constitutionalHierarchy

P9514 predicate

Indicates that one entity holds a superior or subordinate status to another within a formal constitutional or foundational legal framework.

Aliases (2)
  • legalHierarchy ×10
  • constitutionalHierarchyRole ×1

Sample triples (17)
Subject Object
Article 23 of the Constitution of Norway supreme law provision
Article 30 of the Constitution of Norway supreme law of Norway ("legalHierarchy")
Article 45 of the Constitution of Japan constitutional norm ("legalHierarchy")
Article 47 of the Constitution of Japan below the Constitution of Japan as a whole but above ordinary statutes
Article 53 of the Constitution of Japan higher than ordinary statutes of Japan ("legalHierarchy")
Article 60 of the Constitution of Japan supreme law within Japanese budgetary legislation
Article 72 of the Constitution of Japan subordinate to the text of the Constitution of Japan as a whole only in systemic interpretation ("legalHierarchy")
Charter of the City and County of San Francisco subordinate to Constitution of the State of California ("legalHierarchy")
Charter of the City and County of San Francisco subordinate to Constitution of the United States ("legalHierarchy")
Constitution of Japan Article 81 supreme law within Japanese legal system as part of the Constitution
Constitution of the Republic of Poland of 1997 highest legal act in Poland ("legalHierarchy")
Council of State of Cuba subordinate to the National Assembly of People's Power
Education Basic Law of Japan fundamental law of education in Japan ("legalHierarchy")
Federal Constitutional Law "On the Government of the Russian Federation" has higher legal force than ordinary federal laws ("legalHierarchy")
House of Representatives has priority in designating the Prime Minister special rule overriding ordinary bicameral equality in this matter
Oaths Clause reinforces supremacy of the Constitution over other obligations ("constitutionalHierarchyRole")
Revised Organic Act of the Virgin Islands subordinate to the Constitution of the United States ("legalHierarchy")

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