Here are some examples: Page 24, note 41: R. v. Cyr, Alberta Law Reports 12, (1917 - 18): 336 Page 62, note 16: R. v. Nan - E-Quis-A-Ka, NWT,
Territories Law Reports [cited hereafter TLR] 1 (1889): 211 Page 92, note 1: Valente v.
Not exact matches
[22] The
law also requires the United States Department of Justice to write a
report on child abuse prevention
laws in all U.S. states and
territories, «with a particular focus on penalties for cases of severe child abuse.»
The annual
report, the only one of its kind in the nation, ranks all fifty states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and other U.S.
territories for the comprehensiveness and strength of their animal protection
laws.
A study of the past five years of ALDF's Ranking
Reports shows more than three quarters of all states and
territories have significantly improved their animal protection
laws.
With this article, the first of a new series on environmental shipping
law, we consider the amended Regulation 20165 / 757 which imposes new monitoring,
reporting and verification (MRV) obligations of emissions for voyages within the European Union
territory... read more
Later with his friend Thomas Slidell he published the first systematic collection of the
law of Louisiana, called a «Digest of the
Reported Decisions of the Superior Court of the late
Territory of Orleans, and of the Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana.»
It will be interesting to see if the idea of annual
reports on respect for the rule of
law spreads to other provinces and
territories.
Case
law • Over 13,000 court decisions since 1876 • All decisions
reported in print since 1970 • All decisions decided prior to 1970 that have been cited by courts after 1970 • Parallel citations of all cases published in print appear on the face of the decision • The most complete collection of electronically
reported decisions in Canada • Every jurisdiction in Canada • In English and in French, as issued by the courts • Over 207,000 board, tribunal and arbitration decisions • Parallel citations of all cases published in print appear on the face of the decision • In English and in French, as issued by the decision maker • Alberta Labour Relations Board Decisions Index • Alberta Labour Relations Board
Reports • British Columbia Collective Agreement Arbitration Awards • British Columbia Labour Relations Board Decisions • Canada Industrial Relations Board Decisions • Canada Labour Arbitration Decisions • Canada Labour Code Part II Appeals Officers (Health & Safety) Decisions • Canada Public Service Labour Relations Board Decisions • Canadian Artists and Producers Professional Relations Tribunal Decisions • Décisions de la Commission des lésions professionnelles du Québec • Décisions de la Commission des relations du travail dans la fonction publique • Décisions de la Commission des relations du travail du Québec • Décisions des Agents d'appel en vertu du Code canadien du travail, partie II (santé et securité au travail) • Décisions du Conseil canadien des relations industrielles • Décisions du Tribunal canadien des relations professionnelles artistes - producteurs • Décisions du Tribunal du travail du Québec • Manitoba Grievance Arbitration Awards • Manitoba Labour Board Decisions • New Brunswick Industrial Relations Board Decisions • New Brunswick Labour Adjudication Awards • New Brunswick Labour and Employment Board Decisions • New Brunswick Public Service Labour Relations Board Decisions • Newfoundland and Labrador Labour Arbitration Awards • Newfoundland and Labrador Labour Relations Board Decisions • Northwest
Territories Labour Arbitration Awards • Nova Scotia Labour Arbitration Awards • Ontario Grievance Settlement Board Decisions • Ontario Labour Arbitration Awards • Ontario Labour Relations Board Decisions • Ontario Labour Relations Board
Reports • Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Adjudication Decisions • Ontario Pay Equity Hearings Tribunal Decisions • Ontario Public Service Grievance Board Decisions • Ontario Workplace Safety and Insurance Appeals Tribunal Decisions • Prince Edward Island Labour Arbitration Awards • Prince Edward Island Labour Relations Board Decisions • Saskatchewan Labour Arbitration Awards • Saskatchewan Labour Relations Board Decisions • Yukon Labour Arbitration Awards
As the list of countries in which the U.S. is engaged in hostilities grows (Niger has joined the list since last
report), and the purpose of U.S. intervention in some of these places blurs (the
report reminds us that while ISIS has lost 98 % of the
territory it once held in Iraq and Syria, and will soon have lost 100 %, we're planning to keep bombing in Syria after that nonetheless), we've increasingly replaced a difficult conversation about the adequacy of international security policy with an easier (if ultimately misguided) debate about the adequacy of international security
law.
