Search for: "TRACE" Results 4681 - 4700 of 23,327
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
14 Mar 2015, 3:35 pm by Michel-Adrien
Earlier this month, Lord Sumption, Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, gave a speech called Magna Carta then and now to members of the association Friends of the British Library.The Magna Carta, considered a foundational document for democratic principles, was signed in June 1215 by King John of England.The speech looks at the origins of the  document and at how it has perceived by lawyers and historians over the centuries.Earlier Library Boy posts about the Magna Carta… [read post]
4 Oct 2019, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
After all, the commitment to liberty of conscience that characterized colonial Pennsylvania traced directly to Penn’s vision, example, and determination: Pennsylvania enacted more laws about religious tolerance than any other British American colony, both before and after Penn’s death. [read post]
12 Jul 2023, 4:00 am by Howard Friedman
The court said in part:[I]t’s unclear how A&R can trace its economic injury to the Attorney General.... [read post]
24 Mar 2022, 7:06 am by David Priess
  Belton’s book, Putin’s People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took On the West, traces how Soviet-era spies siphoned billions out of the state economy, creating vast networks for laundering money and hiding assets. [read post]
9 Nov 2023, 10:53 am by Jacob Katz Cogan
Salomon, Emancipating human rights: Capitalism and the common good Dorothea Endres, Conceptualizing legal change as ‘norm-knitting’ through the example of the environmental human right Céline Braumann, The settlement of tax disputes by the International Court of Justice International Law and Practice Thea Coventry, Seizing stateless smuggling vessels on the Mediterranean High Seas Máté Csernus, Might contain traces of Lotus: The limits of… [read post]
26 Jan 2016, 3:03 am
But in fact, we can trace investor-state arbitration back much further — nearly a century further — to a long forgotten but nonetheless fascinating dispute between the Suez Canal Company and Egypt, arbitrated by a commission of legal and diplomatic luminaries appointed by Napoleon III, the Emperor of France. [read post]
24 Jul 2020, 9:32 am
It traces the roots of the office of the president back through the executive reorganization acts of the New Deal to a world of Progressive Era executive-centered reform thought. [read post]
22 Sep 2017, 6:36 pm by Christine Corcos
Drawing from the earliest chapters in US history, legal scholar Sheryll Cashin reveals the enduring legacy of America’s original sin, tracing how we transformed from a country without an entrenched construction of race to a nation where one drop of nonwhite blood merited exclusion from full citizenship. [read post]
3 Sep 2016, 9:31 am
Unsuccessful Reform Efforts Manuela Moschella & Antje Vetterlein, Self-Reinforcing and Reactive Path Dependence: Tracing the IMF's Path of Policy Change Theresa Squatrito, Thomas Sommerer, & Jonas Tallberg, Transnational Access to International Organizations 1950-2010: Structural Factors and Critical Junctures Michael Zürn, Historical Institutionalism and International Relations - Strange Bedfellows? [read post]
26 May 2019, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
He traces these influential characteristics from Argentina's transition to democracy in 1983, the end of communism in Eastern Europe, the development of international criminal justice, and the South African truth commission of 1995. [read post]
22 May 2014, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Tracing the development of pain theories in politics, medicine, and law, and legislative and social quarrels over the morality and economics of relief, Wailoo points to a tension at the heart of the conservative-liberal divide. [read post]
30 Nov 2022, 6:30 am by ernst
Inspired by actor-network theory, relational sociologies of association, and performativity theory, this ethnographic exploration multiplies the matters of concern in our study of international law (and lawyering): the human and non-human, material and semantic, visible and evasive actants that tie together the fragile fabric of legality.In tracing these threads, this book signals important changes in the conceptual repertoire and materiality of international legal practice, as liberal… [read post]
19 Jan 2023, 9:10 am by Christine Corcos
This article traces the history of these two standards, tries to explain how they moved from descriptive to normative use, and then turns to problems with personified standards more generally, showing how some superficially appealing reasons for using a personified standard prove to be unpersuasive. [read post]
6 Sep 2018, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
By following the movements of a single ship and bringing oceans into sharper view, Mawani traces British imperial power through racial, temporal, and legal contests and offers a novel method of writing colonial legal history.Praise for the book:“Charting the 1914 voyage of the SS Komagata Maru and focusing on the sea, the ship, the manifest, the indigenous, and the fugitive, Renisa Mawani makes a compelling case against the European myth of the ‘free sea. [read post]
20 Dec 2013, 9:57 pm
Green traces how this dynamic and fast-growing form of private authority is becoming increasingly common in areas ranging from organic food to green building practices to sustainable tourism. [read post]
11 Sep 2017, 9:10 pm
The Internationalists tells the story of the Peace Pact by placing it in the long history of international law from the seventeenth century through the present, tracing this rich history through a fascinating and diverse array of lawyers, politicians and intellectuals—Hugo Grotius, Nishi Amane, Salmon Levinson, James Shotwell, Sumner Welles, Carl Schmitt, Hersch Lauterpacht, and Sayyid Qutb. [read post]
25 Oct 2017, 7:34 am
In particular, it is argued here that the miserable fate of general principles of law can be traced back to a choice by early 20th century international lawyers to locate and organize the prevention of non liquet as well as analogical reasoning within the sources of international law. [read post]
15 Oct 2013, 10:37 am
Police claim the woman told the detective that the diamonds could be removed and sold without a trace and that he could use that money towards the final payment. [read post]
23 Apr 2019, 7:33 pm by Christine Corcos
After all, the commitment to liberty of conscience that characterized colonial Pennsylvania traced directly to Penn’s vision, example, and determination: Pennsylvania enacted more laws about religious tolerance than any other British American colony, both before and after Penn’s death. [read post]