Spelling suggestions: "subject:"anited btates law"" "subject:"anited 2states law""
11 |
Factors affecting government sanction of the performing artsMiller, Mietzl January 1966 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this dissertation.
|
12 |
A regional analysis of Section 235, an attitudinal correlationEskew, William C. January 1971 (has links)
This thesis explored the various elements of the Section 235 program as designated by the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968. Section 235 is a means whereby low and moderate income families can purchase a new home with governmental aid. The purpose of the study was two-fold: First, to determine if the procurrers of the 235 program were adherring to the legal guidelines established by the Federal Government, and secondly, to objectively ascertain if there was a significant difference between 235 new homeowners residing in the city and those residents in the suburban areas.The subsequent survey analysis did prove that the procurrers of the program were following the legally established guidelines, and, that there was a significant difference between the city and suburban 235 residents.
|
13 |
Nutrition policy making in the United States Congress /Porter, Donna Viola January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
|
14 |
State Procedure and Union Rights : A Comparison of the European Union and the United StatesLindholm, Johan January 2007 (has links)
The overarching purpose of this doctoral thesis is to determine if the system of legal mechanisms in European Community law governing what procedural rules national courts shall apply to Community rights can be reformed to better balance involved interests. European Community law is often applied and enforced by ordinary national courts that, as a general rule, supplement substantive Community rules with national procedural rules. While the Community rights that individuals can rely upon before national courts are the same in all Member States, the procedural rules that national courts apply to those Community rights can and often does differ between the Member States. While this order is often acceptable, Community law contains a number of exceptions from the general rule that it is the Member States that decide what procedural rules national courts shall apply to Community rights. Such exceptions are primarily motivated by the need to ensure the effectiveness of Community. In order to determine what interests should be taken into account when deciding what procedural rules national courts shall apply to Community rights and how a more balanced system could be constructed, the European legal system is herein compared to that of the United States. American State courts apply Federal law much like national European courts apply European Community law and, also similar to Community law, a system of legal mechanism governing what procedural rules State courts shall apply to Federal rights has developed. While U.S. law and European Community law are in this respect similar, the two are not identical. A comparison between the two reveals that the European approach improperly overlooks several interests that are central in the American approach. Most importantly, the European approach emphasizes and promotes the effectiveness of union law at the expense of upholding a proper division of power between union and states. American law also provides European Community law with practical advices regarding how a better balanced approach can be constructed and points to solutions that should be avoided.
|
15 |
The impacts of the Federal Aid Highway Program on state and local highway expenditures.Sherman, Leonard January 1975 (has links)
Thesis. 1975. Ph.D.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Civil Engineering. / Vita. / Bibliography: leaves 383-389. / Ph.D.
|
16 |
Analysis of states gun control restrictions [electronic resource] / by Xiaofeng Cheng.Cheng, Xiaofeng. January 2002 (has links)
Includes vita. / Title from PDF of title page. / Document formatted into pages; contains 47 pages. / Thesis (M.A.)--University of South Florida, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references. / Text (Electronic thesis) in PDF format. / ABSTRACT: This thesis analyzes the policy effects of several state gun control restrictions in the United States. The study employs the data of gun related crimes and gun control restrictions from Statistical Abstract of Criminal Justice Handbook through five years (from 1995 to 2000). Although many scholars have studied previously gun control policy effects on crimes, they always focus on the total violence level and ignore to compare the policy effects of different gun control laws. The present study examines intensively gun related crimes and compares several gun control policies. Pooled data is employed to access the effects of gun control restrictions, and it is another advancement based on previous studies, which always use cross-sectional or time series designs. / ABSTRACT: These findings partially reject the previous conclusions that gun control laws have no effects on violence and for gun related homicides and robberies; several gun control restrictions like registration, license, and waiting period show some significant policy effects. Contrary to the past study, the permit to purchase, which has been regarded as the most efficient law, produces no significant policy effects. Sale report to police and certain firearm prohibited also have no significant effects. Among control variables, race and urban population exert the obvious influences on the gun violence, and specifically, the density of population affects the gun related homicides and high school graduates affects the gun related robberies. Implications of these findings and potential for future research are discussed. / System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader. / Mode of access: World Wide Web.
|
17 |
Systems within systems : free and open source software licences under German and United States lawDysart, Thomas January 2017 (has links)
Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) licences channel the exclusionary and individualising force of copyright to establish a qualitatively different, somewhat subversive, system for the exploitation of software. This thesis examines how it is that FOSS licences establish this 'system within a system' under both German and United States law. The inquiry begins with a detailed examination of FOSS licence templates as the instruments which transform code from its default position as the 'res' of proprietary relations to its status as 'open' or 'free'. The thesis then considers whether FOSS licence templates, as the legal basis for this subversive move, are valid and enforceable under domestic law. In addressing this question, the thesis undertakes a critical analysis of the leading case law in each jurisdiction. Going beyond the immediate case law, the thesis considers the broader systemic effects of FOSS licence enforcement. It highlights how building a system within a system foments certain tensions and contradictions within the law, in turn giving rise to unintended consequences and legal uncertainty. By highlighting these tensions, the thesis argues that the questions of FOSS licence enforcement in Germany and the United States may not be as settled as some may think.
|
18 |
Justification for a credit union to charter a bankEazell, Diane Patricia 01 January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0938 seconds