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Change in international law as exemplified by the problematic of interventionÇali, Basak January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Medicina forenseHernández, J., Guillén, R., Peña, F., Rojas, C., Yonz, Y., Zavala, G. 02 July 2009 (has links)
Trabajo Final del Curso InfoCCSS 200901
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Legal writingO'Donovan, Katherine January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and the legality of its claims in international law and Islamic international lawAl-Hajri, Ali Bin Ghanim Ali Al-Shahwani January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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A genealogy of lawGalbraith, D. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Cohesion in the language of lawMbufong, Paul K. January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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The emergence and development of the Russian Advokatura, 1864-1905Pomeranz, William E. January 1990 (has links)
This dissertation examines the emergence and development of the Russian advokatura (legal profession) between 1864 and 1905. Unlike past historical works, which have concentrated on the activities of a few prominent defence attorneys in the major political trials, this dissertation focuses on the advokaturas development as an independent, self-governing, profession. Such an approach reveals that contrary to received wisdom, the advokatura's professional evolution was a long, arduous, complicated process, by no means complete at the time of its premature demise. The Russian advokatura traces its origins back to the Judicial Reforms of 1864; prior to that time, Russia's legal practitioners existed as an amorphous mass, where virtually every citizen had the right to act as an attorney. The Judicial Reforms created a new, western-style advocate - the sworn attorney and his assistant, the attorney-in-training - as well as a new, autonomous institution - the regional Bar Council - which was to supervise the professional activities of a given region's sworn attorneys. Yet as this dissertation shows, the Judicial Reforms did more than simply introduce a modern advokatura to Russia; these reforms also represented a critical experiment with Russia's existing social structure, an unprecedented, largely unpremeditated attempt by the autocracy to take the western image of a 'liberal' profession and somehow adapt it to Russia's existing hierarchical soslovie (estate) system. For political and social reasons, however, the advokatura quickly proved incongruous with Russia's traditional soslovie order; as a result, the autocracy introduced a series of counter-reforms in 1874 which sharply restricted the professional development of the sworn attorneys and attempted to transform the existing advokatura into a more conventional soslovie. At approximately the same time, the autocracy created yet another branch of the Russian legal profession - the private attorneys. Therefore, during the course of its lifetime, the Russian advokatura consisted of multiple sections - sworn attorneys, private attorneys, attorneys-in-training - plus the descendants of the pre-reform legal practitioners, commonly known after 1864 as underground advocates. Each of the above subdivisions will be examined in this dissertation in order to gain a greater appreciation of the advokatura's overall professional development as well as the numerous obstacles that were placed in its path. At the same time, this dissertation will also examine the advokatura's impact on Russia's emerging legal culture as well as its attempts to gain more political influence. Such an analysis reveals that despite some significant gains, Russia's entire legal system - not just the advokatura - was seriously undermined and devalued by its incompatibility with the political and social order, constructed by the autocracy.
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Early Islamic history as a model for the development of some legal categoriesFaruqi, M. Y. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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The diversity and evolution of competition : an ideal proposed for regulatory designIlg, Michael Peter 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation presents a concept of diversity as an ideal of international
economic regulation. The theme of diversity refers to the differentiation of individual
competitive strategies. The first advantage of such differentiation is argued to be as a
means of stable and adaptive progress; increasing the number of possible techniques with
which to meet as yet unforeseen challenges. As the first principle of diversity entails a
method for systemic responsiveness, the second principle gives content to this method
and states that social goals should serve as the incentives encouraging competitors toward
differentiation. The advantage offered by the second principle is that social non-economic
goals may be advanced in the present, as individuals attempt new routes to personal
reward via the satisfaction of collective objectives that previously may have had little or
no economic value.
As an ideal of diversity contemplates a method of systemic incentives, rather than
mandated outcomes, the location of innovation remains individual competitors.
Accordingly, the ideal of diversity is justified and articulated from a basis in individual
rights. Diversity is argued to be the optimal set of principles which individuals would
select if given the ability to design a new competitive system. In joining a method of
differentiation with the added social content of non-economic priority, diversity offers a
unique blend of economic efficiency and equity; or of self-interest and concern for the
welfare of others. Diversity allows an individual to think of their own pursuit of gain, but
also and simultaneously further collective goals by selecting the priorities that should
influence competitors toward differentiation. Other’s welfare becomes a route to
individual success.
The project progresses through three broad conceptual stages. First, international
problems of market failure are considered in light of strategies and the economic
impulses toward self and system defeating cycles of competition. Second, a redefinition
of legal and economic progress is offered to meet conditions of unpredictability, and to
arrive at an evolutionary method that encourages constantly competitive variation with
which to meet society’s future challenges. Third, an evolutionary approach to
international regulation is translated into a priority system of legal rights.
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The moral obligations of Catholic civil judgesDavis, John Denis, January 1953 (has links)
Thesis--Catholic University of America. / Vita. Includes bibliographical refereces (p. 205-216).
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