The Utah Legislature
p. 262 ; column 3 ; 2 col. in. ; The Utah Legislature has met recently. A paragraph from a record of their proceedings shows that the body is subservient to the Mormon leaders.
p. 262 ; column 3 ; 2 col. in. ; The Utah Legislature has met recently. A paragraph from a record of their proceedings shows that the body is subservient to the Mormon leaders.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiug.30112116652741
"October 1969." ; Bibliography: p. 21 ; Mode of access: Internet.
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We analyze informational lobbying in the context of multi-member legislatures. We show that a single decision maker and a decentralized majoritarian legis- lature provide widely di .erent incentives for interest groups to acquire and transmit policy relevant information. The paper also shows a di .erence in the opportunity to a .ect policy through lobbying between a parliamentary legislature and a legislature with low voting cohesion,such as the U.S.Congress.We show that the incentives to lobby a parliamentary legislature are much lower than to lobby Congress.The results provide a rationale for why lobby groups are more active n the U.S.Congress. The key institutional feature to explain the di .erent behavior of lobby groups is the vote of con .dence procedure,which creates voting cohesion in a parlia- mentary system across policy issues.We show that the .exibility of creating majorities in the Congress creates an incentive for interest groups to play an active role in the design of policy in the congressional system,while the voting cohesion in the parliamentary system dissuades interest group 's incentive to engage in information provision.
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Mode of access: Internet. ; Prepared by J.A. Beek, secretary of the Senate, 1942-
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[p. 3] ; column 4 ; ½ col. in. ; The Utah legislature met in Salt Lake City.
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[p. 3] ; column 4 ; 1 col. in. ; The Montana legislature has met to discuss giving bonds to railroads. The Utah Northern railroad is a company they are considering.
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Includes annual and special messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Includes annual and special messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes annual, biennial and special messages, inaugural addresses and speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Includes annual, biennial and special messages, inaugural addresses and speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes annual, biennial and special messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Includes annual, biennial and special messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes biennial messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Includes biennial messages, inaugural addresses, speeches, etc. before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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This paper is an experiment in what John Rawls recently called "Kantian constructiivism". It seeks to establish a "suitable connection between a particular conception of the person and first principles of [morality] by means of a procedure of construction. Yet, it differs from Rawls' similar efforts in a number of ways. The emphasis is morality generally, not justice in particular. The construction attempts to be more "realistic" especially in substituting external procedures for Rawls' "veil of ignorance". These differences are, I hope, at least suggested by substituting "the moral legislature" for Rawls' "original position". Section I of this paper explains further what motivates the sort of construction proposed, sections II-V describe the moral legislature itself, explaining as well why it makes sense to construct it as I do and how it differs from some obvious alternatives. Section VI concludes with an example of how the moral legislature might be used, the sketch of an argument for the claim that positive law cannot in in generally be morally obliging.
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Friday, June 7, 1811. At 12 o'clock, His Excellency the Governor, attended by His Honor the Lieutenant Governor, and the Honorable Council, (completely attired in cloth of American manufacture,) met the two branches of the legislature in the Representatives' Chamber, and delivered the following speech. Title from content of speech. Signed (page 15): E. Gerry. Last page blank. ; Florida Atlantic University Libraries' Marvin and Sybil Weiner Spirit of America Collection, Pamphlets: Speeches B9F11 ; Florida Atlantic Digital Library Collections
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Includes messages, inaugural addresses, proclamations, speeches, etc., before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.a0001826981
Includes annual, biennial, and special messages, inaugural addresses, etc. before the Legislature. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Issued with Following Variations In Title: Biennial Message; Message To the General Assembly; Quadrennial Message To the Legislature ; Mode of access: Internet.
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