In the US Congress, a bill must be made and proposed, then it gets referred to a committee (which may be in the House or Senate, depending on the source) then the committee either refers it or kills it. The exception to the rule about whether or not it is a bill proposal having to deal with budgets or finances- then it must start in the House of Representatives. Usually the state process for making laws is along the same line. It would be referenced as a bill, then a statute/law.
You may be trying to make a reference to bylaws.
Bylaws/by-laws/byelaws are laws created for local application; it's a law that can be applied in wider practice, but generally it's found more in reference to organizational laws, rather than formal government laws. Bylaw is used more in reference to Canada, the UK, or commonwealth countries' laws.
Self-government
unanimity
It's Easy the answer is SELFGOVERNMENT
legitimate
legitimate
They are called "unconstitutional laws".
They are called "unconstitutional laws".
When people pass laws that everyone can agree on, it is often referred to as bipartisan legislation or consensus-based decision-making. This means that representatives from different political parties or groups have found common ground and come to an agreement on the proposed laws.
They are called "unconstitutional laws".
unanimity
Could be an indirect democracy with a social contract theory.
weather they could agree on the laws that the people wanted (voted on laws)