Spelling suggestions: "subject:"[een] JUDGES"" "subject:"[enn] JUDGES""
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Leipziger gelehrte Schöffenspruchsammlung : ein Beitrag zur Rezeptionsgeschichte in Kursachsen im 16. Jh. /Pätzold, Julia. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Leipzig, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 1067-1078) and index.
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Politischer Druck und richterliche Argumentation : eine rechtsrhetorische Analyse von Entscheidungen des Bundesverfassungsgerichts /Solbach, Markus. January 2003 (has links)
Zugl.: Hagen, FernUniversiẗat, Diss., 2001.
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The Relationship of a Performer’s Visual Communication to Evaluations of Music Performance Quality by Expert and Novice JudgesGailliard, Kristin Michelle 28 March 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Double Agents: An Exploration of the Motivations of Court of Appeals JudgesScott, Kevin Matthew 20 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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From the bar to the bench: judicial recruitment in OhioPeterson, Julie Anne Seeds 12 October 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Fungible Justice: The Use of Visiting Judges in the United States Courts of AppealsBudziak, Jeffrey 26 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Essays in Public Economics and the Economics of CrimeWright, Taylor 23 September 2022 (has links)
Using the universe of individual asylum cases in the United States from 2000–2004
and a difference-in-differences research design, we test whether Sept. 11, 2001 decreased the likelihood that applicants from Muslim-majority countries were granted
asylum. Our estimates suggest that the attacks resulted in a 3.2 percentage point decrease in the likelihood that applicants from Muslim-majority countries are granted
asylum. The estimated effect is larger for applicants who share a country of origin
with the Sept. 11, 2001 attackers. These effects do not differ across judge political affiliation. Our findings provide evidence that emotions affect the decisions of judges.
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La dépossession des compétences des tribunaux religieux sous la Régence de Tunis (1574-1923) / The denial of the jurisdiction of religious courts of law under the Tunis Regency (1574-1923)Drissi, Sonia 02 July 2013 (has links)
Le phénomène de la dépossession ponctue l’histoire quand se succèdent et se disputent des régimes politiques et juridiques opposés. Le droit tunisien en est un exemple. Il s’agit de comprendre le processus de la dépossession des compétences des tribunaux charaïques (musulmans) et des tribunaux rabbiniques, dès l’occupation ottomane de la Tunisie en 1574, passant par le Protectorat français établi en 1881 et jusqu’à la fin de l’Empire ottoman en 1923. Cette dépossession, formelle (législative) et matérielle (jurisprudentielle), n’était pas le fait du Protectorat français. Elle était plutôt ottomane et remontait au XVIe siècle. Les juges tunisien et français étaient les acteurs principaux de la dépossession organique, mais le rôle du politique était fondamental (première partie). Au plan interne marqué par la confusion des pouvoirs, le hanafisme avait dépossédé le malékisme et le juge séculier et le pouvoir politique avaient dépossédé le religieux. À la veille du Protectorat, les compétences du juge religieux tunisien étaient limitées au statut personnel. Notre seconde partie démontrera comment le juge protectoral nouvellement institué en 1883 va continuer l’œuvre de la dépossession en la matière. Il mènera une dépossession jurisprudentielle et réussira à asseoir sa compétence à l’égard tant des Tunisiens « protégés » français ou européens que des Algériens vivant en Tunisie. D’une application pure et simple du droit religieux, le juge protectoral mènera progressivement la Tunisie vers la laïcisation déjà commencée par les beys réformateurs au début du XIXe siècle et complétera le paysage juridique tunisien, dont l’importance pour la Tunisie actuelle n’est pas minime. / To deny the jurisdiction of a court of law is an oft-repeated occurrence wherever political and legal regimes dispute against one another. Tunisian law is not exempt from such occurrences. It matters therefore an understanding of what entails and produces ouster-rules and namely those resulting in the denial of jurisdiction with regard to both Islamic-law-based courts as well as rabbinic-law-based ones, which goes back from the Ottoman occupation of Tunisia since 1574, whilst it underwent the French Protectorate established in 1881 until the demise of the Ottoman Empire in 1923. Ouster-rules, which can be either formal (legislative) or substantive (decisional-based), were not the produce of the French Protectorate. They are rather of Ottoman makings and date as from the XVIth century. From an internal approach, marked by the confusion of powers, Hanafi doctrines had already expelled Malikite ones, and secular judges, endorsed by the current political power, had religious laws ground down. On the eve of the Protectorate, the jurisdiction of Tunisian religious judges was boiled down to hearing only Personal Status matters. It is worth emphasising, in the course of this analysis, how “Protectoral Judges”, appointed in 1883, would but only uphold jurisdictional pleas and bring Tunisia progressively towards full « laicisation » which was triggered initially by the Reformatory Beys at the beginning of the XIX century and thus carving out the last distinctive feature of the Tunisian legal panorama, which continues to influence contemporary Tunisia.
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Septuagint lexicography and language change in Greek 'Judges'Ross, William Alexander January 2019 (has links)
This dissertation identifies and addresses key issues in Septuagint lexicography using case studies from the Greek version of Judges. The first chapter outlines the state of the question on the textual history of Judges in Hebrew and Greek, and also presents my lexicographical method and related matters. Chapter two surveys the history of Septuagint lexicography. I demonstrate how data about the meaning of Septuagint vocabulary has been insufficiently or in appropriately derived, expressed, and/or documented. I also highlight debates over the nature of post-classical Greek and the language of the Septuagint, which has predisposed scholars against viewing the Septuagint corpus as part of post-classical Greek in general. By pointing out methodological flaws that have plagued Septuagint lexicography-as well as theoretical problems in a Hebrew-priority view of the language-I argue for a Greek-priority view that evaluates Septuagint vocabulary in light of contemporary sources and emphasizes the importance of documentary evidence. The following chapters provide case studies from Greek Judges that demonstrate the benefits of a Greek-priority view. Many cases of consistent vocabulary disagreement in the textual history of the book cannot be explained on the basis of the Hebrew text nor given the data available in current lexicons. Examination of post-classical Greek evidence demonstrates that the motivation for the language change is multifaceted, but clearly includes matters of style and semantics in Greek independent from the source text. Chapter three focuses on παρατάσσω and παράταξις; chapter four on παιδάριον, παιδίον, νεανίας, and νεάνισκος; and chapter five on ἀπάντησις and συνάντησις. Each chapter concludes by discussing the relevance of the evidence for Septuagint lexicography, the motivation underlying the revision of Greek Judges, and the potential of Septuagint vocabulary to inform Greek lexicography in general. Chapter six summarizes my lexical analysis and discusses the benefits of a Greek-priority approach and its value for Septuagint lexicography. I posit a time-frame for the translation and revision of Greek Judges based on linguistic evidence. I conclude by emphasizing the need for renewed efforts in Septuagint lexicography to incorporate literary and nonliterary post-classical Greek sources. To address this need, I provide several sample lexicon entries for words discussed in the preceding study.
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Judicial Campaigns and Expensive Litigation; The Evolution of the Civil Justice SystemThomlison, Riley 01 January 2012 (has links)
The partisan election of state judges and costly litigation make the civil justice system in the United States vulnerable because they undermine the values upon which the system was founded. The public’s trust that courts administer justice fairly and impartially is questioned by partisan elections funded by large corporations. Moreover, with the advent of electronically stored information, and the market’s control over the price of legal resources, access to the civil justice system is limited by wealth. This thesis seeks to address these problems and analyze the solutions that are most effective and comprehensive.
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