Spelling suggestions: "subject:"law - interpretation anda construction"" "subject:"law - interpretation ando construction""
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Four scholars on the authoritativeness of Sunnī juridical QiyāsHaram, Nissreen January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Abū Ḥanīfah's concept of Qiyās (analogy)Yūsuf, Riḍwān Arẹmu. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Al-Ṭūfī's concept of Maṣlaḥah : a study in Islamic legal theoryLubis, Nazly Hanum January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Contending interpretations of the rule of law in South AfricaSwart, Charl 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The following study examines whether there are contending interpretations of the rule of law
present within the South African democracy. The study proposes that the rule of law forms
part of the societal understanding of democracy and everyday life. Rule of law is defined in
terms of mental models which influence how stakeholders conceive and define institutions.
Rule of law is more than a mere institutional guarantee or set of rules — rule of law is
understood as a component of a specific culture of understanding. It is shown that
conceptions of rule of law have a long history in western society and have been influenced by
both liberal and social ideals. Contemporary conceptions of the rule of law are tightly bound
with specific notions of liberal democracy.
It is hypothesised that there are distinctly identifiable opinions, beliefs and views of the rule
of law present in South African democracy, and that these can be systematically described at
the hand of a conceptual typology. The conceptual typology developed, identifies two
contending interpretations of the rule of law, namely liberal and social rule of law. Liberal
rule of law emphasises the status of the individual, moral plurality and the creation and
maintenance of a rule-based society of the future. In contrast, social rule of law places
emphasis on the status of the community, a single communally defined conception of the
moral good and places greater emphasis on righting past injustices.
Other publications that address the themes of democracy and the rule of law in South Africa
are also examined in order to determine whether there is congruence between the conceptual
typology developed in this study and other works. It is found that the conceptual typology is
congruent with other works that depict the African National Congress’s conception of
democracy, equality and liberty. These congruencies validate and strengthen the conceptual
typology developed in this study.
The conceptual typology is subsequently applied to a specific court case, the AfriForum v
Malema hate speech case. The conceptual typology is found to be sufficiently accurate in
analysing contending beliefs associated with the rule of law as expressed in this court case
and identifies the African National Congress’s conception of the rule of law as falling under
the social rule of law and AfriForum’s conception as aligning to the liberal rule of law. It is concluded that the conceptual typology can be empirically validated at the hand of the
selected case. The conceptual typology is therefore validated with other works (conceptually)
and with a specific case (empirically). It is concluded that the conceptual typology provides a
clear, robust, concise and comprehensive analytical description of values and beliefs
associated with the rule of law in South Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie ondersoek of daar uiteenlopende en teenstrydige interpretasies oor die
oppergesag van die reg teenwoordig is binne die Suid Afrikaanse demokrasie. Die studie stel
voor dat die oppergesag van die reg deel uitmaak van die wyse waarop alledaagse
samelewingsinteraskies, asook demokrasie, verstaan word. Die oppergesag van die reg word
gedefinieer in terme van kognitiewe modelle, wat die belanghebbende partye se konsepsie
van hierdie instelling beïnvloed. Die oppergesag van die reg word dus as element van
spesifieke kulturele begrip vertolk en meer as institusionele element, wat die behoud van
reëls waarborg, beskou. Dit word gewys dat konsepsies van die oppergesag van die reg
lang geskiedenis in westerse samelewing het en dat dit deur liberale en sosiale ideale
beïnvloed is. Kontemporêre konsepsies van die oppergesag van die reg het noue bande met
die liberale demokrasie.
Die hipotese is dat daar afsonderlik identifiseerbare opinies, oortuigings en sieninge van die
oppergesag van die reg teenwoordig is in die Suid Afrikaanse demokrasie, en dat hierdie
opinies sistematies aan die hand van konseptuele tipologie beskryf kan word. Die
konseptuele tipologie wat ontwikkel word in hierdie studie identifiseer twee konsepsies van
die oppergesag van die reg, naamlik die liberale- en die sosiale oppergesag van die reg.
Liberale oppergesag van die reg plaas klem op die status van die individu, morele pluraliteit
en die skep en handhawing van reëlsgebaseerde toekomsgerigte samelewing. Hierteenoor
word die sosiale oppergesag van die reg gekontrasteer wat klem plaas op die status van
gemeenskap of groep, enkele kommunale gedefinieerde konsepsie van die morele doelwit
voortsit terwyl die klem geplaas word op die regstelling van ongeregtighede van die verlede.
Ander publikasies wat die temas van demokrasie en oppergesag van die reg in Suid Afrika
aanspreek, word ook bestudeer om sodoende ooreenkomste tussen die konseptuele tipologie
wat hier ontwikkel word, en die bestaande literatuur vas te stel. Daar word gevind dat die
konseptuele tipologie wel ooreenkomste met ander werke, wat die African National Congress
se konsepsies van demokrasie, gelykheid en vryheid bestudeer, vind. Die ooreenkomste
valideer en versterk die konseptuele tipologie.
