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Relevance in the Law

2010
If the law embodies a culture of implicity, logic’s orientation displays an enthusiasm for the explicit. Logicians put a premium on precision and exactitude, and they reserve a special place for definitions, both biconditional and implicit. It has a considerable bearing on the two-solitudes phenomenon that, for over a century, mainstream logic has been
Dov M. Gabbay, John Woods
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The law of inverse relevance

British Journal of Healthcare Management, 2002
What to do with general practice? For a decades, politicians have proclaimed the mantra of a “primary care-led NHS”, praying all the while that no-one would ask them what they meant. Primary care is A Good Thing, like motherhood and apple pie.
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Are the Cognitive Sciences Relevant for Law?

2021
This chapter addresses the question of whether the cognitive sciences are relevant for law. The answer to this question will turn out to be a threefold ‘yes’. First, if law is traditionally conceived as a set of rules that prescribe what ought to be done, there is a role for the cognitive sciences in determining the facts of the cases to which the law ...
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The Relevance of Constitutional Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2015
This paper questions the relevance of constitutional law in legal systems. Comparative constitutional law scholars have become used to the assumption that constitutional law is a universal point of reference which can be addressed in comparison. If comparative constitutional law is intended to refer to different constitutions, it will be necessary to ...
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The Relevance of Law

1970
Knowledge creates responsibility. The present work proceeds from the conviction that our knowledge of law, meaning the whole legal process, painfully developed through centuries of trial and error and review, should be applied to the solution of the most serious problem confronting modern man — international violence.
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Relevant principles of international law [PDF]

open access: possible, 1981
According to this principle, each State is the sole arbiter of the legal nature of acts performed within its territory. Only the public authorities of that State have the right to act within the territory. Thus an act of public authority of State A performed within the territory of State B, is an infringement of the Sovereignty of State B, unless ...
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