Legislative council
Encyclopedia : L : LE : LEG : Legislative council
A Legislative Council is the name given to the legislatures, or one of the chambers of the legislature of many nations and colonies.
Unicameral legislatures
- Legislative Council of Brunei (unelected, now dissolved)
- Legislative Council of Hong Kong
- Legislative Council of Macao (Assembleia Legislativa, sometimes translated as Legislative Assembly)
- Legislative Council of Singapore (1946 to 1953, replaced by the Legislative Assembly)
- Legislative Council of the Straits Settlements (1867 to 1946, replaced by the Legislative Council of Singapore)
- Uganda Legislative Council (became the National Assembly of Uganda in March 1962)
Part of a bicameral legislature
- Australia:
- *The New South Wales Legislative Council
- *The Queensland Legislative Council (abolished in 1922)
- *The South Australian Legislative Council
- *The Tasmanian Legislative Council
- *The Victorian Legislative Council
- *The Western Australian Legislative Council.
- Bermuda: the Bermuda Legislative Council (renamed the Senate in 1980).
- Canada:
- *The Legislative Council of Manitoba (abolished in 1876)
- *The Legislative Council of Newfoundland (dissolved as part of the Commission of Government in 1934, and has not been summoned since)
- *The Legislative Council of New Brunswick (abolished in 1892)
- *The Legislative Council of Prince Edward Island (abolished in 1893)
- *The Legislative Council of Nova Scotia (abolished in 1928)
- *The Legislative Council of Quebec (abolished in 1968)
- *The Legislative Council of Upper Canada (Ontario) (abolished by the Union Act of 1840)
- *The Legislative Council of the Province of Canada (abolished at Confederation)
- India: The Vidhan Parishad in 5 of India's 28 states (Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Jammu and Kashmir), the Legislative Council serves as the upper house of a bicameral legislature.
- Isle of Man: the Legislative Council of the Isle of Man.
- New Zealand: the New Zealand Legislative Council (abolished in 1951).
- Formerly New Jersey: under the 1776 New Jersey State Constitution the upper house and Supreme Court.
See also
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
