Results 171 to 180 of about 43,905 (239)

A Fight 'Till the Death: Congress's Usurpation of State Court Power in End-Of-Life Matters

Tennessee Journal of Law and Policy, 2023
In the spring of 2005, the United States Congress passed An Act for the Relief for the Parents of Theresa Marie Schiavo1 ("the Act") in response to numerous requests by Michael Schiavo, Theresa's husband, to have Theresa's feeding tube removed.
Leland C. Abraham
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The Dawn of Belarusian Independence and the Usurpation of Power by Aleksandr Lukashenko regime

Ethnic History of European Nations
Despite the geographical and cultural proximity, the contemporary history of Belarus is poorly represented in Ukrainian historiography. The study of the socio-political processes that took place in the Republic of Belarus after it became an independent country is necessary to understand the reasons for the failure of its nationally oriented course in ...
Andrii Didukh
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On the issue of «usurpation of power» by self-proclaimed bodies in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine

Legal Ukraine
The paper analyzes the issue of «usurpation of power» by self-proclaimed authorities in the temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine through the lens of criminal liability legislation. It’s also important to emphasize to the tasks of the state in ensuring compliance with legal norms in all spheres of public and state life.
Vorobey Peter   +2 more
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STRONG LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT AS A LEVER TO COUNTERACT THE USURPATION OF POWER IN TRANSITIONAL DEMOCRACIES (RUSSIA AND BELARUS AS EXAMPLES)

Scientific Journal of Polonia University
The article examines the problem of limiting local self-government in Russia and Belarus as one of the key factors of power usurpation. The authors analyze the constitutional and legal regulation of local self-government in both countries, paying attention to the existing mechanisms of influence of presidents and central authorities at the local level.
Serhii Boldyriev, Mykola Linnyk
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The President as King: The Usurpation of War and Foreign Affairs Powers in the Modern Age

2006
Monarchical conceptions of power in seventeenth-century England, anchored in the theory of High Prerogative, were characterized by sweeping claims to illimitable authority in matters of foreign and domestic affairs. Stuart kings, principally James I and Charles I, also adduced the Divine Right of Kingship as justification for, among other things ...
D. Adler
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