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United States state constitution

In the context of the United States of America, a state constitution is the governing document of a U.S. state, comparable to the U.S. Constitution which is the governing document of the United States. Some states have had multiple constitutions and since each state drafts its own, there is great diversity between them, though the U.S. Constitution guarantees a republican form of government to all states.

The average length of a state constitution is 26,000 words (compared to about 8,700 words for the U.S. constitution). The longest state governing document is that of Alabama, which has over 310,000 words. That document is also the most amended state constitution in the Union, with over 740 amendments as of 2004 (the average state constitution has been amended about 115 times). The oldest state constitution (and the oldest constitution in the world) still in effect is that of Massachusetts, which took effect in 1780. The newest is the Georgia Constitution , which was ratified in 1983 (Hammons, 1999).

Contents

U.S. state constitutions

See also

References

  • Hammons, Christopher W. (1999). Was James Madison wrong? Rethinking the American preference for short, framework-oriented constitutions. American Political Science Review. Dec. 1999.
    • The appendices to this article contain substantial data on state constitutions.

External links



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01-04-2007 01:21:04