In 1850, Cameroon was primarily composed of various indigenous kingdoms and tribes, each with its own customs and governance structures, rather than a unified government or legal system. The region was influenced by the trade networks established by local rulers, and governance often revolved around traditional authority and communal decision-making. European colonial interest was beginning to grow during this period, but significant colonial rule had not yet been established until later in the 19th century. Laws were largely based on customary practices rather than formalized legal codes.
They outlawed laws that one of them
the australian Government is like a school because there are school rules that student have to obey and the government has laws which the WHOLE country has to respect.
Just like the national government, our 3 branches are legislative, judicial, and executive. Legislative-makes the laws Judicial-says what the laws mean Executive-carries out the laws
terrible
Many, my friend. Many. No ordinary folk like you or me could tell, as we are not part of the government, but there is not point crying about it into your pillow. This P. Government passed many laws. End of story.
Like all state governments, they make and administer laws
The legislative government is the congress. They make laws. You have the congress(2 Representatives from each state) and the house of reprenstives (based on the states population.)
Well a government comes up with rules like less teachers which wasn't a good idea by Christi and they enforce it
Thanks to limited government, the President has to follow the laws just like everyone else.
I think it's because of the harsh laws that they may have affected out laws today, like senates.
The House of Burgess is like a government. It discusses issues and makes new laws.
To be used as government. Like to create laws sort of