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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Probate Court (Union County)"

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Underwood, Julie. „Under the Law“. Phi Delta Kappan 99, Nr. 8 (30.04.2018): 76–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0031721718775687.

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In Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, the U.S. Supreme Court will determine whether unions can compel non-union members to pay “fair share” fees to offset the cost of collective bargaining. Julie Underwood reviews past Supreme Court cases and state law involving union fees.
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Tilden, Samuel J. „Ethical and Legal Aspects of Using an Identical Twin as a Skin Transplant Donor for a Severely Burned Minor“. American Journal of Law & Medicine 31, Nr. 1 (März 2005): 87–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009885880503100103.

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On January 7, 2003, Sydney Cowan, a healthy six-year-old girl, underwent skin harvesting, specifically to be used for her badly burned identical twin sister, Jennifer. A day earlier, the Probate Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, after considering whether a healthy minor twin sibling could serve as a skin donor for her severely burned sister, authorized parental consent to the surgery. More accurately, the court addressed whether Sydney could undergo surgical procedures that provided her with no physical benefit, but, rather, resulted in harmful effects, such as acute postoperative pain, permanent residua, and potential long-term emotional and psychological dysfunction.Although the transplants were extraordinarily successful, and the newspaper article depicted Sydney's participation in heroic terms, the harvesting of Sydney's skin was ethically problematic. Specifically, I assert that the use of an incompetent minor as a skin transplant donor, even if an identical twin, is not justified unless the transplant will save the recipient's life.
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Howitt, Pamela S., und Eugene Arthur Moore. „Chapter 3: The Efficacy of Intensive Early Intervention An Evaluation of the Oakland County Probate Court Early Offender Program“. Juvenile and Family Court Journal 42, Nr. 3 (August 1991): 25–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-6988.1991.tb00892.x.

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Даминова, Насия, und Nasiya Daminova. „OPINION 2/13 OF THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION: ANALYSIS AND FURTHER PERSPECTIVES OF EUROPEAN UNION ACCESSION TO THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS“. Journal of Foreign Legislation and Comparative Law 1, Nr. 6 (07.02.2016): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/17170.

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This paper is devoted to the legal analysis of CJEU Opinion 2/13 on European Union accession to the European Convention on Human Rights. The article examines the CJEU’s approach to the interpretation of Art. 267 and 344 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union — in the light of Protocol No. 16 to the European Convention on Human Rights, as well as the previous case law of the Court of Justice (Mox Plant and Melki and Abdeli). The conclusions are drawn as to the manner in which Opinion 2/13 develops EU legal order autonomy doctrine and how it affects the future perspectives of EU accession to the European Convention on Human Rights. Firstly, while interpreting the content and purpose of Art. 344 TFEU, the CJEU gives a positive answer to the question as to whether the ECHR compliance system falls within the ambit of this Treaty provision. Secondly, the Court of Justice takes an extremely protective approach in giving its interpretation to the role of preliminary rulings procedure guaranteed by Art. 267 TFEU for the unity and efficiency of European law, making even the legal protection of individuals secondary to these purposes. It is quite probable that the accession will be delayed for an indefinite period of time — due to the likely impossibility of reaching a consensus on a new version of the Draft accession agreement with all members of the Council of Europe (such as Russia, Ukraine and Turkey) in the very near future. At the same time, European Union accession to the European Convention on Human Rights remains a legal duty in accordance with Art. 6 Treaty on the European Union (TEU), Declaration No. 2 on Article 6 (2) TEU and Protocol No. 8 to the Lisbon Treaty.
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Jensen, Thor øivind, und David Berner. „The EU challenge: New Organization and Culture around Psychotropic Prescription Drugs in the Nordic Count“. Nordisk Alkoholtisdkrift (Nordic Alcohol Studies) 12, Nr. 1_suppl (Februar 1995): 73–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/145507259501201s13.

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The complicated balance, including the formal system, that regulates patterns of psychotropic drug usage in the Nordic countries is under rapid change. The European Union is the main agent of change. The general public, the politicians, the administrators and health professionals all seem to agree that consumption is too high and the awareness of this problem has been rising in recent years. This coincides with the European integration process. It is suggested in the article that the Nordic tendencies to have a paternalistic “health” regulatory system will be replaced by a “market” organized system, emphasizing free competition, consumer rigths, legal decisions and industry interests. One result will be a larger and unpredictable assortment; another probable result is higher and more complicated structured usage patterns. The old system of national health authorities as the main regulatory actor will be seriously weakened. The challenge of solving the problem of managing and reducing consumption of addictive drugs is difficult, and social regulation must rely on new tools. Local and regional authorities and organizations will have a central role, as well as patient organizations and public and professional debate. The final outcome is unpredictable, but one thing is clear, it will be a significantly different structure.
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Underwood, Julie. „Under the Law“. Phi Delta Kappan 98, Nr. 5 (23.01.2017): 76–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0031721717690374.

