Hence, the Articles of Confederation were created, which (to a great degree) James Madison authored, using the Magna Carta as a source of reference and inspiration. ONE: How are the two the same and how are they different vis-a-vis the rule of law? Both documents established the principles for "determining legal status of laws and government authority" (Betz, 2011, p
And in Clauses 20, 21, and 22 the Magna Carta asserts that a defendant is entitled to a "reasonable amount of fine commensurate with the type of offense committed, an amount not to be ruinous of one's free-status position…" and a free man has a right to be tried in front of an "authorized court" (Clause 24). These relate to due process as found in the 14th Amendment of the Constitution (Kusha, 2004)
In the first part, the Magna Carta grants powers to God. This is confirmed by its present charter at the Church of England with its full rights and liberties, which is considered entirely free (Dickerson, Flanagan & O'Neill, 2009)
No person shall be deprived his/her life, property or liberty in the absence of due process of law." When compared to the Magna Carta text, it says "no man shall be imprisoned or taken his/her free liberties or tenement or outlawed, free customs or ruined, nor shall we go against such a person save by a lawful judgment by law of the land or of his peers (Urofsky & Finkelman, 2012)
The decision to worship or to worship is an individual desire and choice. The similarity is reflected in texts such as "…religion- thereof free exercise" versus "the Church of England is to be free… full liberties and rights entirely" (Vile, 2013)
The incremental model of budgeting views the budgetary process as being influenced by past budgeting decisions. Agencies are given a new budget amount based upon what they have been allotted in years past, instead of based upon what they might need for the upcoming and present year (Kettner, Moroney and Martin, n