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Inalienability of the crown: no one has the power to change the dynastic order.
And, (2) In what circumstances should a property, liability or inalienability rule be used to protect an entitlement?
Aboriginal title is one example of inalienability (save to the Crown) in common law jurisdictions.
The "learning of feuds" started with the inalienability of the fief as a starting point.
The final entitlement the authors consider in the article is an entitlement protected by an inalienability rule.
In the German Enlightenment, Hegel gave a highly developed treatment of this inalienability argument.
Various definitions of inalienability include non-relinquishability, non-salability, and non-transferability.
Currently, different representations of organs and other body parts coexist blurring the lines between alienability and inalienability.
Some argue that inalienability means that assets held in trust are not actually assets of the organisation that holds them.
Pierre Rosenberg, the chief curator at the Louvre, also stressed "the absolute rule of the inalienability of patrimony."
The primary thesis of the article focuses on the notion of "entitlements," or rights, which can be protected by either property, liability, or inalienability rules.
An important notion in Mauss' conceptualisation of gift exchange is what Gregory (1982, 1997) refers to as "inalienability".
"They should be," he spieked, "but on Xanadu, Kuat has found a way around that inalienability.
Austrian School economist and libertarian legal theorist Walter Block has criticized Barnett's arguments for the inalienability of certain rights.
Doctrines reinforcing the tendencies of a centralizing monarchy, such as that of the inalienability of royal property and rights, were speedily picked up.
The most notable provisions of the Act regulate the inalienability of aboriginal title in the United States, a continuing source of litigation for almost 200 years.
Inalienability, semantically can be described as the relationship held between an animate possessor and an aspect of this possessor which can't exist independently of that being.
Like Hutcheson, Hegel based the theory of inalienable rights on the de facto inalienability of those aspects of personhood that distinguish persons from things.
The so-called amortization laws (against the traditional inalienability of tenure on the part of religious corporations) remained only a threat, though the Government reserved the right to establish such legislation.
An important section deals with the inalienability of ecclesiastical property; a more vigorous repression of Arianism is demanded, though the return of individuals to the Church is made easy.
"Inalienability: A Note on Canonical Practice and the English Coronation Oath in the Thirteenth Century," Speculum, Vol.
Although the Bill intends to allow the transfer of items in the collections from one public body to another and the disposal of objects under certain conditions, it reaffirms the principle of inalienability.
When using the term to describe a developmental process, one starts with a relatively undifferentiated and unselfconscious subject such as a baby, or with a society which preserves a relatively high degree of cultural inalienability.
The de facto inalienability arguments of the Hutcheson and his predecessors provided the basis for the anti-slavery movement to argue not simply against involuntary slavery but against any explicit or implied contractual forms of slavery.
To solve the second problem, libertarian Christians hold to a "property-interest" theory of contracts that allows for the alienation of interests in labor and actions, even though they agree with Rothbard regarding the inalienability of the human will.