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School boards can enact rules about commenting at their public meetings, but they cannot impede someone’s right to speak, whether employees or the public. A recent federal district court case — Barrett v. Walker County School District (N.D. Ga. 2016) — raised this issue. Jim Barrett, a district employee and president of the local educators’ union, disagreed with the district’s new grading policy and tried to get on the school board agenda to share his concerns. The superintendent, who controlled access to the public comment portion of the meeting, did not approve his requests. The federal district court ruled that this violated Barrett’s First Amendments rights of free speech because it gave the superintendent unfettered discretion to approve, deny, or delay requests to speak before the board and limited the nature of issues that someone could take to the board.
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Nack, David, Michael Childers, Alexia Kulwiec und Armando Ibarra. „The Recent Evolution of Wisconsin Public Worker Unionism since Act 10“. Labor Studies Journal 45, Nr. 2 (30.07.2019): 147–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0160449x19860585.

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This paper examines the experience of four major public sector unions in Wisconsin since the passage of Wisconsin Act 10 in 2011. The four unions are the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT-Wisconsin), the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), and the Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), an affiliate of the National Education Association. Wisconsin’s prior legal framework for public sector collective bargaining is explained and compared to the new highly restrictive framework established by Act 10. That new framework, established by state legislation, is analyzed, as are its impacts on the membership, revenues, structures, and practices of the four unions. In general, we find the impacts to have been very dramatic, with a loss of active union membership averaging approximately 70 percent overall, and concomitant dramatic losses in union revenues and power. These shocks have engendered the restructuring of two of the unions examined, the downsizing of the third, and the de facto exiting from the state’s public sector in another. There have also been significant changes in representation practices in one union, but less so in the others. We conclude by discussing best union practices based on this experience, as well as considering what the recent public sector union history in Wisconsin may portend for public worker union membership nationwide, since the issuing of the Janus Decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Goodrum, Sarah. „Bridging the Gap Between Prosecutors' Cases and Victims' Biographies in the Criminal Justice System Through Shared Emotions“. Law & Social Inquiry 38, Nr. 02 (2013): 257–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12020.

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Research on victims' encounters with prosecutors suggests that victims' rights have had a limited effect on victims' satisfaction with the criminal justice system. This study examines the victim-prosecutor relationship with a focus on people who have lost a loved one to murder. The emotional tone dimension of Carol Heimer's case versus biography analysis proves helpful for explaining the gaps between prosecutors' responsibilities and victims' expectations. The data come from in-depth interviews with thirty-five participants, including twenty victims, three crime victims' advocates, and twelve criminal court professionals in Union County (pseudonym). The findings indicate that shared emotions (e.g., sadness, anger) represent a key mechanism for (1) connecting victims to prosecutors (and individuals to organizations) and (2) improving victims' experiences with the criminal justice system. Although victims' rights do not guarantee the opportunity for shared emotions, prosecutors often honored victims' desire for a close relationship and considered their input on case decisions.
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Alexander, Jonathan, und Susan C. Jarratt. „Rhetorical Education and Student Activism“. College English 76, Nr. 6 (01.07.2014): 525–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.58680/ce201425461.

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On February 8, 2010, eleven student activists at the University of California–Irvine protested a speech by Michael Oren, Israel’s ambassador to the United States. The disruptive nature of the protest by these students—advocates of Palestinian de-occupation and members of the Muslim Student Union—led to disciplinary action against their student organization and criminal prosecution in the local county court for disturbing the peace. This essay offers the results of an interview-based study exploring the rhetorical education of five of these college activists. The interviews reveal the powerful influence of family histories of activism and thoughtful reflections on the rhetorical dynamics of the Middle East conflict within local, national, and international publics. They also show student awareness of the limitations of the liberal-deliberative rhetorics that underpin most college writing courses. That students reported only a tenuous sense of connection between college courses and self-sponsored activist education suggests that teachers and scholars of rhetoric and composition may need to give cocurricular activism more consideration in the next phase of the “social turn.”
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Tuguzhekova, Valentina N., und Vladimir A. Pecherskiy. „The Line Court of the Yenisei (East Siberian) basin in the late 1940s - early 1950s“. Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta, Nr. 478 (2022): 119–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/15617793/478/15.

