Results 31 to 40 of about 5,768 (190)
Common law constitutional rights /
"This book is the first collection of its kind exploring common law constitutional rights. It offers a detailed and comparative analysis of the content and role of individual common law constitutional rights in judicial decision-making; and a series of ...
Hughes, Kirsty Elizabeth, +1 more
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How do judges decide cases in a globalised legal context, characterised by the increased interconnections between legal systems and between actors in these legal systems?
Elaine Mak
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Legal Education, Legal Practice and Ethics
Modern law owes its provenance and enforcement to one branch of government or another. But not all law is ‘public law’ simply because it emanates from public bodies, affects the public or serves public purposes.
Maria Nicolae
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Land–sea interfaces (LSIs) are complex areas where terrestrial and marine ecosystems intersect, leading to intricate ecological, social, economic, and political interactions. These regions face pressures from both land‐based and maritime activities, with
Gea Grassi +7 more
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Methods of Protecting the Rights to Commercial Signage: Experience of France and Ukraine
Legal analysis of constitutional rights to objects of the intellectual property law has been developed with regard to the institutional reforms and improvements related to the main form of civil rights protection, namely judicial protection (based on ...
Galyna Mykhailiuk
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Judging Regulators: The Political Economy of Anglo-American Administrative Law
Drawing insights from economics and political science, Judging Regulators explains why the administrative law of the US and the UK has radically diverged from each other on questions of law, fact, and discretion.
Ip, CYE
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Contemporary jurisprudence on gender identity has embraced an inclusive paradigm. Against this backdrop United Kingdom Supreme Court (UKSC) judgment in For Women Scotland Ltd v.
Dipshreeya Das, Neetu Banduni
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The Lawfulness of Citizenship Deprivation: Comparing Australia and the UK
The rise in international terrorism has led to a rise in citizenship deprivation. Depriving a person of citizenship represents a harsh national security measure.
Guy Baldwin
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Private international law is a globally established field of law however, its pre-eminence in Africa is insignificant and this has been as a result of its relevance, which according to many scholars is arguable. It follows logically therefore, that it is
Primrose E.R. Kurasha
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