Glossary - M Flashcards
Magistrates Court
The lowest court in Australian court hierarchies that hears the less serious criminal and civil disputes. The Western Australian Magistrates Court deals with all simple offences and some indictable offences under criminal law and also with civil disputes up to a value of $75000.
Magna Carta
A document signed by King John in 1215, conceding that the king is subject to the law and acknowledging fundamental legal rights such as trial by jury. It is considered to be a foundation of modern legal and political freedoms.
Main committee
An alternative pathway for the Consideration-in-Detail of bills by the House of Representatives, often used for bills on which agreement can be readily be reached. The main committee sits concurrently with a sitting of the House. It’s decisions are reported back to the House and if these are accepted the bill proceeds to its Third Reading. This parallel process enables the House of Representatives to devote more time to other business. The main committee also hears reports.
Major Party
Political parties that can achieve a majority or near-majority of seats in the House of Representatives. Characteristics of major parties include a broad support base, the organisational capacity to contest all or most seats, a wide-ranging philosophy and a comprehensive set of policies. Examples are the Liberal Party of Australia and the Australian Labour Party.
Majoritarian electoral systems
Electoral systems based on single member electorates that generally lead to election outcomes in which one party or coalition achieves a clear majority of parliamentary seats. Majoritarian systems may require a successful candidate to achieve a simple majority (first past the post voting systems) or an absolute majority (preferential voting system) of the votes cast in an electorate.
Majority verdict
A jury decision that is not unanimous but is still accepted as a clear verdict. Majority verdicts are not accepted in all jurisdictions. States that allow some use of majority verdicts variously require the verdict to be 11-1, 10-2 or 9-3.
Malapportionment
The drawing of electoral boundaries to allow a large variation in the number of constitutes in different electorates. Malapportionment was a deliberate feature of early democratic systems and was intended to give greater political power to land owners in non-urban electorates. Up to the 2008 election, the boundaries used for the Legislative Assembly in WA still featured significant malapportionment.
Mandate
The authority provided by voters to a successful political party to pursue its policies in parliament. The winning party or coalition have a government mandate to enact legislation and carry out administration based on the policies put to the people in the election that brought it to power. In recent years minor parties who hold the balance of power in the Senate have argued that they have a mandate to act as a check on government actions and to seek amendments of government bills.
Magistrate
A person who administers justice in a Magistrates Court. Magistrates are referred to as Sir, Ma’am or Your Worship.
Mandatory Sentencing
Laws that remove judicial discretion in the setting of criminal sanctions. Under mandatory sentencing laws passed in the NT and WA in the 1990s courts delivering sentences for property crimes were required to apply fixed terms of detention to repeat offenders.
Marginal seat
A classification used by the Australian Electoral Commission to refer to seats in which the winning party holds between 50% and 56% of the two party preferred vote. (See fairly safe seat and blue ribbon or safe seat.)
Mass media
The general term for organisations that provide information, opinion and entertainment to large numbers of people. The mass media includes newspapers, radio, television, film and the Internet.
Matters of public importance
A parliamentary procedure that allows MPs to speak in parliament about current events if the matter is not covered by other debates in the chamber. It is one of the procedures that enable MPs to raise issues concerning their constituents or add to public debate on an important issue.
Maxim
A legal tradition, principle or rule, often expressed as a ‘saying’ in Latin. Examples are ejusdem generis and noscitur a sociis.
Mens rea
A guilty state of mind or an intention to commit an offence.