MK
... entities (e.g., non-profit company) for any purpose (legally allowed). Both individual and legal persons exercise the right to associate without discrimination. Registration is not mandatory, and legal entities are not sanctioned for not registering their organisations. Registration rules are clearl ...
... entities (e.g., non-profit company) for any purpose (legally allowed). Both individual and legal persons exercise the right to associate without discrimination. Registration is not mandatory, and legal entities are not sanctioned for not registering their organisations. Registration rules are clearl ...
Legal History and Traditions - Ethiopian Legal Brief
... faced; the type of solutions they gave to such problems and the reasons why they chose those solutions. Identifying the key issues encountered by past legal systems and the solutions offered thereto is hoped to throw light on the foundations of the Ethiopian legal system since some major legal tradi ...
... faced; the type of solutions they gave to such problems and the reasons why they chose those solutions. Identifying the key issues encountered by past legal systems and the solutions offered thereto is hoped to throw light on the foundations of the Ethiopian legal system since some major legal tradi ...
Journal of Law, No. 1, 2012
... II. Criminal Law Evolution in the Republican and Imperial Periods in Ancient Rome State The situation was partially changed at the next stage of criminal law development, which is characteristic to the pre-classical stage of Roman justice development, covering the later republican period (367-27 yy, ...
... II. Criminal Law Evolution in the Republican and Imperial Periods in Ancient Rome State The situation was partially changed at the next stage of criminal law development, which is characteristic to the pre-classical stage of Roman justice development, covering the later republican period (367-27 yy, ...
Transnational Legality: Stateless Law and International Arbitration
... law,” the upshot of a war, of the use of economic force. Something much more “civilized” was evidently meant. The label of law seems intuitively fitting for that purpose. But the label of law can also be used for darker purposes. To see the point, consider the idea of “arbitration dependents.” I mea ...
... law,” the upshot of a war, of the use of economic force. Something much more “civilized” was evidently meant. The label of law seems intuitively fitting for that purpose. But the label of law can also be used for darker purposes. To see the point, consider the idea of “arbitration dependents.” I mea ...
The Concept of the Rule of Law - MacSphere
... community. In the past, we have seen political agendas articulated in terms of liberalism, capitalism and democracy, most of which have been well received, particularly by Western communities. However, there have been differences of opinion; a variety of political leaders and regimes have supported ...
... community. In the past, we have seen political agendas articulated in terms of liberalism, capitalism and democracy, most of which have been well received, particularly by Western communities. However, there have been differences of opinion; a variety of political leaders and regimes have supported ...
verbatim record of the legal experts meeting on the law of the sea
... deputing their officials to participate at this Legal Experts Meeting has been very encouraging. I welcome other representatives from Intergovernmental Organizations, delegates, legal experts, academia and research scholars, some of whom have travelled long distances to be here today, is commendable ...
... deputing their officials to participate at this Legal Experts Meeting has been very encouraging. I welcome other representatives from Intergovernmental Organizations, delegates, legal experts, academia and research scholars, some of whom have travelled long distances to be here today, is commendable ...
THE CONCEPT OF LAW Prof. Dr. and
... bonds of mutual love. Cooperation and reciprocal aid, instead of ruthless competition, ...
... bonds of mutual love. Cooperation and reciprocal aid, instead of ruthless competition, ...
THE CONCEPT OF LAW Prof. Dr. and
... bonds of mutual love. Cooperation and reciprocal aid, instead of ruthless competition, ...
... bonds of mutual love. Cooperation and reciprocal aid, instead of ruthless competition, ...
A Legal History of Rome
... From the vantage point of history, Roman law is one of Rome’s most remarkable and enduring contributions to civilization. In no other field of human endeavour have the Romans a greater claim to lasting fame than in the creation of a sophisticated legal system that constantly adapted itself to an eve ...
... From the vantage point of history, Roman law is one of Rome’s most remarkable and enduring contributions to civilization. In no other field of human endeavour have the Romans a greater claim to lasting fame than in the creation of a sophisticated legal system that constantly adapted itself to an eve ...
