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He exerted great influence on the law institutions of his time.
People should not assume that things are always better if they are done by a public law institution.
The workhouse was a poor law institution.
That is, all the rest of the Spanish Civil Law institutions are in force, particularly the intestate succession.
Highcroft Hospital was a former Poor Law institution, then a Psychiatric hospital.
"It proposed an institutional separation so that mental defectives should be taken out of Poor Law institutions and prisons into newly established colonies."
Since the National Assistance Act 1948 replaced the Poor Law institutions with local authority residential homes, there have been changes of emphasis.
His dissertation had an emphasis on philosophy, defending utilitarianism against Kant's rationalism and posing that in general well-being should be the final goal of every law institution.
Partnerships were a common law phenomenon, dating back to the Roman law institution of a societas universorum quae ex quaestu veniunt, or a trade partnership.
This is a poor law institution!'.a poor law institution in which the patient is charged nearly £3 weekly!'
At that time it was officially known as the 'Poor Law Institution', although the sick wards there had been distinguished as St. Peter's Hospital for some years.
James Cameron brought his years of experience at building environmental law institutions and led the GETS work on climate change, the interplay of international tribunals, and the precautionary principle.
The university serves as the educational center of law in the northwest part of China and as one of the key bases of law institutions of higher learning in China.
The Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) is a public law institution that supervises most banking-related activities as well as securities markets and investment funds.
In the eyes of elderly people many NHS hospitals were still Poor Law institutions, since many had been built originally as workhouses and had not changed a great deal in appearance.
In 1966, Brown graduated with his Juris Doctor degree from the Louisiana State University Law Center, where he studied under Paul M. Hebert, the namesake of the law institution.
In 1886, arguing that mechanisation inevitably reduced demand for labour, and by creating unemployment it then reduced the market for goods, in a vicious cycle that could not be solved by existing Poor Law institutions.
Earlier in the century the Metropolitan Asylums Board (MAB) had been established under the Metropolitan Poor Act 1867 to deal with London's sick poor, run as a Poor Law institution.
The Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (IIT Kharagpur or IIT KGP) is a public engineering, management and law institution established by the government of India in 1951.
There is nothing to suggest that a link with the County Hospital was ever contemplated; the proposed collaboration was evidently to be with other poor law institutions only, and the initial approach was made in fact to the North Evington Infirmary in Leicester.
Unenumerated rights are legal rights inferred from other legal rights that are officiated in a retrievable form codified by law institutions, such as in written constitutions, but are not themselves expressly coded or "enumerated" among the explicit writ of the law.
An Anglophone, common law institution, the Faculty is known for its Centre for Constitutional Studies and Health Law Institute, and widely respected for the breadth and depth of instruction it provides in the fundamentals of Canadian law.
The Spaniard King Phillip V by means of the New Jurisdictional Decrees abolished the main part of both Public Law institutions and sources in the Spanish regions of Aragon, Valencia, Cataluña and the Balearic Islands.
"The Governance and Rule of Law Programme responds directly to three of the four outcome areas outlined in the new country programme: capacity-building for peace and human security, strengthened governance and rule of law institutions, systems, practices and services, and gender equality."
Plans for a workhouse hospital were submitted in 1845, and in 1871 the Local Government Board approved a plan for an infectious diseases hospital (known first as the Poor Law Institution, and later until 1929, the Coventry Poor Law Hospital) at the workhouse.
Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He exerted great influence on the law institutions of his time.
People should not assume that things are always better if they are done by a public law institution.
He was also president of the Turkish Law Institution for 15 years.
The workhouse was a poor law institution.
'London' was dropped from the title in 1825 to reflect the fact that the Law Institution had national aspirations.
That is, all the rest of the Spanish Civil Law institutions are in force, particularly the intestate succession.
Highcroft Hospital was a former Poor Law institution, then a Psychiatric hospital.
By 1929 the workhouse had become officially known as Axbridge Poor Law Institution.
"It proposed an institutional separation so that mental defectives should be taken out of Poor Law institutions and prisons into newly established colonies."
Since the National Assistance Act 1948 replaced the Poor Law institutions with local authority residential homes, there have been changes of emphasis.
CU Law Faculty is considered as the best law Institution among the students of Bangladesh.
Later that month, Dr. Harvey Goldsmith who had been appointed medical officer to the Poor Law Institution in 1900, resigned.
His dissertation had an emphasis on philosophy, defending utilitarianism against Kant's rationalism and posing that in general well-being should be the final goal of every law institution.
Partnerships were a common law phenomenon, dating back to the Roman law institution of a societas universorum quae ex quaestu veniunt, or a trade partnership.
This is a poor law institution!'.a poor law institution in which the patient is charged nearly £3 weekly!'
In 1913 the Poor Law Institutions Order prohibited children between the ages of three and sixteen from remaining in a general mixed workhouse for more than six weeks.
In 1834 he was appointed to deliver lectures on the public records at the Law Institution, and in 1853 an auditor of the Incorporated Law Society.
In November of 1924 the House Committee submitted a special report to the Board concerning the difficulty of obtaining suitable nurses for the Poor Law Institution.
At that time it was officially known as the 'Poor Law Institution', although the sick wards there had been distinguished as St. Peter's Hospital for some years.
James Cameron brought his years of experience at building environmental law institutions and led the GETS work on climate change, the interplay of international tribunals, and the precautionary principle.
He was present at the first annual meeting of the Law Institution on 5 June 1827, and was instrumental in obtaining a royal charter of incorporation for it in January 1832.
The university serves as the educational center of law in the northwest part of China and as one of the key bases of law institutions of higher learning in China.
The Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) is a public law institution that supervises most banking-related activities as well as securities markets and investment funds.
In the eyes of elderly people many NHS hospitals were still Poor Law institutions, since many had been built originally as workhouses and had not changed a great deal in appearance.
The first drew attention to the position of deaf and dumb inmates of Poor Law Institutions and called for an enquiry into numbers involved and the best method of dealing with them.
"We are turning to the legal institutions of the party to look into this."
On one hand, judges can increase general understanding of the law and legal institutions.
As such, it exercised control over all legal institutions and officials throughout Russia.
Or is there something else to this idea of excellence at an academic legal institution?
But even in a free trade region like the United States, different legal institutions matter.
In fact, the legal institution of the imperial diet appeared much later.
It may also enhance our understanding of contemporary legal institutions and practices.
He believed the federal government had no power to regulate a legal institution, which slavery then was.
Constitutional government restored the faith of the Haitian people in legal institutions.
Nor because legal institutions intend to or will ever admit to violating human rights.
The case exposed deep mistrust in the black community about winning justice from legal institutions.
Especially against the decision issued unilaterally and awkward legal institutions.
Legal institutions, critical pedagogy, and minority lawyers in the bar.
It conducts objective empirical research on law and legal institutions.
His initial military involvement was in 1851, in defence of legal institutions.
"They're not doing enough programs that take into consideration the culture, the education and legal institutions that are here."
In the meantime, he was also engaged at the international arbitration courts and legal institutions.
And it may discourage social scientists from the difficult but important work of studying legal institutions."
Yet the trust was a new legal institution, developed only in Augustus' reign.
Rule of law depends on legitimacy of political and legal institutions.
Why would the leadership want more meaningful legal institutions in China, more law and lawyers?
He is a frequent commentator about the role of the media and legal institutions in preventing torture.
While economic reforms were welcomed by most of the population, the new legal institutions, are still unsupported.
"The legal institutions must emphasise protection for social and political stability," Liang said.
Many of the legal institutions follow the same organizational structure as the UN.
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