Sentences with phrase «pervades law»

It is about a culture that pervades law firms in which gatekeepers tiptoe around the perceived sensibilities of lawyers, or accept at face value that the status quo is immutable, to the detriment of all.
The removal of the drudgery that pervades law should be cause for celebration.
However, I think John G nailed it, in that when email began to pervade law practice, our legal ethics chaperones were concerned that inadvertent disclosure could sometimes amount to a waiver of privilege (following worrisome decisions like in Pfeil v. Zink).

Not exact matches

Genuine laws of nature (fundamental physical laws) are omnitemporal: they hold always and everywhere — they pervade space - time, so to speak.
The only novelty may come in breaking away from the clichés that have come to pervade our discussion of law and in recovering what judges used to understand as the axioms of reason that supplied the grounds of their judgments.
Even more significantly, this persistent Mosaic tradition in law also would appear as partially responsible for the high ethical presuppositions which, by and large, pervade the legal framework.
I mean the increasing disregard for law which pervades the country, from savage mobs to executive ministers of justice.
We know that communism was a theology, a church militant, with sacred texts and with saints and martyrs and prophets, with doctrines about the nature of the world and of humankind, with immutable laws and millennial visions and life - pervading judgments about the nature of good and evil.
im not against low carb at all, keto or original atkins are not my favorite ways to approach it, but Im very much in favor of certain types of low carb diets, particularly higher protein, diets with moderate carb restriction... i use low carb, hi - protein for contest prep myself... unfortunately, what pervades much of the low carb world still today, is this belief that calories do nt matter or calories do nt count or what you alluded to, that you can have a calorie deficit and not lose fat... whats really happening is that low carb / higher protein can be a very good way to automatically control appetite and calorie intake, and is also often important for some peoples health given their metabolic status (not very carb tolerant, etc)... its also unfortunate that many in the low carb community are among the ones to suggest that exercise is a waste of time, etc etc, which is also not true and does great disservice to many who listen... low carb does nt work due to some voodoo or because the law of thermodynamics does nt apply... it works mainly because it controls calories and for some people, helps them achieve calorie deficit better than other diets... when folks show up here and suggest «i was in a calorie deficit but wasnt losing» or «exercise does nt work» thats when we cant help but grimace... or chuckle...
Chalk it up to the solidarity mindset, legacy of the old industrial union model (and its mindset of employees as being little more than mules who can only perform singular tasks ad nauseam) borrowed by both police and teachers» unions that continues to pervade both the law enforcement and teaching professions.
«All things are implicated with one another, and the bond is holy; and there is hardly anything unconnected with any other thing... For there is one universe made up of all things, and one God who pervades all things, and one substance, and one law... Be thou erect, or be made erect».
The belief in instantaneous efficiency, and that the prices in the OPMI market reflect economic reality better than anywhere else pervades many areas of American life, including law and sociology as well as finance.
This is the frank, no BS spirit that we all appreciate in JP's work... and it is the tone that still pervades JP Boyd on Family Law.
Latinisms pervade American law because after the Romans conquered most of the Western Word — including England — the language of Cicero became ingrained in the English language.
This mistake pervades nearly every information privacy law, regulation, and debate, yet regulators and legal scholars have paid it scant attention.
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