The important thing now is to dump the tribunals before yet more taxpayers' money is squandered. |
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It is well established that all persons presiding over adjudicative tribunals owe a duty of fairness to the parties who appear before them. |
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The cited Code provisions govern the jurisdictional and procedural aspects of military tribunals. |
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Any remote relationship to terrorism will get you involved in one of these tribunals. |
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The Competition Authority has welcomed the government's decision to require lawyers to submit tenders for work in future tribunals of inquiry. |
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The legality of what they do must be subject to review by independent and impartial tribunals. |
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Parents whose children have been rejected from their preferred schools can apply to appeals tribunals for the decision to reviewed. |
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The arbitral tribunals, and the labour market legislation under which the tribunals operate, greatly facilitate that process. |
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Were he at the centre of power today it would be little different, the tribunals notwithstanding. |
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If tribunals were to be at liberty to exceed their jurisdiction without any check by the courts, the rule of law would be at an end. |
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You said the other night on the show, that the president doesn't need congressional authority to use these military tribunals. |
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Some of the tribunals are still in session, and we don't yet know what nasty shocks await us. |
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Just before Thanksgiving, Senate majority leader Tom Daschle ducked questions about the military tribunals. |
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The US is planning to introduce secret military tribunals which can impose the death penalty. |
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I call upon all secularist forces and freedom-lovers to stand up and protest against the setting up of these tribunals in Canada. |
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The sooner the military tribunals begin to weed out the terrorists the better. |
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The jurisdictional powers of the courts and arbitral tribunals are fundamentally different. |
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We see the employment and disputes tribunals, which adopt their own rules of evidence. |
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Some commentators have also expressed scepticism about the international courts, tribunals and committees which pronounce upon human rights. |
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So we're looking at international tribunals such as the International Court of Justice or the UN Standing Committee on Torture. |
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In such cases, trial court judgments may be reviewed by appellate tribunals, with the Supreme Court having final judgment. |
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That freedom necessarily extends to the workings of the courts and tribunals which administer and enforce the laws of this country. |
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One sees, of course, that there are sometimes decisions of the International Court and of tribunals and they have a greater status. |
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One of its first orders is to set up special tribunals to try members of the former regime. |
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Frequently these tribunals were tripartite, one member appointed by each party to the dispute and the third pursuant to a stated procedure. |
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When the tribunals begin, foreign experts can act as observers and monitors. |
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Would you expect international and national tribunals to act differently in these respects? |
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It is implicit that both tribunals have set the bar too low in terms of the standard of care. |
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Government inquiries and judicial tribunals have heaped further ordure upon this most conservative of professions. |
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She sits as a recorder and she is also a part-time chairperson of employment tribunals. |
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It asks whether cameras should be allowed in Crown Court, magistrates' courts, the civil courts, appeal courts and others such as tribunals. |
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This duty of a commanding officer has heretofore been recognized, and its breach penalized by our own military tribunals. |
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The analysts and political commentators say the tribunals are a fact-finding mission, but the reality is that they are glorified public trials. |
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The Council is also concerned about the previous government's proposals to increase fees for land tribunals. |
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Our tort system is dominated by vague standards and enforced by dispersed tribunals of inexpert jurors. |
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One task that it assumed became the supervisory jurisdiction of inferior courts and tribunals. |
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Judicial review is available as a remedy for mistakes of law made by inferior courts and tribunals only. |
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The coup failed, and 69 accused coup plotters were later executed after secret trials before military tribunals. |
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The commission will introduce tribunals to review automatically the detention of involuntary patients in November. |
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Whatever problems one might have with military tribunals, is it really possible to gainsay the White House response on this one? |
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But the culture of deceit, fraud and corruption at different levels of society is never going to be eradicated by tribunals. |
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By the time the war ended, Riefenstahl had yet to edit the film and it was impounded during the denazification tribunals. |
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England said that the tribunals will hear cases from as many as four detainees a day, six days a week. |
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He urged military tribunals, disfavored any civilian participation and even opposed giving defendants a presumption of innocence. |
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The Admiral had refused to listen to anything Marcus said, and eventually Marcus had been dismissed and ordered back for the tribunals. |
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The judge said none of the detainees had a reasonable expectation of privacy during the tribunals. |
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On the surface, the rwandan mode of reconciliation, enacted through customary Gacaca tribunals, appears to have restored harmony. |
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Community pressure remains in practice the only real sanction for enforcing compliance with arbitral awards, or with judgments of the ICJ or other international tribunals. |
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Then we each can hold war crimes tribunals and let justice prevail. |
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It is encouraging that various instruments, including war crimes tribunals and the International Court of Justice, have been put in place to address and redress past wrongs. |
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It is probably there that the reference to legal services to be provided in proceedings in federal courts and tribunals would need to be inserted. |
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Jurisdiction and natural justice invoke the primordial instinct of courts to second guess other tribunals and thus defeat the greatest benefit of arbitration, its finality. |
