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Constitutional amendment

The term constitutional amendment usually refers to a special procedure by which a constitution may be altered.

A constitution, particularly when it is written document, is often entrenched in some way, thus preventing from being changed by the expedient legislative process used for all other rulemaking[?]. This entrenching may take the form of special second order rules within the constitution specifying the process for changing it — for example, requiring a particular portion of the membership to be given timely notice with an opportunity to vote on the change, not merely by a vote of the governing body; or the governing body may need a qualified (e.g. two-thirds) majority in order to pass the amendment.

The technicalities of amending a constitution vary; some examples follow.

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