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The aim of this article is to study the activities of the Line Court of the Yenisei and then the East Siberian Basin in the period from the transformation of transport tribunals into line courts until the death of Joseph Stalin. Hence, the lower limit of the chronological framework of the article is determined by the year 1948, when transport justice authorities were demilitarized, and the upper limit by the end of the first quarter of 1953. The source base for the study was documents from collections of the State Archive of Krasnoyarsk Oblast and published research papers. Employees of water transport and related enterprises were under the jurisdiction of the Line Court. In the third quarter of 1948, 101 cases were received in the Line Court of the Yenisei Basin, 61 of them were initiated by the Decree of June 26, 1940. Line courts of water basins had to consider cases typical for water transport and cases typical for courts of general jurisdiction. This is shown by the judicial practice of the Line Court of the Yenisei Basin in the first and second quarters of 1949. The Line Court considered cases of theft of goods, which were initiated under the Decrees of June 4, 1947, On Criminal Liability for Theft of State and Public Property and On Strengthening the Protection of Citizens' Personal Property. From April 1, 1949, to April 1, 1950, the Line Court received 123 cases, including 9 cases of theft of personal property. From April 1, 1949, to April 1, 1950, the Line Court received 11 cases about accidents with 13 people, and 5 cases about other violations of discipline in transport for 6 people. All these crimes fell under Article 59-3 “b” of the Criminal Code of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (violation of labor discipline by transport workers (violation of traffic rules, substandard repairs, etc.). The Line Court rarely had to consider cases of “counter-revolutionary” crimes. From April 1, 1949, to April 1, 1950, the Line Court received 8 cases initiated under Article 58 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR. On the merits, 5 cases were considered, 5 people were convicted on them. Based on this research, the authors came to the conclusion that the peculiarity of linear courts was that these instances considered both cases that were in the jurisdiction of people's courts, and those of regional courts and courts of autonomous republics. Therefore, it was necessary to send cassation appeals on cases of the first category directly to the Supreme Court of the USSR, whereas sentences handed down by people's courts could undergo a long way through the county or regional court, the Supreme Court of the Union Republic and the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. This practice violated the rights of transport workers, since the possibility of reviewing the sentence was difficult for them.
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Dissertationen zum Thema "Probate Court (Union County)"

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Dabner, Carol Patrice. „Legal Compliance in Guardianship Cases An Exploratory Study: Investigating Denton County Probate Court Visitors' Program Success with Legal Compliance in Guardianship Cases in 2013“. Thesis, University of North Texas, 2016. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc955079/.

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Dabner, Carol P. Legal Compliance in Guardianship Cases. An Exploratory Study: Investigating Denton County Probate Court Visitors' Program Success with Legal Compliance in Guardianship Cases. Doctor of Philosophy (Applied Gerontology), December 2016, 140 pp., 18 tables, references, 20 titles. Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of the legal compliance of the Denton County Probate Court Visitor's program in the year 2013. Rationale: Guardianship case management success is based on the presence of legal compliance of both guardians and the Court. When a guardian is legally compliant, a ward is receiving the statutorily minimum standards of care. Legal compliance equates (evidence of) the Ward receiving legally sufficient care. Research has not been vast; it has been consistent as to necessity of guardianship training, monitoring, and narrow focus of research. Evidence based research will assist in defining and developing appropriate court monitoring programs, which can add to the quality of care for elderly and disabled adults. Methods: 1,300 guardianship cases in the probate court. Of these cases, 910 had annual reports of the person filed, which 304 were reviewed using the Legal Compliance Audit. Eight (8) factors of compliance were reviewed with three (3) being Court actions and five (5) being guardian actions. Results: Exploratory study provides evidence based research of the necessary changes to develop the Denton County Probate Court Visitor's program. The guardians are more legal compliant than the Court.
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Bücher zum Thema "Probate Court (Union County)"

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Lorain County Chapter. Lorain County Probate Court deaths. Elyria, Ohio: Lorain County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society, 2006.

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County), Missouri Probate Court (Butler. Butler County, Missouri, Probate Court minutes. Broseley, MO: T. Glass, 1988.

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Perry County Chapter., Hrsg. Perry County, Ohio Probate Court birth records. [Junction City, Ohio]: Perry County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society, 2000.

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Mercer County Chapter., Hrsg. Probate court death records: Mercer County, Ohio. Celina, Ohio (P.O. Box 437, Celina 45822-0437): The Society, 1998.

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Mercer County Chapter. Probate court death records, Mercer County, Ohio. Celina, Ohio: Ohio Genealogical Society, Mercer County Chapter, 1998.

