i know that in the UK the lords are called the upper chamber so does that mean in a comparison question when they ask about the upper chamber do they mean the lords not the commons? and then would you compare it to the HOR not the senate?
Hi Alan, i'm doing a question about how the house of Representatives and the House of commons differ. I have one point about how they differ in their legislative powers, and maybe one about how they differ in terms of representation but im stuck for a third point! would you have any ideas. thanks
Either the relationship with the executive- the commons has the executive in it (and dominating it) whilst in the US the executive is separate or maybe something on oversight
hi alan would the second question come up in paper 3 on friday as in your advanced information video you focused on executive
Great video. Can you nexr do a video on the limitations and strengths of different types of sources
definition of LIFE SAVIOUR
What question would the first comparisons answer (beginning part of the video) be? thanks
Which part?
@@AlanHistoryNerd from 2:05 to 12:25
Thanks Alan, very helpful
Glad it was helpful!
i know that in the UK the lords are called the upper chamber so does that mean in a comparison question when they ask about the upper chamber do they mean the lords not the commons? and then would you compare it to the HOR not the senate?
Upper Chambers: Lords and Senate
Lower Chambers: Commons and House of Representatives
Hi Alan, i'm doing a question about how the house of Representatives and the House of commons differ. I have one point about how they differ in their legislative powers, and maybe one about how they differ in terms of representation but im stuck for a third point! would you have any ideas. thanks
Either the relationship with the executive- the commons has the executive in it (and dominating it) whilst in the US the executive is separate or maybe something on oversight
@@AlanHistoryNerd thanks!
hi alan i'm sitting paper 3 on friday can the second question you went through come up in part B