedoms and the Bill of Rights, Maori issues, the office of the Prime Minister, the electoral system, the media, public law. The result is a far reaching and important analysis of both the way New Zealand is governed, and how that system of government should be altered ..."--Back cover.
A complete account of the political system in New Zealand: how parliament works, how laws are made, how the electoral system works, and other topics.
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Since the late 1980s there have been major changes to New Zealand's constitution. In areas such as freedom of information and parliamentary reform, the changes have been fundamental. There has recently been a rapid growth in Treaty of Waitangi jurisprudence. Reforms have also been heralded with the enactment of the Constitution Act and the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act. This work provides a comprehensive explanation of these shifts in the New Zealand constitution and considers how the system of government will operate in the age of MMP.
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