LAW TUTORIAL QUESTIONS Tutorial 1 1. Explain: (a) international law (b) legal rights (c) legal duty (d) public international law (e) private international law 2. Explain the differences between civil law system and common law system 3. Explain: (a) Convention (exam) (b) Treaties (exam) (c) International Organization (d) State (e) Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) (f) MNE & TNC (g)International Person 4.What governs the relationship in International Trade? Tutorial
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CLASS DISCUSSION TOPIC: Classification of Law Question Suzana came to see you‚ a legal officer in Biro Bantuan Guaman and related the following: Although she is from Penang and married a fine young man from Johor Bharu‚ they were married in Golok because her father had objected to her marriage. She helped her husband to set up a stall by using her RM10‚000 savings. She also actively participated in the business until she gave birth to their twins. Since then‚ she became a fulltime housewife
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Constitutional law 2013 Greg Lowndes 1. Constitutions and Constitutional Law. a). What is a Constitution? * The empowering structures of a government that allows them to govern. * Along with the limitation f the power that they can exercise. * In totalitarian systems of government a Constitution may place far more emphasis on the empowering of organs of the government rather than on the limits of power. * Emphasis on the democratic constitutionalism *
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NATURAL LAW ROBERT P. GEORGE* Oliver Wendell Holmes‚ the legal philosopher and judge whom Richard Posner has‚ with admiration‚ dubbed “the American Nietzsche‚”1 established in the minds of many people a certain image of what natural law theories are theories of‚ and a certain set of reasons for supposing that such theories are misguided and even ridiculous. While I have my own reasons for admiring some of Holmes’s work—despite‚ rather than because of‚ the Nietzscheanism that endears him
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The University of Baltimore Law Review University of Baltimore Law Review Summer‚ 1997 26 U. Balt. L. Rev. 1 LENGTH: 2902 words SYMPOSIUM: Developments in International Commercial Law: AN INTERNATIONAL RESTATEMENT: THE UNIDROIT PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL CONTRACTS NAME: E. Allan Farnsworth * BIO: * Alfred McCormack Professor of Law‚ Columbia University. B.S.‚ 1948‚ Michigan; M.A.‚ 1949‚ Yale; J.D.‚ 1952‚ Columbia University; LL.D.‚ 1988‚ Dickinson College of Law; docteur honoris causa‚ University
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Name:_______________ Business Law I: Final Exam Study Guide [20 points] Material Tested: Chapter 1: Laws and Their Ethical Foundation (p. 04-23) (30 points) Chapter 2: Constitutional Rights (p. 24-47) (30 points) Chapter 3: Court Systems (p. 48-63) (30 points) Chapter 5: Civil Law and Procedure (p. 84-105) (30 points) Long Essay: Explain how legal knowledge will be applied in your personal life beyond high school. (30 points) Instructions: Your final exam of 150 points will include the
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Unwritten law is law that has not been enacted by the legislature (Parliament and the State Assemblies) and this law is not found in the written Federal and State Constitutions. This law is found in cases‚ which have been decided by the courts and local customs. Unwritten law is mainly comprised of: 1. English Law English law forms part of the laws of Malaysia. English law can be found in the English common law and rules of equity. However‚ not all of England’s common law and rules of
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Situational Analysis on Children in Conflict with the Law and the Juvenile Justice System Atty. Sedfrey Candelaria; Atty. Aleli Domingo; Amanda Roselle Abrera; Geo Carbonell; Ma. Victoria Cardona and Tricia Oco Adhikain Para sa Karapatang Pambata (AKAP) of the Ateneo Human Rights Center‚ Ateneo Law School and United Nations Children’s Fund‚ 1998. E-mail: ahrc@acc.aiti.admu.edu.ph/ manila@unicef.org The Philippine Senate‚ through Resolution No. 109 dated July 20‚ 1990 ratified the Convention
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1.0 Introduction The rule of law is fundamental in any society where human rights are to be protected. The word rule comes from “règle” and law from “lagu” roughly translating to “supremacy of law”.1It is a mechanism for safeguarding human rights by guaranteeing them legally and at the same time providing a means for redressal where violations occur. The most important application of the rule of law is the principle that government authority is legitimately exercised in accordance with established
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South enslaved the African Africans through Jim Crow laws‚ chickaree‚ and coercion. Democracy and justice did not exist in the South. After the South’s defeat in the civil war‚ the general public thought that Africans Americans had been liberated. However‚ African Americans were enslaved through political institutions‚ social norms‚ and violence. The Jim Crow laws were meant to oppress African Americans. The main tool of discrimination was the law of vagrancy. Vagrancy prevented African Americans
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