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- Title
ZNAČAJ I OPŠTE KARAKTERISTIKE USTAVNOG ZAKONA IZ 1953. GODINE.
- Authors
Hasović, Selim
- Abstract
The Constitutional Law from 1953 confirmed the National Boards as the basic structures of authority of the working people and senior structures of the municipality, city and circuit, and that "workers' self-management in the municipality, city and circuit is the basis of the social and political structure of the country". The Constitutional Law is not merely a cabinet work or a simple legal regulation. It included basic principles and provisions (adopted from practice, then generalized and legalized), which allowed and facilitated the rapid development of new principles and institutions. The Constitutional Law is divested of declamatory statements and verbal declarations. The Constitutional Law was a principled and realistic legal act. The Constitutional Law clearly defined the rights of the Federation and the republics in relation to the national boards. The Federal Constitutional Law precisely defined the authorities of all federal structures, while the republic constitutional law defined the rights and responsibilities of republic structures. The Federal Constitutional Law defined the self-management rights of the National Boards. Thus, these rights were given constitutional-legal significance, which ensured that they could not be changed by federal or republic laws. The most important self-management rights of the National Boards defined by the Federal Constitutional Law included: the right of citizens to appoint and withdraw their representatives in the municipal national board and the circuit city councils, as well as the right of producers to appoint and withdraw their representatives in the council of producers in the national board of the circuit or city, the right of citizens and producers to be appointed to the national board, the right of citizens to directly participate in government through referendum, voters' assembly, council of citizens, their participation in the administration and judiciary and through other forms of direct management, in the right of the national board to independently organize affairs of general interest for the community in the field of economic, communal social and cultural life and development of the municipalities, city and circuit, to rely on economic organizations, self-management institutions, associations and initiative of the citizens, the right of the national board to independently control a portion of the revenues provided by economic organizations to the municipality, city and circuit, but in accordance with the republic social plan, the right of the national board to independently adopt the social plan, the right of the national board to perform legal obligations towards economic organizations on its territory, the right of the national board to manage national property. It also included the right of the municipality and city to manage all land and buildings identified as national property if that right belonged to other state structures, economic organizations, institutions and associations, the right of the national board to form and appoint its structures and to appoint board officials, as well as the right of the national board to regulate by statute its organization and affairs, preservation of order and peace in the municipality, city and circuit.
- Subjects
BOSNIA &; Herzegovina; LABOR laws; CONSTITUTIONAL law; USURY laws; REFERENDUM; PRACTICAL politics; CITY councils; MUNICIPAL government; GOVERNMENT agencies
- Publication
Pregled, 2009, Vol 50, Issue 3, p287
- ISSN
0032-7271
- Publication type
Article