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In effect, what the critics of military tribunals would have the President do is turn enemy belligerents over to civilian law enforcement authorities for prosecution. |
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He said the commission would be endeavouring to reduce the number of committals before five tribunals began overseeing involuntary admissions in the middle of next year. |
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Apart from enriching a bevy of lawyers, the tribunals have yielded little. |
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Next, Labour established, in law, binding Sharia tribunals that Muslims could attend instead of normal British courts. |
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This forced the federal government to give up interference with the legal proceedings and the tribunals ended up acquitting us from the crimes we were accused of. |
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In any event, the image of military tribunals as drumhead courts manned by stony-faced officers ready to convict regardless of the evidence is a fantasy. |
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Instead of only being able to offer advice, staff with legal training will now be able to represent complainants in tribunals and county court cases. |
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Military tribunals may not try U.S. citizens or lawful resident aliens. |
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These tribunals will live under a cloud as long as these questions linger. |
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Everyone has the right to equality before the courts and tribunals of law. |
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This left us a legacy of legal straitjackets which have, in their way, contributed to the climate of sleaze, greed and corruption which has lumbered us with costly tribunals. |
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So there is an envelopment of law around the exercise of these tribunals. |
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After the Second World War eminent surviving German and Japanese civilian and military figures were arraigned on criminal charges before international tribunals. |
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He has at least publicly favoured proper trials over drumhead tribunals. |
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To begin with, creative lawmaking by unrepresentative tribunals seems undemocratic and almost certain to yield unpedigreed outcomes. |
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If still unsatisfied, the candidate could approach tribunals set by ECP to readdress such complaints within 120 days, said the Secretary. |
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He did not go to the police and cover the calumniator with infamy before the tribunals. |
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The Roman Curia has two other tribunals which either deal with specialized cases or which do not deal with cases at all. |
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There are several tribunals that have jurisdiction over either the whole United Kingdom, or over Great Britain. |
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The Court of Appeal deals only with appeals from other courts or tribunals. |
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Case law, in common law jurisdictions, is the set of decisions of adjudicatory tribunals or other rulings that can be cited as precedent. |
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The division hears cases from the High Court of Justice, County Courts and several tribunals. |
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In several Australian states, tribunals function as the equivalent of a small claims court. |
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These tribunals are administered by Her Majesty's Courts and Tribunals Service. |
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There are also a number of specialist courts and tribunals that have been created to hear specific types of disputes. |
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The Court of Appeal hears appeals from the Crown Court, High Court, county courts, courts of summary jurisdiction and tribunals. |
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First among these were the audiencias, which were primarily superior tribunals, but which also had administrative and legislative functions. |
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Following the Finnish Civil War of 1918, the Parliament of Finland passed a law setting up tribunals to try suspected rebels. |
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During the war, and before the tribunals were set up, thousands of people had been executed without trial by both sides. |
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These include the military tribunals in the United States and tribunals used in Australia to try health professionals. |
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There are several specialist tribunals in Scotland which often have exclusive jurisdiction over cases relevant to their remit. |
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Other former functions of primates, such as hearing appeals from metropolitan tribunals, were reserved to the Holy See by the early 20th century. |
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Congress has also created some special judicial bodies known as Article I tribunals to handle some areas of administrative law. |
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In the statement, Moroni said the organization was aware that complaints had been filed with church tribunals. |
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International environmental law also includes the opinions of international courts and tribunals. |
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Unlike courts of common law tradition, ecclesiastical tribunals do not follow the adversarial system. |
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Lekgotla were tribunals consisting of seniors in the neighbourhood who presided over disagreements and rendered a verdict. |
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This principle embodies the basic concept of impartiality, and applies to courts of law, tribunals, arbitrators and all those having the duty to act judicially. |
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Other institutions of the judiciary are the Federal Electoral Tribunal, collegiate, unitary and district tribunals, and the Council of the Federal Judiciary. |
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The result of the replacement of lex mercatoria codes with national governed codes was the loss of autonomy of merchant tribunals to state courts. |
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Beside this, Article 117 of the Constitution Of The People's Republic of Bangladesh empowers the parliament to set up one or more administrative tribunals. |
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At the same time, the actual effects of adjunctive tribunals on health services are disputed, as little evidence exists to evaluate their efficacy. |
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For instance tribunals dealing with minor traffic violations at the New York City Traffic Violations Bureau are held before an adjudicator who also functions as a prosecutor. |
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Final appeal from both Sharia courts and government tribunals is to the King and all courts and tribunals follow Sharia rules of evidence and procedure. |
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The opera's plot, which deals with the secret Vehmic tribunals during the Middle Ages in Germany, reflects the contemporary interest in Gothic subject matter. |
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By mid-2006, Australia thus remained one of the few foreign nations that still accepted the legality of Guantanamo's endless detention and drumhead tribunals. |
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Common law is the body of law developed from the thirteenth century to the present day, as case law or precedent, by judges, courts, and similar tribunals. |
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With the help of local tribunals, such as in Venice, the two institutions investigated a woman's religious behaviors when she was accused of witchcraft. |
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It also oversees the work of other ecclesiastical tribunals at all levels. |
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