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In: Oceana's legal almanac series
In: Law for the layperson
Administration and law -- The immigration department -- Administrative policy-making : the hostile environment policy and windrush -- Administrative rules and guidance -- Caseworking -- Redress and legal challenges -- Immigration enforcement -- Judicial review : norms and pragmatism -- Bureaucratic oppression.
In: (2021) 12 William & Mary Business Law Review 685
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Working paper
In: Buffalo Law Review Vol. 68, No. 2, 2020
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In: Religion, Law, and the Constitution, Foundation Press, 2016
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In: Penn State Law Research Paper No. 17-2013
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Working paper
In: (2011) 66 Australian Institute of Administrative Law 18.
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In: S. Erugo, Introduction to Nigerian Labour Law, 2004
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In: Encyclopedia of American Law (Facts on File, 2002)
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In: 4 Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum 1 (1994)
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In: Netherlands international law review: NILR ; international law - conflict of laws, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 79
ISSN: 1741-6191
"This report describes the results of the Law Enforcement Futuring Workshop, which was held at RAND's Washington Office in Arlington, Virginia, from July 22 to 25, 2014. The objective of this workshop was to identify high-priority technology needs for law enforcement based on consideration of current and future trends in society, technology, and law enforcement over a ten- to 20-year time period. During the workshop, participants developed sets of future scenarios, constructed pathways from the present to alternative futures, and considered how law enforcement use of technology might affect these pathways. They then identified technology needs (including training and changes in policies or practice) that, if addressed, could enable pathways to desirable futures or prevent or mitigate the effects of pathways to undesirable futures. On the final days of the workshop, the technology needs were prioritized using a Delphi method. The output of this workshop described in the report included ten future scenarios and 30 technology needs. The technology needs fell into three general categories--technology-related knowledge and practice, information sharing and use, and technology research and development--and were placed into three priority tiers"--Back cover
"Men have always dominated the most basic precepts of the criminal legal world - its norms, its priorities and its character. Men have been the regulators and the regulated: the main subjects and objects of criminal law and by far the more dangerous sex. And yet men, as men, are still hardly talked about as the determining force within criminal law or in its exegesis. This book brings men into sharp focus, as the pervasively powerful interest group, whose wants and preoccupations have shaped the discipline. This constitutes the 'man problem' of criminal law. This new analysis probes the unacknowledged thinking of generations of influential legal men, which includes the psychological and legal techniques that have obscured the operation of bias, even to the legal experts themselves. It explains how men's interests have influenced the most cherished legal norms, especially the rules of human contact, which were designed to protect men from other men, while specifically securing lawful sexual access to at least one woman. The aim is to test the discipline's broadest commitments to civility, and its trajectory towards the final resolution, when men and women were declared to be equal and equivalent legal persons. In the process it exposes the morally and intellectually limiting consequences of male power."--Bloomsbury Publishing