Mar 26, 2007 14:39
17 yrs ago
English term
URGENT !! statutory instrument or SI for short
English to Dutch
Law/Patents
Law (general)
legislation
This is secondary legislation, but I need a Dutch expression for this. Does anyone know?
Proposed translations
(Dutch)
3 | wettelijk instrument | FullCircle (X) |
3 | wettelijke regelgeving | Wouter van Kampen |
3 -1 | statutair instrument | San Barto |
Proposed translations
25 mins
Selected
wettelijk instrument
Omdat dit niet 1-op-1 te vertalen is vanwege verschillen in rechtssystemen, zou ik het op wettelijk instrument houden of (afhankelijk van de tekst) misschien wel gewoon het Britste 'statutory instrument' (wettelijk instrument) en voor de rest SI hanteren. My 2p.
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Hartelijk dank!"
-1
2 mins
statutair instrument
Maar een idee, geeft wel wat googles!!
Peer comment(s):
disagree |
FullCircle (X)
: statutory in deze context moet m.i. wettelijk zijn
20 mins
|
14 hrs
wettelijke regelgeving
Legal framework
Statutory Instruments (SIs) come in three forms: those passed by affirmative resolution procedure, where they must be approved by the two Houses of Parliament before they can become law, and those passed by negative resolution procedure, where they are merely laid before Parliament, with Parliament able to annul them if it desires. The third form is those which are not laid before Parliament, but which Parliament can annul, usually within 40 days. The section of the Act of Parliament that grants the power will usually state whether the power is to be exercised by Statutory Instrument and which (if any) parliamentary procedure is to apply. Generally, if it is a potentially contentious power, the affirmative route will be used. A new, 'super-affirmative' procedure has been proposed for certain Statutory Instruments that could be made under the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Act 2006.
Statutory Instruments are not necessarily the same thing as an Order-in-Council: Statutory Instruments are 'delegated legislation' (the power is delegated by Parliament), whereas Orders-in-Council either operate through the Royal Prerogative or are made under powers created in statute. The latter will generally be made by Statutory Instrument, the former not.
Statutory Instruments are used because they are much faster and simpler to implement than a full Act of Parliament. SIs are sometimes described as 'secondary legislation, not second class legislation'. They have the same force as an Act of Parliament, and the great majority of the United Kingdom's law is made in this way. Two or three thousand SIs are passed each year, compared to only a few dozen Acts.
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Note added at 14 hrs (2007-03-27 05:24:10 GMT)
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In Nederland werd verschil gemaakt tussen een wetsontwerp (afkomstig van de regering) en een wetsvoorstel (afkomstig uit de 2e kamer)
Een statutory instrument komt dicht in de buurt van een wetsontwerp.
Nu wordt er verschil gemaakt tussen wetsvoorstel (van regeringswege) en initiatiefvoorstel (vanuit de 2e kamer (recht van initiatief))
Wettelijke regelgeving (geen officiële juridische term) is vrijwel altijd het resultaat van een wetsontwerp (dat nu kennelijk wetsvoorstel heet) (Nederland verkrommunicatie-land => Nederland emigratieland)
Statutory Instruments (SIs) come in three forms: those passed by affirmative resolution procedure, where they must be approved by the two Houses of Parliament before they can become law, and those passed by negative resolution procedure, where they are merely laid before Parliament, with Parliament able to annul them if it desires. The third form is those which are not laid before Parliament, but which Parliament can annul, usually within 40 days. The section of the Act of Parliament that grants the power will usually state whether the power is to be exercised by Statutory Instrument and which (if any) parliamentary procedure is to apply. Generally, if it is a potentially contentious power, the affirmative route will be used. A new, 'super-affirmative' procedure has been proposed for certain Statutory Instruments that could be made under the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Act 2006.
Statutory Instruments are not necessarily the same thing as an Order-in-Council: Statutory Instruments are 'delegated legislation' (the power is delegated by Parliament), whereas Orders-in-Council either operate through the Royal Prerogative or are made under powers created in statute. The latter will generally be made by Statutory Instrument, the former not.
Statutory Instruments are used because they are much faster and simpler to implement than a full Act of Parliament. SIs are sometimes described as 'secondary legislation, not second class legislation'. They have the same force as an Act of Parliament, and the great majority of the United Kingdom's law is made in this way. Two or three thousand SIs are passed each year, compared to only a few dozen Acts.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 14 hrs (2007-03-27 05:24:10 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
In Nederland werd verschil gemaakt tussen een wetsontwerp (afkomstig van de regering) en een wetsvoorstel (afkomstig uit de 2e kamer)
Een statutory instrument komt dicht in de buurt van een wetsontwerp.
Nu wordt er verschil gemaakt tussen wetsvoorstel (van regeringswege) en initiatiefvoorstel (vanuit de 2e kamer (recht van initiatief))
Wettelijke regelgeving (geen officiële juridische term) is vrijwel altijd het resultaat van een wetsontwerp (dat nu kennelijk wetsvoorstel heet) (Nederland verkrommunicatie-land => Nederland emigratieland)
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