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Focus on Britain today (cultural studies for the language classroom), Clare Lavery, Prentice Hall Elt, chapter 1, 13 (p. 104)Any other book available.
SEMINAR 4 British Institutions
Though each country that makes up the United Kingdom has a long tradition of Christianity with a link remaining between church and state in England and Scotland, in practice all have relatively low levels of religious observance and today are secular societies. A European Commission poll reports that the majority of citizens retain a belief in the supernatural, however: 38% of interviewees "believe there is a God", and a further 40% believe there is "some sort of spirit or life force". A United Nations report claims that in 2007 "two-thirds ... either did not claim membership of a religion or said that they never attended a religious service". Many other religions have also established a presence in the UK, mainly through immigration, though also by attracting converts. After Christianity and the irreligious those religions with the most adherents are various forms of Islam and Hinduism. Other faiths include Sikhism, Judaism, Buddhism, the Bahá'í Faith, RastafarianismandNeopaganism. There are also organizations which promote rationalism, humanism, and secularism.
2. The Monarchy
o the mystery of the family name: Windsor or Saxe-Coburg-Gotha? o the family tree: who comprise the royal family today? o the reputation of the Family members, scandals etc. o what is the future of the Windsors?
o what are the duties and rights of the Queen? o does she rule or reign? What’s the difference? o what do the British need monarchy for?
3. Governmental institutions The Constitution of the United Kingdom is the uncodified body of law and convention under which the United Kingdom is governed. The bedrock of the British constitution is the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty, according to which the statutes passed by Parliament are the UK's supreme and final source of law.
PROJECT WORK: Parliament: the House of Commons vs. the House of Lords ˜ geographical position, the interior of the chambers (benches, red lines, balconies, desks) ˜ who comprise the Houses and who preside over them? the status of the members. ˜ which House predominates? why? ˜ an MP’s life ˜ interesting traditions
˜ geographical position ˜ who comprise the Cabinet and who preside over it? what is discussed behind the closed doors? What is “the Prime Minister’s question day”? ˜ The “Shadow Cabinet” and the Opposition
˜ history: the Tories and the Wigs ˜ why is the British party system unique? ˜ General Elections ˜ what is the present day situation? who is at power? Make sure that you can interpret such notions: The front / back benchers, the shadow cabinet, Lord Chancellor, the Woolsack in the House of Lords, the Chief Whip, Privy Counselors, royal prerogative, Lords Spiritual, Lords Temporal, Law Lords.
SOURSES: 1. Britain (the country and its people: an introduction for learners of English), James O’Driscoll, Oxford University Press, chapters 13, 6-9. Date: 2016-03-03; view: 1486
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