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In: Discussion paper series 6912
In: Industrial organization
In: The Ashgate international law series
Presenting fresh perspectives on a range of contemporary issues in international law, this book draws on the work of major contributors to legal and political theory. Arguing that international law lacks the vocabulary to deal with the collective dimension and therefore perpetuates an individualistic vocabulary, it develops and articulates a more appropriate collective approach for public international law. In doing so, it reframes longstanding problems such as the conflict between self-determination and the integrity of states and the effects and the limits of state sovereignty in an increasi.
In: IDS bulletin, Volume 32, Issue 1, p. 28-34
ISSN: 0265-5012, 0308-5872
World Affairs Online
In: Law Society of Ireland manual
In: Common Market Law Review, Volume 29, Issue 1, p. 29-70
ISSN: 0165-0750
In: Common Market Law Review, Volume 12, Issue 1, p. 77-90
ISSN: 0165-0750
International law principles enable a rationalisation of the values to which the Union order aspires as a collective political and legal commitment amongst the Member States. The doctrine of Union law supremacy, which parallels that of international law supremacy, emphasises the overriding character of Union legal demands as a set of values and objectives over those of purely domestic origin. A common view that the Union legal order is sui generis or municipal in character fails to explain the directing character of the values underlying the Union project including its legal order. In this article I therefore explore and defend the view that the Union legal order is essentially one of international law. A central contention in this regard is that the supremacy of Union law obligations within the Member States is based on the principle of the supremacy of international law obligations over those originating in the domestic arena. The intensive rationalisation of this principle by the Court of Justice within its case law manages the intrusive domestic legal effects of the values and ideals found in the Union Treaties and illustrates the evolutionary character of the Union project.
BASE
"An accident happened in the North Sea and I need a complete overview of the rules regarding oil pollution at sea. I need to draft a legal advice for a financial institution on paperless trade finance. I wish to have the legal rules applicable to copyrights and trademarks at hand during my client's meeting. As a student, I wish to have one compendium in which the most important materials and legal provisions on (International) Commercial Law are gathered. For these and many more examples, one can rely on the Materials on Commercial Law. Indeed, this reader bundles in four volumes the most important materials - even those published by soft-law organisations and not always easy to access by the public - in the eclectic field of commercial law. The reader is user-friendly via its index at the beginning of each Volume. The legislative texts are categorized per legal domain."--
In: Law and Religion in the Roman Republic, p. 145-164
The characteristic features of modern banking law and its place in the national law. The structure of the legal system. Clarified the issue of banking relationship with the legal rights of the units : the rule of law, the institution of law, sub-sector and the field of law. Methods are defined with respect to the legal regulation of banking, such as a method of government regulations, administrative and regulate the power relations between the NBU and commercial banks, and the method of autonomy, that is, legal equality of the parties where applicable civil legal method of regulating social relations. defined legal acts regulating banking activity. Determined that the banking law is a complex interdisciplinary institute that combines norms of administrative, financial, civil and commercial law governing the relationship between the banks and corporations and individuals, as well as coordinate the relationship between the commercial banks and establish a procedure for submission of commercial banks to the National Bank of Ukraine
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In: Continuity and change: a journal of social structure, law and demography in past societies, Volume 17, Issue 3, p. 309-331
ISSN: 1469-218X
This article approaches the medieval law of theft from a 'functional' perspective. It seeks, that is, to consider the rules of law principally in relation to the social circumstances which give rise to them and upon which they, in turn, have an impact. Concentrating primarily upon material from England and Wales, the essay considers general issues of definition, jurisdiction and proof in the law of the middle ages before concentrating specifically upon the rules respecting theft. The ideas of manifest and non-manifest theft are explored in an attempt to discover why the law distinguished between them. Potential difficulties concerning the bringing of theft actions and the defences which might be offered to them are also examined and related to the practical world in which perpetrators and victims of theft found themselves. Finally, the possible tension between the satisfaction of the demands of the individual victim and the wider desire to maintain public order is investigated.
In: European foreign affairs review, Volume 15, Issue 2, p. 265-282
ISSN: 1384-6299
World Affairs Online