Legal regulation of interaction between levels of public authority as one of the reserves for improving the efficiency of its functioning
Автор: Kozhevnikov O.A., Karasev A.T.
Журнал: Вестник Южно-Уральского государственного университета. Серия: Право @vestnik-susu-law
Рубрика: Публично-правовые (государственно-правовые) науки
Статья в выпуске: 2 т.24, 2024 года.
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The current stage of development of the state and society increasingly determines the need for a constant and purposeful assessment of implementation, both at the level of legislative and law enforcement activities, of the textual changes to the Constitution of the Russian Federation that took place in 2020. In the context of the special military operation and the sanctions policy of unfriendly states, a particularly important task is to build the most optimal model for the organization and functioning of public authorities and local governments as structural elements of a unified system of public authority. Defining the constitutional foundations of this system in Article 132 of the Constitution of the Russian Federation, the federal legislator considered the legal regulation of the elements of a unified system of public authority with varying degrees of care and correctness. In the presented article, the authors prove the importance and necessity of early constitutional and legal concretization within the framework of legislative and law enforcement practice of the provisions on the interaction of the state and municipal levels of the unified system of public authority, since its actual absence already brings its "negative fruits" within the framework of law enforcement, which significantly undermines confidence in the institutions of public authority and in general the provisions the Constitution of the Russian Federation.
Constitution, constitutional court of the russian federation, constitutional reform, unified system of public authority, forms and mechanisms of interaction of public authorities
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147243990
IDR: 147243990 | DOI: 10.14529/law240214