Here the mufti, or jurisconsult, appears to play a role remarkably similar to that of the roman jurist or contemporary European law professor. |
|
Undoubtedly, English law was imprecise on the matter of obscenity, and the jurist might well have found this irritating. |
|
Your Honour has an outstanding reputation as a jurist and someone who has already made a significant contribution to the law in Australia. |
|
He was nominated by the first President Bush, and has a solid record as a conservative jurist. |
|
Your Honour comes to the Bench with an outstanding reputation as a jurist and as an academic. |
|
Both aspects of the rule requires that the jurist be mindful of the general nature of the appeal. |
|
The position of the Federalist Party of President John Adams was that of the English jurist William Blackstone. |
|
The competition is in memory of Manfred Lachs, the renowned Polish educator, diplomat, jurist and space law expert. |
|
In fact, on the statue's plaque he's listed first as a jurist, and then as Premier. |
|
The opinion was written by Judge Randolph, a jurist who in my view would be a serious candidate for the Supreme Court but for his age. |
|
The new jurist, Superior Court Judge Trena Burger-Plavan, issued a ruling blocking the school district from moving ahead. |
|
The samithi has pointed out the need to appoint a jurist or a civil service officer as chairman of the Board. |
|
It is a valiant, encyclopedic attempt of a star jurist to give voice to an embattled philosophical position. |
|
Even if a judge believes that a brief offers a perfect expression of the law, copying it creates the perception that the jurist is sloppy, lazy, or intellectually moribund. |
|
When the Belgian Congo acquired its independence in 1960, the country did not have a single trained jurist. |
|
The jurist in me finds these cases very interesting and intellectually stimulating. |
|
The shortfall cannot be absorbed by the OPCV without another jurist position. |
|
The Honourable Peter de C. Cory, a former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, is a distinguished jurist of international repute. |
|
Her sharp legal acumen and dedication to impartial justice, coupled with her balance and grace, made her an eminently capable jurist. |
|
A jurist and political scientist, she has conducted various field surveys regarding the relations between migration and politics in France. |
|
|
His grandfather had served as governor of New Jersey, his father was a prominent jurist and New York assemblyman, and he quickly became a leading lawyer and socialite. |
|
Posner is generally believed to be the most prolific and most-quoted legal academic and jurist of his generation. |
|
In a celebrated passage the thirteenth-century French jurist Beaumanoir attributed servile status to anyone below the category of privileged townsman. |
|
Its influence was so significant in Italian legal and political circles that a fourteenth-century Bolognese jurist wrote a reference index to its contents. |
|
Having had an excellent career as a jurist, she became Liberia's first woman lawyer, then a professor of law and the first woman to be a member of her country's Supreme Court. |
|
It provides for the appointment of four codifiers who will examine the reports, opinions, proposed amendments and recommendations of the jurist appointed in 1955, and develop a definitive draft of a new Civil Code. |
|
It also gives the clearest picture of the type of jurist Kagan may become. |
|
The American jurist, Lon Fuller, warned us that one of the ways in which something can fail to be a legal system is if there is no congruence between legal rules and official action. |
|
Having taken holy orders, you continued your religious studies to university level and are now a jurist and doctor in canon law of the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. |
|
I gained because every day I was becoming a better jurist. |
|
His father, a jurist, was keenly interested in science and meteorology. |
|
He is independent from his client from the moment that he is a jurist, and responsible, and he will refuse to support or participate in any illegal cause. |
|
Professor Humphrey, a Canadian jurist, wrote the preliminary draft of the declaration while serving as the first director of the UN Human Rights Division. |
|
After the examination of the proposal has been finalised, jurist linguists will be asked to draft the amending Council Decision in an appropriate form. |
|
It's about time, argues former top U.N. jurist Geoffrey Robertson. |
|
Influential natives included patriot James Otis, historian and writer Mercy Otis Warren, jurist Lemuel Shaw, and naval officer John Percival. |
|
The General Assembly also decided that the fifth member would be a distinguished jurist chosen by consensus by the four other members and would chair the Internal Justice Council. |
|
As stated by Cicero, the great philosopher and jurist who explored the principles of our Western notion of law: True law is right reason in agreement with nature. |
|
Ambedkar was an astute political leader, prominent constitutionalist, jurist, economist, thinker and a transformational social reformer. |
|
Around AD 130 the jurist Salvius Iulianus drafted a standard form of the praetor's edict, which was used by all praetors from that time onwards. |
|
|
One of the two following praefecti was the famous jurist Aemilius Papinianus. |
|
Ambedkar, father of modern India, polymath, jurist, economist, politician and social reformer. |
|
For instance in one text the jurist or brithem had three ranks, and the highest was given an honour price only halfway up the other scales. |
|
Literary sources relate that Trajan had considered others, such as the jurist Lucius Neratius Priscus, as heir. |
|
He employed noted jurists to oversee the administration of justice, such as the famous jurist Ulpian. |
|
Marthinus Steyn, a prominent jurist and politician, and others were vocal in their opposition. |
|
Grimm's work as a jurist was influential for the development of the history of law, particularly in Northern Europe. |
|
The representatives of the Company then called Hugo Grotius, a jurist of the Dutch Republic, to draft a defence of the seizure. |
|
Despite his generally poor health, his intellectual grasp and wide knowledge and research gradually made him famous as a jurist and historian. |
|
Sir Edward Coke, a famed jurist whose judgements included seminal cases in corporate and competition law and the creation of judicial review. |
|
The Asterisk Rule contradicts everything I believe in as a jurist. |
|
Some classes of cases, such as intellectual property disputes, are heard by an individual judge designated by the Lord President as the jurist for intellectual property cases. |
|
English jurist Jeremy Bentham was a critic of Blackstone's theories. |
|
He was a respected jurist and his death will be a loss to the profession. |
|
Sir Edward Coke was one important early jurist who published a series of court reports during his tenure as chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas. |
|
An important early printed edition of the Chronicle appeared in 1692, by Edmund Gibson, an English jurist and divine who became Bishop of Lincoln in that year. |
|
A jurist who is qualified to practice ijtihad is known as a mujtahid. |
|
Because the judge was not a jurist or a legal technician, he often consulted a jurist about the technical aspects of the case, but he was not bound by the jurist's reply. |
|
Jacopo Riccati, who was also a jurist, invented the Riccati equation. |
|
In law, Andreas Alciatus infused the Corpus Juris with a humanist perspective, while Jacques Cujas humanist writings were paramount to his reputation as a jurist. |
|