Results 191 to 200 of about 51,145 (238)
Independence and Accountability of Regulatory Agencies in Turkey [PDF]
Gul Sosay, Unal Zenginobuz
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Requirements of the Istanbul Convention in Domestic Criminal Law and Court Practice
Balkan Yearbook of European and International Law, 2022This paper analyses harmonization of the criminal law of the Republic of Serbia with the requirements of the Council of Europe on prevention and combating of violence against women and domestic violence—The Istanbul Convention—ten years after the Republic of Serbia signed it. The focus is on newly introduced criminal offenses (female genital mutilation,
Slađana Jovanović, Nikola Vujičić
exaly +4 more sources
The Istanbul Convention and the Latvian Constitutional Court
Osteuropa-recht, 2022The signing of the Istanbul Convention by Latvia in 2016 induced a widespread debate on both political and academic levels. Today, Latvia remains one of the six EU Member States that have not yet ratified the Istanbul Convention. This article focuses on the recent judgment of the Constitutional Court of Latvia concerning the compatibility of the ...
exaly +2 more sources
Istanbul Yenikoy Court Cash Waqfi Records (1591-1883)
2021Cash waqfs studies are usually considered in the context of a particular social community such as foundation, period, region or avariz-artisan funds and evaluated within their own limits. This study addresses all the types of waqfs listed under the umbrella of the Court, greatly expanding the scope of these limitations.
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The Hamidian Era through a Jewish Lens: A Study of the Rabbinical Court Records of Istanbul
Diaspora, 2015exaly +2 more sources
International Journal of Economic Policy in Emerging Economies, 2017
This paper which is based on court orders of Ottoman Judiciary (between 17th and 18th centuries), aims to discuss that regulation almost has 300 years past in Turkey's economic history. It is realised that Ottoman courts' verdicts and today's regulation authority orders have some similarities though they had not given under similar circumstances. These
Onur Uçar, Ahmet Burçin Yereli
openaire +1 more source
This paper which is based on court orders of Ottoman Judiciary (between 17th and 18th centuries), aims to discuss that regulation almost has 300 years past in Turkey's economic history. It is realised that Ottoman courts' verdicts and today's regulation authority orders have some similarities though they had not given under similar circumstances. These
Onur Uçar, Ahmet Burçin Yereli
openaire +1 more source