Die konseptuele tipologie word ook toegepas op spesifieke hofsaak, naamlik die AfriForum
v Malema haatspraaksaak. Daar word gevind dat die konseptuele tipologie wel akkurate analise van teenstrydige opinies, wat geassosieer word met die oppergesag van die reg,
moontlik maak. Die African National Congress se konsepsie word in die kategorie van die
sosiale oppergesag van die reg geplaas terwyl AfriForum se siening in die kategorie van die
liberale oppergesag van die reg geplaas word.
Dit word bevind dat die konseptuele tipologie voldoen aan empiriese validasie aan die hand
van geselekteerde saak. Die konseptuele tipologie word daarvolgens gevalideer met ander
werke (konseptueel), asook met spesifieke gevallestudie (empiries). Daar word tot die
gevolgtrekking gekom dat die konseptuele tipologie duidelike, robuuste, bondige en
omvattende analitiese beskrywing van die waardes en oortuigings, wat geassosieer word met
die oppergesag van reg in Suid Afrika, beskryf.
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"法案" 還是 "議案"? :從澳門特別行政區基本法中葡文版本差異看澳門立法議員的立法提案權 = "Bill" or "motion"? : a study of the proposal rights of the Legislative Council of the Macao Special Administrative Region, based on the difference between the Chinese and the Portuguese version of Macao Basic Law / "Bill" or "motion"? : a study of the proposal rights of the Legislative Council of the Macao Special Administrative Region, based on the difference between the Chinese and the Portuguese version of Macao Basic Law;Study of the proposal rights of the Legislative Council of the Macao Special Administrative Region, based on the difference between the Chinese and the Portuguese version of Macao Basic Law;Bill or motion?胡楷琦 January 2018 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law
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The logos of land: economic and proprietarian conceptions of statutory access rightsGrattan, Donald Scott, Law, Faculty of Law, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Legislation in various jurisdictions alters the common law right to control access to one???s land by allowing the imposition of rights of access in favour of one landowner over the land of another. The relevant legislation can be divided into two categories. The first-generation legislation (s 88K, Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) and s 180, Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)) permits the creation of easements over servient land to facilitate the development of dominant land. The second-generation legislation (the Access to Neighbouring Land Act of New South Wales, Tasmania and the United Kingdom) permits the creation of temporary rights of access over servient land to facilitate work on dominant land. This thesis examines the extent to which this change in the law can be justified by three modes of ethical discourse: right-based, duty-based, and goal-based reasoning. An examination of the first-generation legislation and the cases in which it has been applied suggests that a form of goal-based reasoning can be used to justify its enactment. The legislation is needed to facilitate the efficient use of land where the existence of a bilateral monopoly and the possibility of strategic bargaining puts at risk the conclusion of a mutually beneficial agreement regarding access. A review of the second-generation legislation and the law reform reports and parliamentary debate that preceded its enactment indicates that the legislation can be justified by a form of duty-based reasoning. The legislation is needed to bring about a proper social ordering by imposing access rights where this would be consistent with the ideal of good neighbourliness. The thesis concludes that although these goal-based and duty-based discourses make an arguable case for the enactment of both generations of the legislation, neither of them, in an unadulterated form, provides a conclusive justification. Rather, an eclectic approach that draws on both discourses is required. It proposes that the legislation???s compensation provisions be amended to reflect the commingling of the ideas of efficiency, a properly ordered society and intensive land use, and to allow the servient owner to share in the benefits generated by the imposition of access.
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Medieval and modern halakhic attitudes on the applicability of Biblical rabbinic law concerning the Seven Nations and the ancient pagans to contemporary non-Jews : a study in Halakhah, exegesis and history / Yishum shel ha-mishpat ha-Miḳraʹi-Talmudi be-ḳesher la-yeḥasim ben Yiśraʾel u-ven umot - ha ʻolam be-fesiḳah ha-rabanit le-man ha-meʾah ha-shemoneh eśreh ṿe-elekhCharlap, Yaakov January 1988 (has links)
This thesis focuses on two issues among the many comprising the broad subject of the relationship between Jews and non-Jews according to Jewish law. The issues are: (1) the prohibition against selling real estate in the land of Israel to non-Jews; and (2) the prohibition against intermarriage. / The prohibition against selling real estate in the land of Israel to non-Jews is based upon a Rabbinic interpretation of the phrase "lo Tehanem" from Deut. 7:2. In the period of the "Rishonim" (from Maimonides till Radbaz) the general view was that this prohibition was still in force and applied to contemporary non-Jews. From the beginning of the modern era, however, this prohibition, as a result of the new reality facing the struggling Jewish settlement in the land of Israel, became problematic. / The prohibition against intermarriage underwent a reverse development. During the Talmudic period most of the Rabbis, guided by the context of the Biblical text, argued that the Biblical prohibition only concerned the "Seven Nations" who used to live in Canaan at the time of the conquest and the settlement. But at the beginning of the modern era a rabbinic consensus gradually emerged that this Biblical prohibition related not only to the "Seven Nations" or "Ancient Pagans", but to all non-Jews at all times. