¶ … English Legal System and the European Courts
The English Legal System is the product of an evolution of a body of laws that has been developed since the 11th century to present day. This body of law includes many organs or institutions that have been mimicked in other nations' legal systems, including the United States. The key legal institutions that make up the English Legal System include Parliament, the Courts, and the Executive institution, which is made up from the largest party in the House of Commons. (Gillespie, A., 2010) These three individual organs of the legal system are balanced against each other, similar to the way that the Judicial, Executive, and Legislative branches are in U.S. law. However, in the English Legal System, the Parliament wields the legislative power under an unwritten British Constitution. Also, the British did not believe in complete separation of powers like the framers of the U.S. Constitution did.
Parliament is responsible for introducing and passing laws, just as the U.S. legislative branch is. Parliament is made up of two different houses or groups. The lower house is called the House of Parliament where members are directly elected. The upper house is called the House of Lords which grants Parliamentary positions to people based upon birthright and heritage (Wilson, et. al., 2001). However, in the late 1990's, most of these birthright positions were eliminated in favor of a primarily popularly-elected Parliament (Gillespie, A., 2010).
The Crown Court and the Supreme Court are the courts where criminal trials take place. These are where laws are upheld and enforced. However, England being a common-law country, it is one of the few that do not have a codified set of...
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