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    Factory Act

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    Factories Act‚ 1934 Description Factories Act 1934 extends to the whole of Pakistan. The Factories Act 1934‚ is the principal law‚ which regulates the working conditions in a factory. The need for this law is evident from its attributes as it defines all the elements of the factory workplace such as maintenance of health and safety conditions‚ regulating the working hours and environment‚ penalties for non-compliance and associated procedures etc. Aims and objectives Factories Act‚ 1934 may

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    Dream ACt

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    Minors act‚ also known as The DREAM Act‚ was first introduced in 2001 by Orrin Hatch and Dick Durbin. Giving undocumented students‚ who grew up in the United States‚ a chance to contribute to our country’s well-being by serving in the U.S. armed forces or pursuing a higher education is what the DREAM Act consist of. The DREAM Act has been rejected by the Republicans board numerous times‚ and they are obviously not aware of all the benefits that come with approving this act. The DREAM Act will assure

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    no longer recognized as a citizen of the country that you have grown up in your whole life. This is the struggle that many Haitian people in the Dominican Republic are going through today‚ all because of their background. The actions that Sonia Pierre executed throughout her life greatly impacted those of Haitian lineage in the Dominican Republic‚ which can be traced back through her childhood‚ the establishment of the Movement for Dominican Women of Haitian Descent (MUDHA)‚ and the fight that she

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    The Intolerable Act

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    Intolerable Acts Notes Questions What is it? How many laws or “acts” were there? What were those laws? What is the Administration of Justice Act? What is the Massachusetts Government Act? What was the Quartering Act? What was the Quebec Act? What started the intolerable acts? Who started the Tea party? What was the tea party? What was the effect of the intolerable acts? Notes The intolerable acts were laws that

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    The Homestead Act

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    the intent of the Homestead Act was to defeat land monopoly. Many farmers‚ however‚ lacked the economic means to move west and manage a farm. . By this‚ fewer still understood the new type of agriculture‚ in which technology was used to farm the land that the Great Plains required. Instead‚ speculators and corporate interests were able to reap in profits‚ and fraud and corruption‚ and often marked the process farmland for transportation (the railroads). The Homestead Act ’s biggest weakness however

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    Patriot Act

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    The Patriot Act and Civil Liberties The Patriot Act and Civil Liberties With today’s society of advanced technology‚ it has become imperative for the United States to develop new laws to keep up with emerging threats and to combat illegal activities within the country as well as abroad. Without the ability to monitor communications and information‚ the War on Terrorism becomes an unsymmetrical battle that is detrimental to the American way of life. Devoid of such significant

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    The Patriot Act

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    unfortunately brought down and reduced to rubble because of this heinous act. In the wake of 9/11‚ a national crisis occurred as everyone was left frightened. It soon became clear that it was time to institute newer‚ stricter laws to prevent an attack of this scale on US soil ever again. On October of 2001‚ the Patriot Act was signed into place. It granted government agencies more authority to

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    In the Republic of Plato‚ Justice has been discussed in the first two chapters. Many conversations are presented either by people engaged in these debates or Socrates himself leading these debates. Individuals engaged in the debates discuss on how can a person be “Just” or “Unjust” to get to the main understanding of “Justice” itself. In particular to be a just person‚ this justification has to be examined on the political sense‚ which is basically the definition of justice in the city‚ and in the

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    The Townshend Acts

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    The Townshend Acts In 1767 Charles Townshend who was the chancellor of the exchequer‚ created the Townshend Acts . The Townshend Acts were approved by British Parliament on June 26-June 2‚ 1767 and were repealed April 12‚ 1770. Charles Townshend proposed the program in order to raise 40‚000 pounds a year so that the English parliament could cut the british land tax and this would also raise money to pay for the salaries of governors and judges. Some of the things that

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    The Stamp Act

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    Past and Promise) That was the colonist’s famous saying. The colonists were being taxed with no say in parliament. They were getting taxed with the Stamp Act‚ the Tea Act‚ and the Sugar Act‚ but those were only a few. Eventually the Stamp Act was successfully repealed‚ yet the Stamp Act was the catalyst for the American Revolution. The stamp Act was the first attempt for Brittan to directly tax the colonists. (Mason Lorna) Brittan thought that since they owned the colonists they could tax them‚

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