Introduction
Every state must have a constitution in the sense of a body of legal rules (usually supplemented by a collection of informal practices which are called constitutional conventions), both of which will reflect certain underlying political doctrines and will provide a framework for the governance of that state. While it is obvious that both the underlying doctrines and the content of the rules and practices will vary from one state to another, it is also true, if less obvious, that the way in which those doctrines, rules and practices are presented will also vary from one state to another.
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