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Protecting parliamentary democracy in “plague” times: Accountability and democratic institutions during the pandemic

Steven Chaplin

2020Commonwealth Law Bulletin30 citationsDOI

Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 has not only placed strains on public health and the economy. It has presented challenges to the constitutional structure and the continuing requirement that parliaments within the Westminister system of government be able to operate. In such systems, the continued legitimacy of government action and accountability for those actions rests and must remain with the elected chamber of Parliament. At the same time, COVID-19 precludes normal gatherings of parliamentarians for proceedings. This article briefly explores the constitutional necessity for continued parliamentary scrutiny, the various forms such proceedings have taken to date and the application of parliamentary privilege to such proceedings.

Topics & Concepts

ParliamentScrutinyAccountabilityLegitimacyGovernment (linguistics)DemocracyPolitical sciencePlague (disease)LawPrivilege (computing)Public administrationPoliticsHistoryPhilosophyArchaeologyLinguisticsHealthcare Systems and PracticesCOVID-19 Digital Contact Tracing
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