Search for: "France " Results 7801 - 7820 of 22,796
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8 Jun 2023, 2:13 pm by Michel-Adrien
Hassan Diab was extradited to France and detained for three years in a maximum-security prison before being released, without ever standing trial. [read post]
23 Mar 2018, 8:00 am by Dan Ernst
While little of his work expressly invokes Christianity, his turns towards solidarity and public service in the area of public law and his development of the social function of property in the area of private law reveal a level of concordance with Roman Catholic thought in late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century France. [read post]
20 Dec 2020, 10:04 am by Sophie Corke
 Keeping with the French theme, JUVE Patent reports that the Paris Court of Appeal declined to rule on alleged multi-jurisdictional infringement of a patent held by Paris-based Hutchinson, due to the different factual and legal features of the alleged infringement in each of the UK, France and Germany and its lack of jurisdiction over a South African defendant's conduct in Germany and the UK.Trade MarksRecent trouble in sneakerhead-land has come to an end: Nike's pursuit… [read post]
30 Jul 2021, 10:23 am by Anastasiia Kyrylenko
The overview covers national case law from Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Hungary, Poland, and the Netherlands.PatentsThe recent decision of the German Constitutional Court concerning the constitutionality of the UPC has attracted wide commentary in the the patent blogosphere [see, e.g., IPKat posts here and earlier here]. [read post]
18 Jun 2024, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Tom Hamilton shows how this trial contributed to a wider struggle for justice and an end to violence in postwar France. [read post]
23 Feb 2017, 8:45 am by Daniel Shaviro
I was told that this could definitely happen as to France, and that Germany's recent move supporting Spain in the Santander litigation indicates that it is feeling sensitive too, whether on this ground or based on concern that the EC is over-reaching as an EU political matter. [read post]
31 Aug 2015, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
The typical account of the precopyright world of printing privileges, particularly in Venice, France and England, portrays a system primarily designed to promote investment in the material and labor of producing and disseminating books; protecting or rewarding authorship was at most an ancillary objective.The sixteenth-century Papal privileges found in the Archives, however, prompt some rethinking of that story because the majority of these privileges were awarded to authors, and even where… [read post]
5 Oct 2023, 9:30 pm by ernst
Patricia Akester (GPI-IPO) and Victor Drummond (Universidade Gama Filho) will launch their section covering Portugal and Brazil, Marius Buning (University of Oslo), Magne Klasson  (University of Oslo) and Martin Fredriksson (Linköping University) will speak about the forthcoming Scandinavian section, and further material for three existing sections – the Vatican, France and German speaking countries – will be presented by Jane Ginsburg (Columbia Law School), Katie… [read post]
28 Jul 2016, 9:00 am by Mitra Sharafi
 Here is the title and abstract in English: “Gender Making and National Meaning in Young Christian Organisations in Cameroon (1940s-1950s)” While scholarship on Africa at the end of empire has tended to focus on the evolution of notions of citizenship and demands for national political inclusion in the years following the end of the Second World War, the vibrancy and widespread influence of the Christian churches in France’s African territories, particularly… [read post]
29 Apr 2015, 11:41 am
Inheritance Laws in the 19th and 20th Centuries The Law Library of Congress is proud to present a new legal research report, Inheritance Laws in the 19th and 20th Centuries.This report summarizes inheritance law in the 19th and 20th centuries in France, Germany, and the United States. [read post]
9 Jul 2014, 7:32 am by Gritsforbreakfast
Via Agence-France-Press, the President of Palau felt the need to explain the island nation's decision to hire former Williamson County DA John Bradley as a prosecutor in their Attorney General's office. [read post]
17 May 2018, 3:27 am
., Serial No. 87334693 (May 14) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Frances Wolfson). [read post]
16 Jan 2024, 8:45 am
The implications of this idea will be developed in a talk based on interdisciplinary collaboration between Antoine Garapon, a legal scholar, (Professor at the Law School of Sciences Po, Paris, France) and Jean Lassègue, a philosopher of science (Senior Research Fellow at the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Director of Centre Georg Simmel,Recherches franco-allemandes en sciences sociales, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris).We… [read post]
22 Aug 2024, 2:38 pm by Jacob Katz Cogan
It treks around the globe: from Pacific war crimes trials in the aftermath of the Second World War to Holocaust proceedings in contemporary Germany, France, and Israel; from absurd show trials in Communist Czechoslovakia to international courtrooms in Arusha, Phnom Penh, and The Hague. [read post]
29 May 2020, 9:30 pm by ernst
New online from American Journal of Legal History and Oxford Academic: Combatting Bias in the Criminal Courts of France: 1870s–1913, by James Donovan. [read post]
10 Apr 2025, 9:30 pm by ernst
Fitzsimmons has published The Forgotten Constitution: The Origins, Realization, and Legacy of the French Constitution of 1791 (Oxford University Press):The French Constitution of 1791 has a major legacy that overturned many centuries of historical tradition but remains little known outside of France. [read post]
3 Aug 2015, 9:10 am
Popular Violence and its prosecution in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France, Julius R. [read post]
27 Nov 2015, 4:05 am by Howard Friedman
France, (ECHR, Nov. 26, 2015) is available in French (with a partial dissenting opinion in English). [read post]
21 Mar 2025, 12:45 pm by Unknown
Navigating contradictory temporal logics in the Dutch asylum system," Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Latest Articles, 20 March 2025 [open access]"The Social Worker as Border Guard: How and Why British Welfare Workers are Disposed to Control Immigration," International Migration Review, OnlineFirst, 11 March 2025 [open access]"'Stop the boats': populist contagion and migration policymaking in the UK," Ethnic and Racial Studies, Latest… [read post]
10 Nov 2016, 3:15 pm
Nineteenth-century England and France are remembered for their active legal prosecution of literature, and this book examines the ways in which five novels were interpreted in the courtroom: Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, Paul Bonnetain’s Charlot s’amuse, Henry Vizetelly’s English translations of Émile Zola’s La Terre, Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness. [read post]