Sentences with phrase «most legal traditions»

[T] he assertion of a private form of eminent domain — the «one - to - one transfer of property» for private rather than public benefit — remains anathema in most legal traditions.
most legal traditions within the UK, Canada, and other Commonwealth realms) what...

Not exact matches

Most of the time, the just war tradition is used to test a particular war (or a strategy or a weapon) for its moral and legal acceptability.
(Second ed., Strassburg, 1903) And these traditions, be it observed, were the traditions of legal interpretation or of Bible hermeneutics, for the most part, handed down in schools of Jewish law.
Most Americans probably support the implicit moral position of mainstream Protestantism and perhaps of America's religious traditions in general: permit as few legal abortions as possible without damaging women's rights and without making it necessary for women to perform abortions on themselves or seek clandestine and possibly dangerous abortions.
His father was an architect and builder; in his mother's family, the legal profession is a tradition, and most of its members are lawyers.
As one of the most tradition - bound aspects of the legal profession, CLE could use some shaking up, especially as provider options multiply and prices continue to drop.
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.
The attorneys at The Cochran Firm Ft. Worth are proud to carry on in the tradition of Johnnie L. Cochran, to see that everyday citizens are afforded the most effective legal representation available today.
Most countries today follow one of two major legal traditions: common law or civil law.
Without question, its most important achievement was the seminal role it played in making «computer assisted legal research» accessible at no charge to law students, a tradition established by CLIC that is continued by commercial legal publishers to this day.
Furthermore, religion does not preclude reasoned argument; its arguments are based on a more - or-less exacting hermeneutic of «revealed» texts (and, sometimes, oral traditions), which is not that much different from the practice of law, since most legal cases are not reasoned from first principles, but from precedent - setting cases like Oakes).
Finally, and most importantly, in some civility cases, such as the Laarakker case out of British Columbia, the law societies targeted lawyers who, quite frankly, were acting in accordance with justice and the finest traditions of the legal profession.
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