Topic One: Introduction to Conflict of Laws
... proper law is usually not the forum. Ancillaries: the time limitations, cross-defences, rules of evidence, presumptions, burdens of proof, order of proof, etc., which affect or quality the legal relationship. They were classically deemed procedural (and thus of the forum) but, in reality, ancillar ...
... proper law is usually not the forum. Ancillaries: the time limitations, cross-defences, rules of evidence, presumptions, burdens of proof, order of proof, etc., which affect or quality the legal relationship. They were classically deemed procedural (and thus of the forum) but, in reality, ancillar ...
Magna Carta and the ius commune - Chicago Unbound
... Cartaand the Idea of Liberty 2-3 (Krieger 1972, repr 1982), where he notes the partial influence on the Charter of ideas drawn from the scholastic culture of the time. ' See Holt, Magna Carta and the Origins of Statute Law at 300-01 (cited in note 2) (stating that "[tihe influence exercised was not ...
... Cartaand the Idea of Liberty 2-3 (Krieger 1972, repr 1982), where he notes the partial influence on the Charter of ideas drawn from the scholastic culture of the time. ' See Holt, Magna Carta and the Origins of Statute Law at 300-01 (cited in note 2) (stating that "[tihe influence exercised was not ...
Magna Carta and the ius commune
... Cartaand the Idea of Liberty 2-3 (Krieger 1972, repr 1982), where he notes the partial influence on the Charter of ideas drawn from the scholastic culture of the time. ' See Holt, Magna Carta and the Origins of Statute Law at 300-01 (cited in note 2) (stating that "[tihe influence exercised was not ...
... Cartaand the Idea of Liberty 2-3 (Krieger 1972, repr 1982), where he notes the partial influence on the Charter of ideas drawn from the scholastic culture of the time. ' See Holt, Magna Carta and the Origins of Statute Law at 300-01 (cited in note 2) (stating that "[tihe influence exercised was not ...
How Law is Like Chess - bepress Legal Repository
... pointing to norms. Why could it not be something else? Kelsen had a detailed answer to this question.6 The law, according to Kelsen, is first and foremost a system of norms. Norms are ‘ought’ statements, prescribing certain modes of conduct. Unlike moral norms, however, Kelsen maintained that legal ...
... pointing to norms. Why could it not be something else? Kelsen had a detailed answer to this question.6 The law, according to Kelsen, is first and foremost a system of norms. Norms are ‘ought’ statements, prescribing certain modes of conduct. Unlike moral norms, however, Kelsen maintained that legal ...
Introduction to Historical Jurisprudence Paul Vinogradoff 1920
... them, why not history and philosophy? As to ethical doctrines, they are, of course, closely related to jurisprudence, but they present themselves to jurists chiefly in their practical aspect as influencing conduct. 2 In this sense the data of ethics form a most important chapter of psychology, as th ...
... them, why not history and philosophy? As to ethical doctrines, they are, of course, closely related to jurisprudence, but they present themselves to jurists chiefly in their practical aspect as influencing conduct. 2 In this sense the data of ethics form a most important chapter of psychology, as th ...
RTF version - Federal Court of Australia
... maritime law had “the force of law, not from extra-territorial reach of national laws, nor from abdication of its sovereign powers by any nation, but from acceptance by common consent of civilised communities of rules designed to foster amicable and workable commercial relations” 28 . Importantly, t ...
... maritime law had “the force of law, not from extra-territorial reach of national laws, nor from abdication of its sovereign powers by any nation, but from acceptance by common consent of civilised communities of rules designed to foster amicable and workable commercial relations” 28 . Importantly, t ...
Law and Morality - The Tanner Lectures on Human Values
... substantive preferences incapable of further justification and subject to choice by persons acting in a purposive-rational manner ; an example would be the individual interests that private legal subjects pursue in economic exchange. Finally, Weber also calls rational the results of the intellectual ...
