Results 221 to 230 of about 17,291 (293)
The Foreign Trade Regime in the Comecon Countries Today [PDF]
Grzybowski, Kazimierz
core +1 more source
Abstract Despite longstanding research on human rights and the environment, scholarship has only recently moved towards an explicit connection to the marine environment. At the same time, research on human rights and oceans focuses on people at sea, not environmental protection.
Laura Major, Elaine Webster
wiley +1 more source
The Evolution of "Causa" in the Contractual Obligations of the Civil Law [PDF]
University of Texas at Austin
core +1 more source
From Prohibition to Digitalisation: 100 Years of Cameras in the Courtroom
This article traces the shifting relationship between the courts, the public, and the media in England and Wales from the 1925 prohibition on courtroom photography to the contemporary regime of livestreamed and recorded proceedings. It situates the introduction of the ban on courtroom images within the first administrative turn of the judiciary, when ...
Ozan Kamiloglu, Kanika Sharma
wiley +1 more source
The UK Supreme Court's judgment in In the matter of an application by JR87 and another for Judicial Review, that religious education in Northern Ireland breached the Human Rights Act 1998, turned in significant part on a disconnect between statutory rights and administrative reality.
Cassandra Somers‐Joce, Joe Tomlinson
wiley +1 more source
Reasons, Mistakes, and Excuses
Drawing on the theory of practical reasons, John Gardner has offered a seminal account of excuses in criminal law. His proposal is that an excuse asserts that the defendant acted for what she justifiably believed to be sufficient reason for her to perform the offending act although she had no such reason.
Andreas Vassiliou
wiley +1 more source
Ethical, Legal, and Religious Aspects at the Border of Viability. [PDF]
Oehmke F +16 more
europepmc +1 more source
The Title “Pharaoh” and the Rulings Related to it in the Books of Ḥanafī Jurists
openaire +1 more source
The hidden discount: Examining racial disparity in the use of suspended sentences
Abstract Extant research on criminal sentencing generally concludes that racial/ethnic disparity is concentrated in the “in–out” decision, and that racial differences in sentence lengths are small and inconsistent. However, sentence length analyses rarely focus on the fact that criminal sentences are often partially or fully suspended, creating ...
Kevin Petersen +3 more
wiley +1 more source

