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PARLIAMENTARY SPEAKERSHIP: FROM INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERSHIP TO THE COLLECTIVE DIRECTION OF PARLIAMENTARY WORK
Author(s) -
Mikel Urquijo Goitia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
spanish journal of legislative studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2695-5792
DOI - 10.21134/sjls.vi2.1286
Subject(s) - mandate , political science , work (physics) , parliamentary procedure , order (exchange) , world war ii , parliament , law , political economy , sociology , public administration , politics , engineering , economics , mechanical engineering , finance
The article explains the evolution of the parliamentary speakership in different countries of continental Europe in the XIX and XX centuries. The text focuses on three questions in order to define how the speakership was shaped in the parliaments that emerged from the liberal revolution: the procedure by which the speaker was elected, the duration of his mandate and his functions. Starting from the definition of the initial model, it analyzes how after the II World War the direction of parliamentary work evolved towards a shared model involving three bodies. These were the speakership itself, the bureau of the chamber and the conference of presidents of the parliamentary groups, with functions delimited among the three bodies and the speakership maintaining those competencies that had necessarily to be performed by a unipersonal body.

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