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Customary law, the Crown and the common law : ancient legal islands in the post-colonial streamPesklevits, Richard Dale 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a cross-disciplinary study of legal history and customary law. Respect for, and
accommodation of local customary law has been a constant and integral feature of law in
Britain since Anglo-Saxon times. It guided the emergence of the common law, and
continues as a rule of law to the present day. Such respect and accommodation was an
essential principle that permitted the peaceful consolidation of the British realms from its
constituent parts. Continuity of law is a legal presumption whether territories have been
added by conquest, cession or annexation. The principle respect for local legal custom was
one of two schools of thought carried to Britain's overseas colonies; the other was a theory
that local customary law could be extinguished by non-recognition on the part of the British
sovereign or his/her delegates. Nevertheless, customary laws and institutions were explicitly
and implicitly recognized in the colonial period. The doctrine has modern application with
respect to the customary law ways of indigenous peoples wherever the common law has
been extended overseas. Rights under customary law are distinguished from Aboriginal
rights, though there is some overlap between the two. Customary law can only be
extinguished by an express statute, or by clearly unavoidable implication. Legal customs are
not invalid merely for being contrary to the common law. Common law defers to valid
customary law as a matter of constitutional common law. But the common law provides
tests by which courts can identify valid legal custom. Where a valid, unextinguished legal
custom is found, courts are bound by the common law to apply it. Where customary law can
be identified, it binds the servants and agents of the Crown, except when it is inconsistent
with Crown sovereignty itself.
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Les transferts de droit en Chine : contribution à l'étude de la filiation romano-germanique en droit chinois contemporainPiquet, Hélène Anne F. January 2003 (has links)
The topic of this thesis is legal transplants in China since 1978. The first part is devoted to a presentation of contextual elements of Chinese Law, with a critical discussion of various theories of legal transplants, including the most recent Chinese scholarship on this topic. The second part contrasts the influence, on the Chinese legal reforms, of the continental (or civilian) legal tradition with that of the common law. To this end, the author uses a study of the reception of the bona fide principle and of the fairness principle in The Contract Law of the People's Republic of China, with a discussion of the future Chinese Civil Code. The common law's influence, in the same law, is then presented with a focus on the doctrines of anticipatory breach and indirect agency. In the end, the author explains why the civilian legal tradition will remain the dominant, but not exclusive, model on Chinese legal reforms.
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The administration of justice : an exegesis of Max Weber's 'sociology of law' with a focus on the English law and judgeSahni, Isher-Paul January 2004 (has links)
This study examines two interconnected and as yet wholly neglected aspects of Max Weber's 'Sociology of Law,' namely, its substantive underpinnings and focal concern with the status of the judge. At the heart of the 'Sociology of Law' is a comparative analysis of the Continental and the English administrations of justice, which can best be understood when read against his substantive sociology and which requires an assiduous reading of the 'Sociology of Law.' Thus the first part of this examination elucidates Weber's overarching concern with the effects of bureaucratization on the development of personality. The second part provides a detailed explication of the 'Sociology of Law' which privileges his treatment of the Common Law and distinguishes the juristic and sociological strands of his analysis, re-examines his notion of formal and substantive rationality, pays close attention to his assessment of the Free Law Movement, and accords due place to his discussion of the anti-formalistic tendencies in modern law. Taken together, these expose the contradictions and assumptions which frame his tendentious analysis and bring to light the vital role he ascribes to the judge.
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Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via Section 23 of the ConstitutionBeck, Gregory Wayne January 2010 (has links)
<p>The purpose of this thesis is to broadly determine the influence of the Constitution on the South African labour environment and to do so from the perspective of the labour rights of workers who fall outside the ambit of the traditional common law contract of employment. An examination of the Constitution&rsquo / s influence will involve a consideration of various aspects including: (i) The evolution of the concept of employee and the contract of employment / (ii) The impact of the Constitution on South African labour relations and labour laws / (iii) The purposive interpretation of legislation / (iv) An outline of the &lsquo / Kylie&rsquo / CCMA ruling and Labour Court judgment / (v) The current legal position of prostitution in South Africa / (vi) The requirements for a meaningful transformation in the legal treatment of sex workers particularly as regards their entitlement to the protections afforded to vulnerable workers provided in the LRA.</p>
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The doctrine of forum non conveniens and its suitability within the application of the Brussels I instrumentsMarkgren, Karolina January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Obscenity in Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary and James Joyce's Ulysses: A Postmodern Literary, Legal, and Cultural AnalysisKweon, Christie 01 January 2015 (has links)
In this paper. I attempt to prove that obscenity as a legal concept is actually a moral judgment made by patriarchal powers and a political tool used to police female sexuality. I analyze James Joyce’s Ulysses as a case study, using Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary as a precedent. While I believe that literature can transfer and inspire ideas, I don’t believe that transferring or inspiring perversity was the intent or effect of these novels. I argue not only that the trials’ prosecutions incorrectly claim that the novels sexually arouse the average or reasonable reader, but also that they do the opposite, or fail to meet expectations to do so. In the case of Madame Bovary, I further argue that the defense incorrectly claims that the novel has and enforces a set of morals, as the novel neither punishes nor lauds its protagonist, or any of its characters for the matter.
These so-called obscene novels don’t convert the everyman into a pervert. However, Ulysses and Madame Bovary do reflect and thus reveal a reality that is inconsistent with the censors’ imagined utopia: the characters in the novels’ world as well as the readers in the real word are all sexual beings, women included. I argue that censors banned novels such as Ulysses and Madame Bovary because they wished to police female sexuality under the guise of protecting the public from obscenity. Specifically, they prevented the publishing and distribution of these and other Modernist texts in an attempt to erase realistic representations of female sexuality, thus illegitimating it. Nevertheless, the perseverance of these texts proves that moral values, particularly those regarding sexuality, cannot be enforced by the law (and neither should they be).
