LPP is seen
as a necessary corollary of the right of any person to obtain skilled advice about the law without fear that the information provided to their adviser may afterwards be disclosed and used to their prejudice.
International institutions have been seen
as necessary corollary to domestic jurisdiction in specific circumstances.
His 2001 Labour conference speech set out a broad agenda - including a just Middle East peace, African development and a commitment to human rights -
as a necessary corollary to military action against al - Qaida and the Taliban.
One of the most curious features of the recent plumping for the «Judeo - Christian tradition» is the way its advocates regard capitalism
as the necessary corollary and expression of that tradition.
Not exact matches
But here it is important to recognize that a
corollary of this conception of God
as «sheer Love,» and
as always acting lovingly, is that the creation has its freedom, its causative capacity, and its
necessary accountability for what occurs in that freedom.
If «deeply felt personal experience» is sufficient proof of a claim, then's let's accept that, along with the
necessary corollary that all such experiences must be equally valid, such
as the gentleman in the asylum who deeply feels he is Napoleon.
However it is depicted and however
necessary it seems to be
as a
corollary to our freedom, hell is only a possibility for typical theology — a real possibility, but not necessarily an actualized one.
Do you agree or not that an autonomous thermal gradientin a gravitational field is a
necessary corollary of the Second Law of Thermodynamics,
as I have proved?
As I've said, I don't know the answer, but I am not sold on the idea that complexity, and its
corollaries conflict and uncertainty, is a
necessary element of family justice.
Another approach to avoid this concern might be to regard immunity
as inapplicable to a proceeding which relates directly to another, non-immune underlying proceeding only where it is a
necessary or readily foreseeable
corollary of that underlying proceeding —
as is the case with proceedings to enforce a foreign arbitral award, but not, presumably, with a defamation action arising from statements made in an earlier proceeding.