Sentences with phrase «prohibit public conduct»

«Representatives of the Indigenous, Greek, Jewish, Chinese, Arab, Armenian and Korean communities have expressed their «vehement opposition» to changes that have been mooted to sections of the Racial Discrimination Act which prohibit public conduct that is reasonably likely to «offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate» a person or groups because of their skin colour or national or ethnic origin.

Not exact matches

Other matters that would be repugnant to most people, such as gross misrepresentation of facts important to health and safety, or public displays of vicious and immoral conduct, would also normally be prohibited by law.
Elsewhere, the Court has claimed that a disclaimer can go a very long way in allowing conduct in the public square that might otherwise be prohibited.
Where the ACCC is satisfied that the arrangement provides an overall public benefit, it can allow conduct which may otherwise be prohibited by the Competition and Consumer Act.
Such behavior includes, but is not limited to, attempting to enter the building with prohibited items listed above; smoking; offensive or disorderly conduct; throwing any object; entering or attempting to enter pools or exhibits; failure to follow the instructions of aquarium personnel; actions that might harm or endanger others; and any other conduct that is deemed inappropriate in a public setting.
Any defamation of the country and the nation, any instigation to a war of aggression, to national, racial, class or religious hatred, any incitement to discrimination, territorial separatism, or public violence, as well as any obscene conduct contrary to morality shall be prohibited by law.
«There is no other action associated with this settlement, no admission or denial of wrongdoing and no financial penalty,» the company said of the culmination of a two - year investigation by the New York Attorney General's Office in which it was accused of violating state laws prohibiting «false and misleading conduct» in statements to the public and investors.
He cited the district's policy governing public conduct, which lists more than 20 conducts prohibited on school grounds, as the reason for banning Weston from school grounds.
The carriage of local traffic for compensation or hire by foreign air carriers between two points in the United States, a practice commonly referred to as cabotage, violates 49 U.S.C. § 41703, which prohibits cabotage except under very limited circumstances that do not apply here.3 In addition, a foreign air carrier that holds out to the public without authorization, either expressly or by course of conduct, that it provides cabotage service violates 49 U.S.C. § 41301.
You agree not to engage in any of the following prohibited activities: (i) copying, distributing, or disclosing any part of the Service in any medium, including without limitation by any automated or non-automated «scraping»; (ii) using any automated system, including without limitation «robots,» «spiders,» «offline readers,» etc., to access the Service in a manner that sends more request messages to the Company servers than a human can reasonably produce in the same period of time by using a conventional on - line web browser (except that Humble Bundle grants the operators of public search engines revocable permission to use spiders to copy materials from Humble Bundle for the sole purpose of and solely to the extent necessary for creating publicly available searchable indices of the materials, but not caches or archives of such materials); (iii) transmitting spam, chain letters, or other unsolicited email; (iv) attempting to interfere with, compromise the system integrity or security or decipher any transmissions to or from the servers running the Service; (v) taking any action that imposes, or may impose in our sole judgment an unreasonable or disproportionately large load on our infrastructure; (vi) uploading invalid data, viruses, worms, or other software agents through the Service; (vii) collecting or harvesting any personally identifiable information, including account names, from the Service; (viii) using the Service for any commercial solicitation purposes; (ix) impersonating another person or otherwise misrepresenting your affiliation with a person or entity, conducting fraud, hiding or attempting to hide your identity; (x) interfering with the proper working of the Service; (xi) accessing any content on the Service through any technology or means other than those provided or authorized by the Service; (xii) bypassing the measures we may use to prevent or restrict access to the Service, including without limitation features that prevent or restrict use or copying of any content or enforce limitations on use of the Service or the content therein; (xiii) sell, assign, rent, lease, act as a service bureau, or grant rights in the Products, including, without limitation, through sublicense, to any other entity without the prior written consent of such Products» (defined below) licensors; (xiv) circumventing Service limitations on the number of Products you may purchase, including, without limitation, creating multiple accounts and purchasing a total number of Products through such multiple accounts which exceed the per - user limitations; or (xv) except as otherwise specifically set forth in a licensor's end user license agreement, as otherwise agreed upon by a licensor in writing or as otherwise allowed under applicable law, distributing, transmitting, copying (other than re-installing software or files previously purchased by you through the Service on computers, mobile or tablet devices owned by you, or creating backup copies of such software or files for your own personal use) or otherwise exploiting the Products (defined below) in any manner other than for your own private, non-commercial, personal use.
Apparently, the exercisers» conduct violates a city ordinance that prohibits congregating in a public median.
An infringement of those rules therefore causes a disturbance to the public policy established by the Member State, a lesser or greater disturbance depending on the nature of the act committed, the disturbance caused to public policy normally being reflected in the degree of severity of the penalty laid down by the national legislature to sanction the prohibited conduct.
By its criminal law, each Member State sets the framework of its public policy, since it defines the conduct which it prohibits under pain of sanctions.
Section 7C (2) authorizes candidates facing active opposition in a merit retention election for the same judicial office to campaign together and conduct a joint campaign designed to educate the public on merit retention and each candidate's views as to why he or she should be retained in office, to the extent not otherwise prohibited by Florida law.
The evidential burden of showing that the crime and Gray's subsequent incarceration amounted to a break in the chain of causation was on the defendant and where the manslaughter either did not break the chain of causation or where any contributory fault on the part of the claimant was less than 100 %, the claim would not be so inextricably bound up with the criminal conduct so as to be prohibited by public policy.
The ruling comes after the Law Society of Upper Canada applied for a declaration that the Law Society Act applies to employees of the Crown (in right of Ontario) who provide legal services, and that Crown employees who provide legal services to the public respecting employer conduct prohibited by the OHSA are not exempt from the LSA paralegal licensing requirement (Bylaw 4).
This negative impact includes prohibiting individuals from merely pursuing their sole means of livelihood, fining and imprisoning these individuals, encouraging participation in other unlawful conduct for subsistence, and excluding the indigent from the public sphere.
In Dudewicz v Norris - Schmid, Inc, 443 Mich 68 (1993), the court held that a claim based on a violation of public policy can not be raised when an applicable statute prohibits a retaliatory discharge for the plaintiff's conduct.
In addition, the bill would prohibit EPA from completing a pending rulemaking to expand the lead restrictions to commercial and public buildings unless it conducts a study showing that the change is necessary.
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