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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The logos of land: economic and proprietarian conceptions of statutory access rightsGrattan, Donald Scott, Law, Faculty of Law, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Legislation in various jurisdictions alters the common law right to control access to one???s land by allowing the imposition of rights of access in favour of one landowner over the land of another. The relevant legislation can be divided into two categories. The first-generation legislation (s 88K, Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) and s 180, Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)) permits the creation of easements over servient land to facilitate the development of dominant land. The second-generation legislation (the Access to Neighbouring Land Act of New South Wales, Tasmania and the United Kingdom) permits the creation of temporary rights of access over servient land to facilitate work on dominant land. This thesis examines the extent to which this change in the law can be justified by three modes of ethical discourse: right-based, duty-based, and goal-based reasoning. An examination of the first-generation legislation and the cases in which it has been applied suggests that a form of goal-based reasoning can be used to justify its enactment. The legislation is needed to facilitate the efficient use of land where the existence of a bilateral monopoly and the possibility of strategic bargaining puts at risk the conclusion of a mutually beneficial agreement regarding access. A review of the second-generation legislation and the law reform reports and parliamentary debate that preceded its enactment indicates that the legislation can be justified by a form of duty-based reasoning. The legislation is needed to bring about a proper social ordering by imposing access rights where this would be consistent with the ideal of good neighbourliness. The thesis concludes that although these goal-based and duty-based discourses make an arguable case for the enactment of both generations of the legislation, neither of them, in an unadulterated form, provides a conclusive justification. Rather, an eclectic approach that draws on both discourses is required. It proposes that the legislation???s compensation provisions be amended to reflect the commingling of the ideas of efficiency, a properly ordered society and intensive land use, and to allow the servient owner to share in the benefits generated by the imposition of access.
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The logos of land: economic and proprietarian conceptions of statutory access rightsGrattan, Donald Scott, Law, Faculty of Law, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Legislation in various jurisdictions alters the common law right to control access to one???s land by allowing the imposition of rights of access in favour of one landowner over the land of another. The relevant legislation can be divided into two categories. The first-generation legislation (s 88K, Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) and s 180, Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)) permits the creation of easements over servient land to facilitate the development of dominant land. The second-generation legislation (the Access to Neighbouring Land Act of New South Wales, Tasmania and the United Kingdom) permits the creation of temporary rights of access over servient land to facilitate work on dominant land. This thesis examines the extent to which this change in the law can be justified by three modes of ethical discourse: right-based, duty-based, and goal-based reasoning. An examination of the first-generation legislation and the cases in which it has been applied suggests that a form of goal-based reasoning can be used to justify its enactment. The legislation is needed to facilitate the efficient use of land where the existence of a bilateral monopoly and the possibility of strategic bargaining puts at risk the conclusion of a mutually beneficial agreement regarding access. A review of the second-generation legislation and the law reform reports and parliamentary debate that preceded its enactment indicates that the legislation can be justified by a form of duty-based reasoning. The legislation is needed to bring about a proper social ordering by imposing access rights where this would be consistent with the ideal of good neighbourliness. The thesis concludes that although these goal-based and duty-based discourses make an arguable case for the enactment of both generations of the legislation, neither of them, in an unadulterated form, provides a conclusive justification. Rather, an eclectic approach that draws on both discourses is required. It proposes that the legislation???s compensation provisions be amended to reflect the commingling of the ideas of efficiency, a properly ordered society and intensive land use, and to allow the servient owner to share in the benefits generated by the imposition of access.
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The logos of land: economic and proprietarian conceptions of statutory access rightsGrattan, Donald Scott, Law, Faculty of Law, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
Legislation in various jurisdictions alters the common law right to control access to one???s land by allowing the imposition of rights of access in favour of one landowner over the land of another. The relevant legislation can be divided into two categories. The first-generation legislation (s 88K, Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) and s 180, Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)) permits the creation of easements over servient land to facilitate the development of dominant land. The second-generation legislation (the Access to Neighbouring Land Act of New South Wales, Tasmania and the United Kingdom) permits the creation of temporary rights of access over servient land to facilitate work on dominant land. This thesis examines the extent to which this change in the law can be justified by three modes of ethical discourse: right-based, duty-based, and goal-based reasoning. An examination of the first-generation legislation and the cases in which it has been applied suggests that a form of goal-based reasoning can be used to justify its enactment. The legislation is needed to facilitate the efficient use of land where the existence of a bilateral monopoly and the possibility of strategic bargaining puts at risk the conclusion of a mutually beneficial agreement regarding access. A review of the second-generation legislation and the law reform reports and parliamentary debate that preceded its enactment indicates that the legislation can be justified by a form of duty-based reasoning. The legislation is needed to bring about a proper social ordering by imposing access rights where this would be consistent with the ideal of good neighbourliness. The thesis concludes that although these goal-based and duty-based discourses make an arguable case for the enactment of both generations of the legislation, neither of them, in an unadulterated form, provides a conclusive justification. Rather, an eclectic approach that draws on both discourses is required. It proposes that the legislation???s compensation provisions be amended to reflect the commingling of the ideas of efficiency, a properly ordered society and intensive land use, and to allow the servient owner to share in the benefits generated by the imposition of access.
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