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Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitutionBeck, Gregory Wayne January 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to broadly determine the influence of the Constitution on the South African labour environment and to do so from the perspective of the labour rights of workers who fall outside the ambit of the traditional common law contract of employment. An examination of the Constitution’s influence will involve a consideration of various aspects including: (i) The evolution of the concept of employee and the contract of employment; (ii) The impact of the Constitution on South African labour relations and labour laws; (iii) The purposive interpretation of legislation; (iv) An outline of the 'Kylie' CCMA ruling and Labour Court judgment; (v) The current legal position of prostitution in South Africa; (vi) The requirements for a meaningful transformation in the legal treatment of sex workers particularly as regards their entitlement to the protections afforded to vulnerable workers provided in the LRA. / Magister Philosophiae - MPhil
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An analysis of the South African Revenue Services' recognition of unmarried partners as spouses.Galt, Harold H. January 2002 (has links)
The focus of this study is on the criteria and processes used by the South African
Revenue Services (SARS) in recognising spouses in permanent, unmarried
unions. In theoretically positioning this focus, four possible areas of tax benefits
were reviewed . These include: (i) donations tax, (ii) capital gains tax, (iii) estate
duty tax and (iv) transfer duty. Also , the focus of this study was positioned
relative to South African taxation acts. Specifically, three Acts were selected for
review, viz.: (i) the Income Tax Act, No. 58 of 1962, the Estate Duty Act, No. 45
of 1955, and the Transfer Duty Act, No. 40 of 1949. These Acts may be
understood relative to the South African Constitution's framing of notions like
equality - given that these Acts signal the legislation's intention to honour the
constitutional rights of its tax-paying citizenry. Furthermore, a theoretical
framework that highlights official and espoused perspectives of practice is
reviewed as it provides a theoretical frame for this study. Given this legislative
and theoretical background the following aims were focussed: (1) To identify the
official and espoused criteria used by the South African Revenue Services to
recognise unmarried partners as spouses, and (2) To identify the official and
espoused processes used b~ the South African Revenue Services to recognise
unmarried partners as spouses. The chosen methodology is an explorative descriptive
methodology, as situated within a qualitative framework. Data
sources are described as constituting the three tax Acts, a senior SARS official,
and SARS helpdesk personnel. Data selection criteria are described , and
convenience and purposive sampling are the stated data selection techniques.
Document analysis and interview schedules were used to collect data. Data was
managed and analysed via the use of several data analysis techniques. Results
are presented and discussed. Significantly, SARS has non-specific criteria that
are nebulous, and open to interpretation. Furthermore, processes are poorly
stated and provide insufficient guidance to the taxpayer. Given these outcomes,
this study also offers two South African legal cases that cogently illustrate criteria
and processes for recognising a spouse. Each of these cases are analysed
regarding the criteria and processes used to determine the definition of 'spouse'.
These cases, while dealing with issues of same-sex adoption and same-sex
partner's rights to remuneration benefits serve to highlight factors that may be of
use to SARS. Furthermore, international case exemplars are also discussed.
Specifically, Canada's taxation laws were focussed. Canada's criteria and
processes used to define common-law partners (read as spouse for purposes of
this study) serves as an informative case exemplar, relative to other countries
also investigated in this study, viz .: the United States of America , Belgium and
other European countries. Finally, several recommendations are stated , and an
evaluation of the study is provided. / Thesis (M.A.)-- University of Durban-Westville, 2002
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Marching Toward Inefficiency: The Common Law Efficiency Hypothesis' Software ExceptionCoon, Eli 01 January 2014 (has links)
This thesis proposes an exception to the common law efficiency hypothesis. In many cases, common law moves toward efficient legal rules through an evolutionary process of litigation incentives. Software patent law has departed from this trend, due to an asymmetric and unopposed set of litigation incentives by parties in precedent setting decisions. This paper evaluates the history of software patent legal rules, using an economic model of litigation incentives. It concludes that software patent law has been driven toward inefficiency due to an asymmetric set of interests between patent filers and administrative agencies.
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'n Onderwysregtelike perspektief op die sorgsame toesighoudingsplig van die Suid-Afrikaanse opvoeder / Lodewikus Stephanus HerselmanHerselman, Lodewikus Stephanus January 2006 (has links)
According to legislation, common law and case law, South African educators have a
responsibility to ensure the safety of learners. Above all, God has placed children in
our care and it is our God-given duty to take care of them.
For educators to be able to perform this duty of care as it should be, they need to be
equipped with the necessary legal knowledge. However, the acquisition of this
knowledge remains the primary responsibility of each educator. Other educational
role-players also have some moral obligation and responsibility to assist educators in
attaining such knowledge.
As educators should acquaint themselves with the relevant legislation regarding duty
of care, such legislation should be accessible to all educators. Principals should
encourage educators to become acquainted with the content of the relevant
education laws.
All the determinants regarding duty of care ought to be general knowledge to
educators. Principles such as what torts comprise of, the requirements of delictual
accountability, reasonable foreseeability and preventability and the reasonable
educator test should be as well-known as subject didactical knowledge. Real-life
situations and case law should be used to ensure a clear understanding of these
principles. Tendencies in international law should also be communicated to
educators.
This study determined that educators do not have sound legal knowledge to meet
the minimum requirements set by legislation, common law and case law. Tertiary
institutions will have to compile training programs urgently so that education
departments, trade unions, governing bodies and principals can make it available to
educators, who, in turn can empower themselves with relevant, practical education
law knowledge. / Thesis (M.Ed.)--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2006.
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