Studies in History and Jurisprudence, Količina 1Oxford University Press, American Branch, 1901 - 926 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 43
Stran 12
... ordinary civil society occu- pied with the works and arts of peace , with an extremely small military element . It is military society , military first and foremost , though with an infusion of civilian officials , and in some towns ...
... ordinary civil society occu- pied with the works and arts of peace , with an extremely small military element . It is military society , military first and foremost , though with an infusion of civilian officials , and in some towns ...
Stran 30
... ordinary way . There are also many differences in the administrative systems of the different Presidencies and other territories , besides of course all imaginable diversities in the amount of independence left to the different ' Pro ...
... ordinary way . There are also many differences in the administrative systems of the different Presidencies and other territories , besides of course all imaginable diversities in the amount of independence left to the different ' Pro ...
Stran 116
... ordinary rights of British subjects enjoyed under such statutes as Magna Charta and the Bill of Rights . The natives of India have entered into the labours of the barons at Runnymede and of the Whigs of 1688 . What has happened has been ...
... ordinary rights of British subjects enjoyed under such statutes as Magna Charta and the Bill of Rights . The natives of India have entered into the labours of the barons at Runnymede and of the Whigs of 1688 . What has happened has been ...
Stran 128
... ordinary laws . We may provisionally call these two types the Old and the New , because all ancient and mediaeval as ... ordinary laws of the State , and to the ordinary authority which enacts those laws . Some constitutions , including ...
... ordinary laws . We may provisionally call these two types the Old and the New , because all ancient and mediaeval as ... ordinary laws of the State , and to the ordinary authority which enacts those laws . Some constitutions , including ...
Stran 129
... ordinary laws ; and they are promulgated or repealed in the same way as ordinary laws . In such cases the term ' Constitution ' denotes nothing more than such and so many of the statutes and customs of the country as deter- mine the ...
... ordinary laws ; and they are promulgated or repealed in the same way as ordinary laws . In such cases the term ' Constitution ' denotes nothing more than such and so many of the statutes and customs of the country as deter- mine the ...
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Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
action Alping altered amendments America ancient assembly authority become belong body British called centrifugal forces centripetal forces century character cities citizens civil Code codifying colonies Common Law conquered conquest Consti course Courts created Crown customs democracy dominions effect enacted England English law Europe European exist fact Federal Flexible Constitution frame of government France Gaul German German Empire Goði groups habits Hindu Hinduism Iceland India influence instance Italy King Kingdom land legislation legislature less magistrate mass matters ment monarchy Musulman nation native law Norsemen Norway ordinary Parliament party passed persons ping political popular population present principles provinces provisions races religion Republic respect Rigid Constitution Roman Empire Roman law Rome rules Scotland seems sentiment South South Africa statutes subjects tendencies territories tion Tocqueville tutions Union United United Kingdom unity usage vote whole
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 436 - But' no alteration diminishing the proportionate representation of any State in either House of the Parliament, or the minimum number of representatives of a State in the House of Representatives, or increasing, diminishing or otherwise altering the limits of the State, shall become law unless the majority of the electors voting in that State approve the proposed law
Stran 316 - I hold with Montesquieu that a government must be fitted to a nation as much as a coat to the Individual; and consequently that what may be good at Philadelphia may be bad at Paris and ridiculous at Petersburg!!.
Stran 309 - It is against the enterprising ambition of this department that the People ought to Indulge all their jealousy and exhaust all their precautions
Stran 121 - between the laws of different countries may in that department continue, or even that new divergences may appear. Still, on the whole, the progress of the world is towards uniformity in law, and towards a more evident uniformity than is discoverable either in the sphere of religious beliefs or in that of political institutions.
Stran 398 - of coloured races (especially Chinese, Malays, and Indian coolies). The gain to suitors from the establishment of a High Court to entertain appeals and avoid the expense and delay involved in carrying cases to the Privy Council in England. The probability that money could be borrowed more easily on the credit of
Stran 91 - In Lithuania the rule was that where no express provision could be found governing a case, recourse should be had to ' the Christian laws.' Speaking generally, one may say that it was by and with Christianity that Roman law made its way in the countries to the east of Germany and to the north of the Eastern Empire.
Stran 31 - Finance was the standing difficulty of the Roman as it is of the Anglo-Indian administrator. Indeed, the Roman Empire may be said to have perished from want of revenue. Heavy taxation, and possibly the exhaustion of the soil, led to the abandonment of farms, reducing the rent derivable from the land. The terrible
Stran 309 - extending the sphere of it* activity and drawing all power into its impetuous vortex. . . . It is against the enterprising ambition of this department that the People ought to Indulge all their jealousy and exhaust all their precautions
Stran 300 - one written at the very birth of the Union by those who watched its cradle, and recording incidentally, and therefore all the more faithfully, the impressions and anticipations of the friends and enemies of the
Stran 74 - This was a large class, and went on rapidly increasing. To it pure Roman law was applicable, subject of course to any local customs. The other class consisted of the provincial subjects who were merely subjects, and, in the view of the Roman law, aliens