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      ‘CHANGE THE CONSTITUTION? INTERPRETATION, (MIS)CALCULATION, WRONGS RIGHTED OR REACTION & REITERATION’

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          Abstract

          Since the United States adopted a written constitution as a consequence of the War of Independence, it is fair to say that most Western democracies with written constitutions have taken some guidance from that founding document. Inevitably, a key provision for any written constitution is ‘how can it be amended’. Even where there is an unwritten constitution (as for the United Kingdom, Aotearoa/New Zealand and Israel), the ‘rules’ established by convention or custom or some other means cannot be immutable: the passage of time or changing ideas require some means of altering or updating the rules. Changing a constitution is a matter of law, yet one inescapably imbued with politics. This article explores the way constitutional change has come, and how the rules have worked, in Australia (the 1951 referendum to ban the Australian Communist Party – unsuccessful, and the 1967 referendum to recognise rights of Indigenous Australians – successful) and the United States (the Equal Rights Amendment – situation ongoing), with a foray into the referendum process in United Kingdom (the 2017 ‘Brexit’ vote). It explores, too, the ‘change’ to a constitution where there is no change to the words of the document, but a change in interpretation – this in the context of Canada in 1929. There, consistent with judgments in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States, the Canadian Supreme Court interpreted ‘person’ as appearing in the North America Act as not including women, denying women any entitlement to be appointed to the Canadian Senate. As related here, women were finally acknowledged as ‘persons’ when the Privy Council pronounced this to be so, an unanticipated outcome from a judicial body considered by both Canada and Australia to be so hidebound as not to be ‘right’ as the final court of appeal for Britain’s former colonies.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          The Denning Law Journal
          University of Buckingham Press
          08 August 2019
          : 30
          : 2
          : 121-175
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Buckingham
          Article
          04bf4af2-958b-4c1d-8ed2-2ebc16a7189a

          Distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial NoDerivatives License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 which permits noncommercial use and distribution in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited, and the original work is not modified.

          History

          Social law,History, Philosophy & Sociology of law,Civil law,General law,Public law,Procedural
          Australian Communist Party Referendum 1951,‘Person’ Cases,United States Constitution,Brexit Referendum,Equal Rights Amendment (ERA),United Kingdom Referendums,‘Person’ not including Women,Australian Constitution,Australian A,Canadian Constitution

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