... systems specifically accepted by Tamanaha as law are state law,
customary law, religious law, international law, transnational law, indigenous law and natural
law (pp. 224–30).
52
Tamanaha, General ... Common Sense: Law, Globalization and
Emancipation (London: Butterworths, 2nd edn 2002), esp. p. 371 for his map of capitalist law
into domestic law, production law, exchange law, community law, territorial ... right and ability to
create law.
A depiction of the authority of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and
Citizen, in the late eighteenth century, features different symbols of authority.
34
Two tablets,...
... in law schools.
95
Today, some of the most innovative ideas about improving law teaching can be
found in the scholarship of clinical and legal writing law professors.
96
Specific critiques of ... resulting synthesis of
Law, Language, and the Law School Classroom
17
developing a model of how language works in the law school classroom, and in the
law more generally.
The Role of Language in Society
A ... first year oflaw school in-
volves a breaking down of standard cultural assumptions and inculcation of new
orientations, analysis of this process can reveal a crucial focal point of professional
identity—one...
... AGENCIES/
ORGANIZATIONS
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Police
Bureau of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement
Bureau of Industry and Security
Bureau of Land Management, Law
Enforcement
Bureau of Reclamation, Office of
Security, ... federal law enforce-
ment agencies to the most sophisticated analysis of
contemporary theories of policing. The broadening
of the field oflaw enforcement affected the process
of selection of topics. ... comparative study of world law
enforcement systems. Police and law enforcement
officers do a variety of things in a day and need to
draw on a body of knowledge that includes law,
sociology, criminology,...
... AGENCIES/
ORGANIZATIONS
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Police
Bureau of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement
Bureau of Industry and Security
Bureau of Land Management, Law
Enforcement
Bureau of Reclamation, Office of
Security, ... federal law enforce-
ment agencies to the most sophisticated analysis of
contemporary theories of policing. The broadening
of the field oflaw enforcement affected the process
of selection of topics. ... personal body armor.
Originated by the Office ofLaw Enforcement
Standards of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, and produced as part of the Law
Enforcement and Corrections Standards...
... the case lawof the European Court of Justice. In its case law the
ECJ had recognized two of these areas of exclusive competence. The first of these
11
The Declaration on nationality of a Member ... principle of conferral in EU law. ’
19
And a little further
he connects that to the idea of ‘the will of the law- maker or constituent power.’
20
10
H.L.A. Hart, The Concept ofLaw (2nd edition), ... course of real events.’
2 Paradigms of Constitution-Making, or Two Tales of One Dualism
25
The question of legal competence, i.e., the question of the (limits to) powers of the
European Union is often...
... an “empire of men and
not of laws”.
93
The republican conception oflaw implies just laws, made by popular
sovereignty, for the common good of the people. Cicero insisted that such
laws must serve ... defense of
the public good.
19
The rule oflaw
The third traditional desideratum of republican government requires the
rule oflaw (“the empire of laws and not of men”), which protects justice
and ... United States of
Republican Legal Theory
The History, Constitution and Purposes
of Law in a Free State
M.N.S. Sellers
Regents Professor of the University System of Maryland and
Director of the Center...
... conception of the rule of law.
In short, at the level of legal theory, the explanatory contest is between
asubstantive conception of the rule oflaw and a more formal one, which
equates rule by law ... conception of the
rule oflaw has to find a way of coordinating the roles of the judiciary
and the other branches of government, when the latter are productively
engaged in the rule -of- law project.
Butwhat ... itself to the constitutional principles of the rule of law, whether
or not it articulates those principles in a bill of rights.
Law presupposes the rule of law, in the substantive sense. Therefore,
if...
... claims
that the rule oflaw does not apply to some ordinary exercises of official
discretion. In addition, in seeing why ordinary exercises of official dis-
cretion are subject to the rule of law, we can ... the rule of law. Chapter 4,‘Theunityof
public law , weaves the threads of the entire argument of the book together
viaadiscussion of the relationship between international human rights
law and ... conception of the rule of law.
In short, at the level of legal theory, the explanatory contest is between
asubstantive conception of the rule oflaw and a more formal one, which
equates rule by law...
... of the
pattern for chancel screens at that time. It is perhaps worthy of note that the use of the
39
relegated to the margins of main sculptures or to parts of the structure that were of ... element of
interlace is in the form of a knot of a pattern that we have already discussed.
Besalu, Sant Vicenc – Detail of capital on South door
The addition of a small element of interlace ... on South wall of choir
One of the finest examples of interlace that is probably from the Carolingian period is to
be seen on a cross that is from the top of the West façade of the church...
... are conserved features of
a number of archaeal originsof replication and this
has allowed the prediction of the localization of repli-
cation origins in a diverse range of archaea. Interest-
ingly, ... position of the origin of replica-
tion in Pyrococcus, providing the first experimental
proof of a localized origin of replication in the archaea
[52]. Interestingly, in a situation reminiscent of that ... been learnt about the nature of initiators
and originsof replication, particularly in simple model
systems. However, many of the molecular details of
the basis of origin selection remain poorly...
... beyond mere recounting of data and
towards an understanding of the role of sport in the creation of class culture and,
Int roduct i on xv
Halifax walked off the pitch in the midst of a game at Heckmondwike ... a customs
officer and a future Justice of the Peace.
37
The narrowness of the social strata upo n which these clubs were based can
also be seen from the family relationships of many of the clubs’ ... the creation of the sport of rugby
league.
Yet despite a growing body of scholarly research into the history of sport,
Renan’s remark remains irritatingly true, and especially so of rugby union....
... Ashoka’s wheel represents to us the wheel of the Law, the wheel of the
Dharma. Truth can be gained only by the pursuit of the path of Dharma,by
the practise of virtue Italso tells us that Dharma ... the
concern of this book, it is as if a “wall of separation” has shielded both
scholarly and judicial analysis of constitutional issues from the experience
of other polities. As a result, too often ... of the
representational pattern, which suggests the centrality of the Jewish peo-
ple to the meaning of Israeli nationhood. The Declaration of Independence
refers to the “self-evident right of...