16. "The state is both the child and parent of law." Who said this? (A) Laski (B) Green (C) Bentham 18 (D) MacIver
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
this questions answer is a laski
Answered by
0
The statement was said by (D) MacIver
- He clarified that there are several types of legislation. There are social laws, for example, that are founded on societal conventions and traditions, and some of these become state laws.
- However, according to MacIver, the state simply adds new phrases to the great book of law and deletes old ones.
- Much of the book was never created by the state, yet the state is obligated by it all, except when it updates the co de from generation to generation."
- As a result, the state is both the child and the parent of law, and the power of law outweighs the authority of the state. The state is only an official keeper of the law, not its author. It must adhere to the rule of law.
Similar questions