... substantive preferences incapable of further justification and subject to choice by persons acting in a purposive-rational manner ; an example would be the individual interests that private legal subjects pursue in economic exchange. Finally, Weber also calls rational the results of the intellectual ...
LUMSA * International Commercial Law 24 february 2014
... In order to avoid divergent interpretations of the CISG some commentators had hoped for the establishment of an international court with jurisdiction over disputes arising under the CISG. The main advantage of such a development would probably be the uniformity that a centralized judicial system can ...
... In order to avoid divergent interpretations of the CISG some commentators had hoped for the establishment of an international court with jurisdiction over disputes arising under the CISG. The main advantage of such a development would probably be the uniformity that a centralized judicial system can ...
Continued
... Age for Legislation and Jurisprudence" 1814. This pamphlet was an answer to a proposal made by a professor of civil law, A.F.J. Thibaut of Heidelberg University, to the effect that a codification of the laws and customs of the various German states be undertaken in a coherent arrangement, on the bas ...
... Age for Legislation and Jurisprudence" 1814. This pamphlet was an answer to a proposal made by a professor of civil law, A.F.J. Thibaut of Heidelberg University, to the effect that a codification of the laws and customs of the various German states be undertaken in a coherent arrangement, on the bas ...
1 “The Rule of Law in British Colonial Societies in the 19th Century
... Interpretations of liberty and the rule of law within the Anglo-American world in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries also need to take account of a tension between law as a centralized system of decision-making, and law as a product of local and particular custom. Jack Greene notes that a ...
... Interpretations of liberty and the rule of law within the Anglo-American world in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries also need to take account of a tension between law as a centralized system of decision-making, and law as a product of local and particular custom. Jack Greene notes that a ...
Legal Positivism
... Discretion Thesis, but the other basic tenets of positivism as well – such is the nature of the relations among them. Here is how the remainder of the edifice crumbles. If the moral principles to which judges appeal in hard cases are even sometimes law, then it cannot be true that all laws are rules ...
... Discretion Thesis, but the other basic tenets of positivism as well – such is the nature of the relations among them. Here is how the remainder of the edifice crumbles. If the moral principles to which judges appeal in hard cases are even sometimes law, then it cannot be true that all laws are rules ...
Accepted version - Queen Mary University of London
... the same place and time, with the possibility of a diversity of determinants of their relative authority. ...
... the same place and time, with the possibility of a diversity of determinants of their relative authority. ...
Tracing the Performance of Law in Indonesia (A Perspective of
... There are many terms that can be given to the law, and until now there is no agreement that is acceptable to all parties because each side has a perspective or a different view. At least there are three wellknown legal concepts that can be used to study the law, namely:6 1. Law as ideas, moral value ...
... There are many terms that can be given to the law, and until now there is no agreement that is acceptable to all parties because each side has a perspective or a different view. At least there are three wellknown legal concepts that can be used to study the law, namely:6 1. Law as ideas, moral value ...
In employing the term “rights to do wrong,” I mean
... few will ever invoke them? If that is so, does this make us hypocrites? If we dismiss these questions, we succumb to mystification in defending treasured rights entirely in terms of the high moral principles they enshrine. For these rights rest at least equally on our tacit sociological assumptions ...
... few will ever invoke them? If that is so, does this make us hypocrites? If we dismiss these questions, we succumb to mystification in defending treasured rights entirely in terms of the high moral principles they enshrine. For these rights rest at least equally on our tacit sociological assumptions ...
Peking University – May 7th, 2013 Aquinas on Natural Law Riccardo
... understand and establish. In this sense, Aquinas notes, natural law cannot be a habit, i.e. a disposition acquired by human being, simply because it is established by human reason. Moreover, natural law is not the cause of our action as humans: it is something that we do, a product of reason which c ...
... understand and establish. In this sense, Aquinas notes, natural law cannot be a habit, i.e. a disposition acquired by human being, simply because it is established by human reason. Moreover, natural law is not the cause of our action as humans: it is something that we do, a product of reason which c ...