Ministerial committee

A ministerial committee is a committee consisting of ministers of government portfolio.

A joint ministerial committee usually refers to committee consisting of ministers from different nations or international organisations.

Australia

The term is used in both federal and state governments of Australia.

Examples

  • Federal government
    • Ministerial Committee Inquiry into The Portrayal of Violence in the Electronic Media, May 1996 – July 1996
    • Ministerial Committee to Oversight Implementation of Backing Australia's Ability (MCOIBAA) , later named "Science and Innovation Committee" but still referred to as a Ministerial committee
  • New South Wales
    • Ministerial Committee of Inquiry into impotency treatment services
  • Northern Territory
    • Ministerial Standing Committee on Crime Prevention
  • Western Australia
    • Commercial Passenger Vessel Advisory Committee (CPVAC)
    • Ministerial Committee on Lesbian and Gay Law Reform

Joint ministerial committees

  • Singapore–Australia Joint Ministerial Committee (SAJMC)
  • Australia–Japan Ministerial Committee (AJMC)

United Kingdom

A Joint Ministerial Committee exists in the UK as a committee of ministers and members of devolved administrations. It is not an executive body and cannot bind any of its participants.[1]

gollark: Otherwise, just edit anavrins' code or whatever.
gollark: I would expect that it has some kind of network interface if you're trying to do that.
gollark: Right, okay, and what's anavrins' program?
gollark: I... what are you even doing?!
gollark: It's not as if you can somehow make a program use stuff from another thing without changing the program.

References

  1. "Devolution: memorandum of understanding and supplementary agreement". gov.uk. 1 October 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2017.

See also

  • Ministerial Council (disambiguation)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.