Amendement Labouchere (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Amendement Labouchere" in French language version.

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archive.org

  • « Speranza's Gifted Son », St. Louis Globe Democrat,‎ , p. 3 (lire en ligne, consulté le )
  • Morris B. Kaplan, Sodom on the Thames: sex, love, and scandal in Wilde times, Cornell University Press, (ISBN 9780801436789, lire en ligne Inscription nécessaire), 175
  • (en) William Ivor Jennings, Parliament, CUP Archive, (1re éd. 1957) (lire en ligne), p. 280 fn.3; Thomas Erskine May et Thomas Lonsdale Webster, A treatise on the law, privileges, proceedings and usage of Parliament, London, 12th, (lire en ligne) :

    « When the bill, as amended by the committee, is considered, the entire bill is open to consideration, and new clauses may be added, and amendments made. According to former usage, the amendments might be wholly irrelevant to the subject-matter of the bill. This vicious practice was, in 1888, rendered impossible by standing order No. 41, which prescribes that no amendment may be proposed to a bill on consideration, which could not have been proposed in committee without an instruction from the house. »

books.google.com

  • Neil McKenna, The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde, (ISBN 9781446456828, lire en ligne), p. 107
  • Robert Aldrich et Garry Wotherspoon, Who's who in gay and lesbian history: from antiquity to World War II, Psychology Press, (ISBN 9780415159838, lire en ligne), p. 298
  • Ed Cohen, Talk on the Wilde side: toward a genealogy of a discourse on male sexualities, Psychology Press, (ISBN 9780415902304, lire en ligne), p. 92
  • (en) William Ivor Jennings, Parliament, CUP Archive, (1re éd. 1957) (lire en ligne), p. 280 fn.3; Thomas Erskine May et Thomas Lonsdale Webster, A treatise on the law, privileges, proceedings and usage of Parliament, London, 12th, (lire en ligne) :

    « When the bill, as amended by the committee, is considered, the entire bill is open to consideration, and new clauses may be added, and amendments made. According to former usage, the amendments might be wholly irrelevant to the subject-matter of the bill. This vicious practice was, in 1888, rendered impossible by standing order No. 41, which prescribes that no amendment may be proposed to a bill on consideration, which could not have been proposed in committee without an instruction from the house. »

fordham.edu

irishstatutebook.ie

lexscripta.com

millbanksystems.com

hansard.millbanksystems.com

parliament.uk

api.parliament.uk