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White, Elizabeth W. Estate settlements Giles County Court. Pulaski, Tenn: E.W. White, 1994.

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Duff, Dorothy Smith. DeKalb County, Alabama probate court records, 1836-1930. Baltimore, Maryland: Clearfield Company, 2012.

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Society, Chicago Genealogical, Hrsg. Probate court records, Cook County, Illinois, 1872-1873. Chicago: Chicago Genealogical Society, 1992.

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Florence, Cole, Hrsg. Guardianships, Warren County, Ohio, probate court, 1803-1916. [Loveland, Ohio?]: Cardinal Research, 1989.

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Hageness, MariLee Beatty. Orphans Court book 1850 to 1852, includes Probate Court minutes, Tallapoosa County, Alabama. [Anniston, Ala.] (3916 Bramble Road, Anniston, AL 36207-7004): [MLH Research], 1994.

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Buchteile zum Thema "Probate Court (Union County)"

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Jones, Lucy. „2. The Court System and Alternative Dispute Resolution“. In Introduction to Business Law, 16–40. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198824886.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the English court system, civil disputes, and alternative dispute resolution. The courts in England and Wales form a hierarchy. At the lowest level are the Magistrates’ Courts and the County Courts, then the Crown Court and High Court, then the Court of Appeal, and finally the Supreme Court. The chapter considers the role of the Court of Justice of the European Union in interpreting EU law within Member States. It explains the position of the European Court of Human Rights, which deals with allegations of state breaches of the European Convention on Human Rights. Civil disputes arise in every area of business. An explanation of the civil procedure rules from commencing a claim to enforcement of a court judgment is provided. The chapter concludes with a discussion of alternative methods of dispute resolution including arbitration, mediation, and conciliation.
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Jones, Lucy. „2. The Court System and Alternative Dispute Resolution“. In Introduction to Business Law. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198766261.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the English court system, civil disputes, and alternative dispute resolution. The courts in England and Wales form a hierarchy. At the lowest level are the Magistrates’ Courts and the County Courts, then the Crown Court and High Court, then the Court of Appeal, and finally the Supreme Court. The chapter considers the role of the Court of Justice of the European Union in interpreting EU law within Member States. It explains the position of the European Court of Human Rights, which deals with allegations of state breaches of the European Convention on Human Rights. Civil disputes arise in every area of business. An explanation of the civil procedure rules from commencing a claim to enforcement of a court judgment is provided. The chapter concludes with a discussion of alternative methods of dispute resolution including arbitration, mediation, and conciliation.
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Penn, William A. „Introduction“. In Kentucky Rebel Town. University Press of Kentucky, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813167718.003.0001.

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When a Confederate officer scribbled in his journal after the Second Battle of Cynthiana that Morgan’s men were “plundering & pillaging … the best rebel town of our native state,” he was expressing a widely held perception that, in the Bluegrass, Cynthiana was a “Rebel town.” This reputation was earned in the early years of the war after a series of implicating events: the county judge, county clerk, sheriff, and newspaper editor were arrested for being southern sympathizers; one of the very first Kentucky Rebel volunteer companies was from Harrison County, marching off to war as a Confederate flag was displayed on the courthouse flagpole; and the majority of Harrison County recruits joined the Confederate army. At this divisive time, a citizen admitted: “It is not safe for a man to talk about or in favor of the Union.” The state representatives from Harrison County were known to be prosouthern by their speeches during the neutrality period. Rep. Lucius Desha fled behind Confederate lines to avoid being arrested, only to be indicted for treason on returning to the state. Cincinnati newspapers and a US representative from Bourbon County pointed to the arrest of about sixty citizens to support their contention that Cynthiana was full of “lurking Rebels” and described the town as a “pestiferous Secession hole.” A militia officer, writing state officials in October 1861, referred to “Cynthiana, that infernal hole of rebellion.” And in correspondence with President Lincoln about shipping guns through Harrison County, the clerk of the Kentucky state court of appeals warned, “Cynthiana is a dark hole of traitors.” Even after the war ended, complaints surfaced that some candidates for office in Harrison County were former “stay-at-home rebels.”...
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Benthall, Jonathan. „The Tariq Ramadan visa case“. In Islamic Charities and Islamic Humanism in Troubled Times. Manchester University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781784993085.003.0008.

