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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Analysis Of New Approaches To Civil Legal Security For Loan Obligations, Nurillo Imomov
Analysis Of New Approaches To Civil Legal Security For Loan Obligations, Nurillo Imomov
Review of law sciences
The article analyzes the need and specific features of “security transactions” as ways to ensure the fulfillment of obligations not specified in the Civil Code. It also explores new approaches to ensuring the fulfillment of obligations and proposes judgments in this area.
The Unmet Legal Needs Of The Poor In Maine: Is Mandatory Pro Bono The Answer?, Wendy F. Rau
The Unmet Legal Needs Of The Poor In Maine: Is Mandatory Pro Bono The Answer?, Wendy F. Rau
Maine Law Review
In 1989, the Maine Commission on Legal Needs was formed to study the civil legal needs of Maine's poor population and to develop a plan for meeting those needs. Similar projects have been undertaken in a number of other states and by the American Bar Association in recent years. Each study has revealed a significant unmet need among the poor for assistance with legal problems. There seems little doubt that the situation is serious and widespread. The difficulty lies in finding a solution. One proposal that has been advanced is mandatory pro bono, a program that would require attorneys to …
Digital Civil Turnover: A Targeted And Conceptual Scientific And Theoretical Approach, Sh. Ruzinazarov
Digital Civil Turnover: A Targeted And Conceptual Scientific And Theoretical Approach, Sh. Ruzinazarov
Review of law sciences
This article examines the role and importance of civilian science and a new trend in fundamental research in their priority areas. In it, based on the scientific direction of the digital economy, the conclusions and proposals on current problems of civil law are justified.
Borrowing American Ideas To Improve Chinese Tort Law, Yongxia Wang
Borrowing American Ideas To Improve Chinese Tort Law, Yongxia Wang
St. Mary's Law Journal
As China develops its modern jurisprudence it faces a choice between emulating the legal frameworks of civil law countries or common law countries. Thus far, the civil law path has allowed for a rapid expansion of Chinese tort law, but jurists have found difficulty in applying such generalized statutory schemes with the absence of supporting judicial interpretation. Cognizant of the differences between the public policy of common law countries and China, Vincent Johnson’s Mastering Torts (Měiguó Qīnquán Fǎ) provides this guidance through the lens of American tort law. The hornbook takes care to simplify the role of judicial …
Private And Public Law, Thomas W. Merrill
Private And Public Law, Thomas W. Merrill
Faculty Scholarship
This chapter explores the relationship between private and public law. In civil law countries, the public-private distinction serves as an organizing principle of the entire legal system. In common law jurisdictions, the distinction is at best an implicit design principle and is used primarily as an informal device for categorizing different fields of law. Even if not explicitly recognized as an organizing principle, however, it is plausible that private and public law perform distinct functions. Private law supplies the tools that make private ordering possible — the discretionary decisions that individuals make in structuring their lives. Public law is concerned …
Transplanting Fair Use Across The Globe: A Case Study Testing The Credibility Of U.S. Opposition, Niva Elkin-Koren, Neil Weinstock Netanel
Transplanting Fair Use Across The Globe: A Case Study Testing The Credibility Of U.S. Opposition, Niva Elkin-Koren, Neil Weinstock Netanel
Joint PIJIP/TLS Research Paper Series
No abstract provided.