Bill (proposed law)
(Redirected from Bill (law))
A bill is a proposed new law introduced within a legislature that has not been adopted. Once a bill has become law, it is thereafter an act; but in popular usage the two terms are often treated as if they meant the same.
Types of bills
Bills can be divided into:
- public bills, which apply to the general population
- private bills, which only apply to a single person or to a select group of people. If a private bill is punitive in nature, it is called a bill of attainder.
- hybrid bills, which combine elements of both public and private bills. Note that the concept of hybrid bills is not widely recognised outside the United Kingdom (in particular, it is expressly not recognised in Canada).
- local bills, which affect only a certain locality, and are often proposed by local government to the legislature
Bill (proposed Law) Media
Other websites
Hong Kong
New Zealand
- List of current bills Archived 2008-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
United Kingdom
United States
- How a law is made Archived 2005-07-11 at the Wayback Machine. From the North Carolina General Assembly
- How a bill becomes a law - related information.
- Currently hot issue regarding the Net Neutrality bills become the law Archived 2008-12-11 at the Wayback Machine.