Front cover image for The New Hampshire state constitution

The New Hampshire state constitution

Prepared in 1776, the constitution of New Hampshire is the nation's first written state constitution. The 1776 constitution was a brief 15 sentences, but it laid out a form of government dedicated to popular control and limited government powers that have remained a central theme of New Hampshire constitutional law to this day. The detail of the framing of the original state constitution --the first in the nation- provides a context for understanding and appreciating the traditions which has marked the state's political and constitutional history, even after 144 amendments and over 200years
eBook, English, 2011
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2011
e-books
1 ressource en ligne (xvii, 289 pages).
9780199877706, 9781306267182, 019987770X, 1306267188
1365078883
Cover; Contents; Series Foreword; Foreword; Acknowledgments; PART ONE: The History of the New Hampshire Constitution; Introduction and Overview; The Temporary Constitution of 1776; Dissent Develops against the 1776 Constitution; The World's First Modern Constitutional Convention; Adoption of the 1784 Permanent Constitution; The Revision of 1792; Over 80 Years of Constitutional Satisfaction; Important Changes Reshape State Government in 1877; Constitutional Conventions; Amendments to the Constitution, 1792-2002;Conclusion; PART TWO: The New Hampshire Constitution and Commentary. Article 12. Protection and Taxation ReciprocalArticle 13. Conscientious Objectors Not Compelled to Bear Arms; Article 14. Legal Remedies to Be Free, Complete, and Prompt; Article 15. Right of Accused; Article 16. Former Jeopardy; Jury Trial in Capital Cases; Article 17. Venue of Criminal Prosecutions; Article 18. Penalties to Be Proportioned to Offenses; True Design of Punishment; Article 19. Searches and Seizures Regulated; Article 20. Jury Trial in Civil Causes; Article 21. Jurors; Compensation; Article 22. FreeSpeech; Liberty of the Press; Article 23. Retrospective Laws Prohibited. Article 24. MilitiaArticle 25. Standing Armies; Article 26. Military Subject to Civil Power; Article 27. Quartering of Soldiers; Article 28. Taxes, by Whom Levied; Article 28-a. Mandated Programs; Article 29. Suspension of Laws by Legislature Only; Article 30. Freedom of Speech; Article 31. Meetings of Legislature, for What Purposes; Article 32. Rights of Assembly, Instruction, and Petition; Article 33. Excessive Bail, Fines, and Punishments Prohibited; Article 34. Martial Law Limited; Article 35. The Judiciary; Tenure of Office,etc.; Article 36. Pensions. Article 36-a. Use of Retirement FundsArticle 37. Separation of Powers; Article 38. Social Virtues Inculcated; Article 39. Changes in Town and City Charters, Referendum Required; Part 2, the Form of Government; Numbering of Articles in Part 2; Article 1. Name of Body Politic; Article 2. Legislature, How Constituted; Article 3. General Court, When to Meet and Dissolve; Article 4. Power of General Court to Establish Courts; Article 5. Power to Make Laws, Elect Officers, Define Their Powers and Duties, Impose Fines and Assess Taxes;Prohibited from Authorizing Towns to Aid Certain Corporations. Introduction to Constitutional CommentaryPart 1, the Bill of Rights; Article 1. Equality of Men; Origin and Object of Government; Article 2. Natural Rights; Article 2-a. The Bearing of Arms; Article 3. Society, Its Organization and Purposes; Article 4. Rights of Conscience Unalienable; Article 5. Religious Freedom Recognized; Article 6. Morality and Piety; Article 7. State Sovereignty; Article 8. Accountability of Magistrates and Officers; Public's Right to Know; Article 9. No Hereditary Office or Place; Article 10. Right ofRevolution; Article 11. Elections and Elective Franchises
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