Sentences with phrase «obsolete laws on»

Obsolete laws on the police including a law of 1839 requiring street musicians to leave the area if required to do so by irritated householders.

Not exact matches

Some have however insisted that the law is obsolete, considering that a President on an international assignment remains a President, and so he or she doesn't need anyone to act in his absence.
The distribution of content on the Internet has made traditional copyright laws obsolete.
In a future where cars are obsolete, the Gunbrick has become a worldwide sensation!The Gunbrick - A gun one side... a shield on the other.Encounter wasteland mutants, crazed nerds, law enforcement and all manner of cube based adversaries.
In addition to the Beetle Trilogy, the show presents works such as Controller of the Universe, an explosion of tools such as saws, pickaxes and rakes, a piece that expresses the artist's skepticism of blind trust in technological innovation, which time transforms into old - fashioned, obsolete forms; and Hollow / Stuffed: market law, a small replica of a submarine with biodegradable plastic sacks full of salt hanging from the ceiling on steel cables.
In his equally superb article, The Curse of Loose - Leaf Law Books, Louis Mirando presents an analysis of where the quest for short - term profit in holding on to obsolete formats can be an enemy of quality and value.
Anyone interested in reading further about Canada's blasphemy law should definitely check out Jeremy Patrick's excellent paper Not Dead, Just Sleeping: Canada's Prohibition on Blasphemous Libel as a Case Study in Obsolete Legislation, which is available here.
The long anomalous survival of these now obsolete offences may well have owed something to the reluctance of the rich and powerful to accept that the poor had an equal claim on access to the law.
The American Bar Association's House of Delegates made 2012 changes in Comment 8 on Rule of Professional Conduct 1.1 (Competency) stating that «to maintain the requisite knowledge and skill» a lawyer «should keep abreast of changes in the law and its practice, including the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology...» This means simply that lawyers with obsolete technology — or obsolete attitudes — should beware.
And for some, like the Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada, it means rendering every textbook published on labour law prior to 2015 entirely obsolete.
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