Tags for this Online Resume: Negotiations, Business Development, Legal Research & Strategy, Contract Drafting, Client Relationship Mgmt., Corporate
Law, Employment
Law, Product / Service Introductions, Legislative / Regulatory Compliance, Government
Reporting,
Territory Planning / Management, Trademark / Patent Licensing
California SB 909 was signed into
law on September 29, 2010 and requires Consumer
Reporting Agencies (a.k.a. background screening firms) that instigate an investigative consumer
report for employment purposes to provide the subject of the
report with a Disclosure and Request for Consent in order for the subject's information to be sent outside of the United States or its
territories.
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner June Oscar AO has urged Federal, State and
Territory governments to genuinely consider the Australian
Law Reform Commission's
report into the over-representation of Indigenous...
Though not strictly acting in concert, the Commonwealth, States and
Territories have been reforming juvenile justice
laws along similar lines for more than a decade as they apply to all children, and particularly Indigenous juveniles, since the RCADIC
Report in 1991.
The
report examines major developments in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over the past year — including the «deep cuts, confusion and anxiety» caused by the Indigenous Advancement Scheme, Western Australian plans to close remote communities, the Northern
Territory's paperless arrest
laws, and the Australian Government's response to the Forrest Review on Indigenous employment.
Alongside this has been the refusal to overturn mandatory sentencing
laws in the Northern
Territory and Western Australia, and the hostile reaction to the expression of views by various United Nations human rights treaty committees under routine
reporting mechanisms.
3.10.5 Nothing in this section of the guideline derogates from the Children's Contact Services» mandatory obligations at
law to
report any relevant child abuse or suspected abuse to the relevant State or
Territory child protection authority (for example, the Department of Community Services in NSW).
The Native Title
Report 2007 also raised the problem that even if commercial native title rights and interests are proven and recognised by the Court, the commercialisation of those native title rights would remain subject to relevant state and
territory laws and regulations by virtue of s 211.
The
report makes specific recommendations for
law reform, including of state and
territory bail
laws, sentencing legislation, and improving access to community - based sentencing options for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander offenders.
The Commission's 1998
report, Article 18, thoroughly reviewed the protection of the right to freedom of religion and belief under Australian Commonwealth, State and
Territory law.
In my Native Title
Reports, I will recommend action that the Australian Government can take to ensure that our rights, as affirmed by the Declaration, are fully respected in
laws and policies that affect our lands,
territories and resources.
For example, the Social Justice
Report 2001 made recommendations relating to the operation of juvenile diversionary schemes in the Northern
Territory which included extending options for the operation of Aboriginal Customary
Law as a diversionary mechanism.
One of the recommendations that the Social Justice
Report 2001 made regarding juvenile diversionary schemes in the Northern
Territory encouraged both the recognition of customary
law and community participation in a review of program needs for young Indigenous people:
monitor and
report on the adequacy of government consultation processes regarding reforms to
laws and policies that affect our rights to our lands,
territories and resources
Recommendation 8: That the Government adopt the social justice principles from ATSIC's Rights, recognition and reform
report as the starting point for negotiations with Aboriginal peoples in the Northern
Territory of a justice agreement framework under the 1997 National Summit on Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, community justice mechanisms and about service delivery arrangements, regional governance and unfinished business, including the recognition of Aboriginal Customary
Law.
See, for example, Aboriginal Issues Unit of the Northern
Territory «Too much sorry business» in Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody National
Report AGPS Canberra 1991 Volume 5 Appendix D (i); A Bolger Aboriginal Women and Violence Australian National University North Australia Research Unit Darwin 1991; Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women's Task Force on Violence
Report of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women's Task Force on Violence State of Queensland 1999; S Gordon et al Putting the Picture Together: Inquiry into response by government agencies to complaints of family violence and child abuse in Aboriginal communities State
Law Publisher Perth 2002.