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This Chapter describes the case of Tariq Ramadan, the Swiss-born academic and commentator on Islamic matters, who was refused a non-immigrant visa in 2005 to enter the USA in order to accept a professorship in peace studies. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) took up his case. Though it is probable that the real reason for his exclusion was opposition to Ramadan’s political opinions, the reason given was that between 1998 and July 2002 he had made donations totalling the equivalent of US$940 to a charity registered in Switzerland (the Association de Secours aux Palestiniens). In August 2003 this charity was designated by the USA as a terrorist fundraising entity, on account of its alleged links to Hamas-linked Palestinian charities (including zakat committees). Eventually, after two court hearings, the State Department decided in January 2010, in a document signed by Secretary Clinton, to lift the ban against Ramadan’s entering the USA. This Chapter recounts the progress of the case, and reproduces a letter sent by Benthall to Secretary Clinton in October 2009 in support of the ACLU’s representation of Ramadan.
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Gregoratti, Catia, Nora Stappert und Fredrik Söderbaum. „Justifying Delegitimation“. In Legitimation and Delegitimation in Global Governance, 162–84. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192856111.003.0008.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on delegitimation and asks how far the institutional set-up of global governance institutions determines which normative justifications are raised to challenge their legitimacy. Specifically, it compares the normative justifications used by African states and civil society organizations to delegitimate the African Union (AU), the International Criminal Court (ICC), and the Kimberley Process. Such a focus not only responds to calls for Global International Relations, but also explores regional dynamics in delegitimation practices that are often overlooked in extant literature on legitimacy in global governance. The chapter draws on a range of statements made by African states and civil society organizations, additional documents, and qualitative interviews, enabling the comparative case studies to probe key institutionalist and structuralist theoretical expectations. It asks whether differing institutional set-ups or a shared history of colonialism results in continuing power hierarchies that shape normative justifications of delegitimation practices. The chapter highlights the importance of underlying power hierarchies for delegitimation practices, as it finds support for structuralist expectations across the three cases. However, it also outlines important synergies between institutionalist and structuralist expectations.
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Penn, William A. „Lurking Rebels“. In Kentucky Rebel Town. University Press of Kentucky, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813167718.003.0004.

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This chapter examines Union attempts during the Civil War to suppress disloyalty with controversial new war measures, including the employment of loyalty oaths and the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, which blocked detained citizens from access to the courts to obtain their freedom. Taking advantage of these laws, military officers, to silence dissent, were free to arrest and imprison citizens, therefore bypassing the court system. This chapter is a study of the application of these pacification laws in Harrison County, describing the arrests of over sixty citizens, the reasons for the arrests, and incarceration of the political prisoners in Camp Frazer, Camp Chase, and other locations. Cynthiana’s pro-Southern editor was arrested and his paper closed.
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Boucher, Anna K. „Labor Rights or Immigration Enforcement?“ In Patterns of Exploitation, 126—C5P73. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197599112.003.0006.

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Abstract In the seminal case of Hoffman Plastic Compounds Inc. v. NLRB (2002), Jose Castro, an undocumented Mexican migrant worker employed in Hoffman Plastics, a PVC factory in Orange County, California, sought back payment following unfair dismissal for trade union organizing. This case was eventually litigated all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, where, by a slim majority, the Court found that those without visa status were not entitled to enforce back pay under the National Labor Relations Act because this would be in conflict with restrictions against illegal immigration status under the Immigration Reform and Control Act. The case provides a useful lens for understanding the tension between labor and immigration regulation, not only in California but in all four countries examined in this book. The MWRD includes workers without visas and migrants working illegally (such as tourists) or working with lapsed visas; these data are analyzed in this chapter that considers the underrepresentation of undocumented workers as claim-makers.
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Klarman, Michael J. „The Interwar Period“. In From Jim Crow To Civil Rights, 98–170. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195129038.003.0004.

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Abstract In 1919, black tenant farmers and sharecroppers in Phillips County, Arkansas, tried to organize a union and to hire white lawyers to sue planters for peonage practices. Local whites cracked down with a vengeance. When whites shot into a church where black unionists were meeting, blacks returned the gunfire. A white man was killed. Mayhem quickly ensued. Marauding whites, some from adjoining states, supported by federal troops ostensibly dispatched to quell the disturbance, went on a rampage. They tracked down blacks throughout the countryside and killed dozens of them. Seventy-nine blacks, and no whites, were prosecuted and convicted for their actions during this “race riot,” and twelve received the death penalty. The trials of those twelve lasted only an hour or two each, and the juries, from which blacks had been systematically excluded, deliberated for only a few minutes. Huge mobs of angry whites surrounded the courthouse, menacing the defendants and the jurors and threatening a lynching. Six of the defendants appealed their death sentences to the Supreme Court, arguing that mob-dominated trials violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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