It is therefore very helpful for a single practitioner work, such as this, to gather together the most important rules, guidelines and so - called «soft law» on the subject, to set out the key principles applicable in each type of arbitration, and to provide
illustrative cases from a number of different jurisdictions and legal traditions.
Here's a couple of
the illustrative cases from the «energy» post I linked.
Not exact matches
Utilizing the data
from FY 2014
cases like the following
illustrative sample appear consistently in the data.
Textbooks and casebooks (textbooks with selected readings
from cases and statutes
illustrative of the ideas in the narrative) are really for instruction.
See Bowen v. Roy, 476 U. S., at 706 - 707; id., at 705, n. 15; Yoder, 406 U. S., at 218; see also McDaniel v. Paty, 435 U. S., at 628, n. 8 (noting
cases in which courts considered claims for exemptions
from general criminal prohibitions,
cases the Court thought were «
illustrative of the general nature of free - exercise protections and the delicate balancing required by our decisions in [Sherbert and Yoder,] when an important state interest is shown»).
While New Mexico product liability law differs
from that which was applied by the court in this
case, the
case is still
illustrative of how manufacturers can be held liable for products that are defectively designed or manufactured.