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It states that the supreme court can overturn anything it sees as unconstitutional

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13y ago

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What is the name of the power of the the courts to determine if a law is constitutional?

I think you mean Judicial Review.


What are the 3 branches of government here in the Us and list one principle about it?

judicial, political and economic. I am not sure what you mean by a principle, a principle for which one?


What does 'judicial revue' mean?

Judicial Review is when a court, in hearing a case, considers whether the law that applies is valid or consistent with overarching legal requirements. For example, the US Supreme Court once applied Judicial Review to assess the law establishing a national income tax and found that the Constitution (the supreme law of the land) did not permit the Congress to establish such a tax. Therefore the law was null and void, and unenforceable. A Constitutional Amendment was then passed, that permitted the establishment of a national income tax. After than, any judicial review would find that the Congress had been empowered to create such a tax.


What does judicial review mean and how does it impact the legal system?

Judicial review is the power of courts to review and potentially invalidate laws or actions of the government that are deemed unconstitutional. This impacts the legal system by serving as a check on the other branches of government, ensuring that their actions comply with the constitution.


The judicial branch is to interpert?

If you mean the job then yes, they interpret our laws. By interpret, they decide whether the law is constitutional or not.


What does judicial review give the US Supreme Court the power to do?

B. protect citizens from being tried under unconstitutional laws -APEX


What is the most important power of the US Supreme Court?

judicial review


What do you mean by single integrated judicial system?

It means all the the administration of Courts in India is based on the same principle ie Justice.


Can judicial review not be granted?

Judicial review is the power of the judiciary branch to invalidate laws made by the legislative and/or executive branch. It's generally explicitly granted by a provision in the country's constitution. It's possible to write a constitution which does not grant the judiciary branch this power, but doing so eliminates part of the "checks and balances" that are common in constitutional governments. If you mean discretionary review (review of the results of a case in a lower court), at least in the US the Supreme Court is not required to hear all appeals; those wishing to appeal to the Court submit a petition, and a certain number of Justices (at least four) must agree that the case merits a hearing. Only about 1% of the petitions are actually granted certiorari.


What does judicial branch mean?

what does judicial branch mean?the branch that interprets laws and settle disagreement about them; "judicial" comes from judge :)


What constitutional principle most directly address the relationship between the national and state governments?

The legal doctrine stating that federal laws supersede state laws is called preemption. ...not sure if this is what you are asking but doctrine and principle in this instance mean the same...


What constitutional principle most directly addresses the relationship between the national and state governments?

The legal doctrine stating that Federal Laws supersede state laws is called preemption. ...not sure if this is what you are asking but doctrine and principle in this instance mean the same...

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