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Discuss and consider the extent to which the Land Registration Act 2002 meets the principles referred to in to in the quotation, including in your answer discussion of the extent to which pre-registration concepts persist in relation to dificult cases.
... the UK. The LRA 2002 promotes a system of title by registration. The aims of the Act as set out in the Law Commission Report Number 271 are to create a register that is an accurate reflection of the true ...
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Discuss the claim in the UN Declaration of Human Rights (1948), Article 19, that freedom of expression and the collection of information are both fundamental human rights.
... was Article 19, which stated that;
"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers." ...
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Discuss the legal protection given to databases under the Maltese Copyright Act 2000.
... a computer file which, when accessed by an appropriate computer program will be used to determine the actual sounds produced. A database containing musical information will be considered to be a musical work or could even be classified as a ...
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Discuss the nature of Peel's policies in Ireland
... of sustaining Ireland as a peaceful nation. He hoped to convert Irish priests to be supporters of the union and with this he could turn them away from nationalism and hence crush support for it as the priests were key ...
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Discuss the operation of the Treasure Act 1996, the necessity to reform the ancient law of treasure trove and the successes/failures to meet the criteria to make it workable.
... be necessary to evaluate the criticisms levelled at the Treasure Act of 1996 and to discuss whether the reform has met its objectives and if not, how it could be implemented and improved.
Until 1996, treasure was very difficult to ...
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Discuss the opinion that“Le Cid is less about love, honour and revenge and more about the complexrelationship between the individual and the state”.
... individual and the state, and between the individual and himself.
To understand the political framework and concept of honour in the play, there are three characters -don Gomès, don Diègue and don Fernand- in whose interactions the concept of honour ...
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Discuss the ways in which Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw and Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys exploit the traditions and conventions of their genre both formally and in terms of context.
... by the Greek philosopher, Aristotle. (Myths and Conventions, Unit 19, page 12) In Act 1, Shaw conforms to the exposition element of his play by introducing all the characters and sets up a promise of what is to happen when ...
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Discussing the short story "Turned" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
... pregnant and we know that the father of the baby is Mr. Marroner that makes us to act un sympathetically to her because we think that she's a cheap girl that want to sleep with anyone. But because Mrs. Marroner ...
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Disparities within the Civil Rights movement in the 1960's
... (SCLC) and Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
History and milestones
There is a common ground for all three of them, in a sense that they were founded out of a need to materialize the gains Black movement got in the 1950's through ...
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Do DIMIA's detention guidelines pay sufficient homage to the best interests of the child as espoused by international law?
... guidelines against an assumption of non-detention, DIMIA assumes detention as a central and integral part of the asylum seeker process. This is inconsistent with international standards and represents a fundamental failing in DIMIA's standards.
IMPLEMENTATION OF CROC
Our ratification of CROC means ...
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Do we need a national Bill of Rights in Australia? Discuss critically.Introduction: The Bill of Rights is a legal document intended to protect human rights. Australia is one of the few democratic
... Bill of Rights:
The Bill of Rights involves economic, social and cultural rights, and concerns the legal status of political and civil rights. Economic, social and cultural rights refer to the matter of human wellbeing and daily life,4whilst Legal ...
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Do you think that Churchill presents her characters in Act One as relating their own stories without trying to understand each other? In your answer you should make close references to several sequences.
... different times or cultures would interact and react with one another that Churchill would have presented the characters in a way which shows all the characters listening and discussing one another's individual narratives.
Essentially, to begin with, I agree with ...
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Does Law limit or enhance democracy
... between citizen and state "there is no reason why governors would, on their own initiative, provide an adequate framework for citizens to pursue their own interests freely." Bentham supports this view by arguing:
"The temptation to abuse power in the ...
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Does rule-utilitarianism avoid the problems of act-utilitarianism?
... to whether one construes 'rule' as 'actual rule' or 'possible rule'1. The latter is in accordance with Kant's 2principle 'Act only on that maxim through which at the same time will that it should become a universal law'; the former ...
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Does rule-utilitarianism solve the problems faced by act-utilitarianism?
... that this is not necessarily a qualification of the latter.
There are there three major issues with act-utilitarianism, as expounded by Mill. The first rests in the need for a morality to be practicable - the very lifeblood of moral ...
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Does the European Union have a comprehensive human rights policy?
... by law "respect fundamental rights, as guaranteed by the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms...and as they result from the constitutional traditions common to the Member States, as general principles of Community law."- 1 Article ...
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Does the law on terrorism reflect a tendency in the UK to pass authoritarian laws with little regards for human rights without giving thought to whether such laws are needed? Is this problem peculiar to Britain?
... This purpose might be strongly linked to the very nature of terrorism, which is to be found far beyond the diverse definitions. The notion of terrorism is at the intersection of political violence, moral justifications, and fight for a "just" ...
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Eddie Speed is renting a flat from Inverdawn Council on a monthly basis. It is a Scottish Secure Tenancy. He is being a nuisance to his neighbours and is more than 7 months in arrears with his rent. The council are looking to evict Eddie. Discuss this iss
... and is of a description specified in the order in relation to the landlord. (www.scottishtenants.org)
In the case of Eddie Speed his landlord is a registered social landlord, the Inverdwam Council. Scottish Secure Tenancy may only be brought to an end ...
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Eliminating Uncertainty: The Effect of Institutional Influence on Economic Performance.
... measures needed to make public choices.
The survival of an economy largely depends on how its institutions structure the incentives to generate wealth, to protect assets, and to acquire goods. Thus, property rights are a vital institution in ensuring and defending ...
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Ethical decision-making.
... own code of ethics represents an amalgamation of existing theoretical approaches. Generally, my personal code of ethics is a reflection of how I expect that I would conduct myself in society, and how I would expect others to behave, barring ...
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ETHICAL DISCUSSION OF ABORTION For thousands of years of western civilization, abortion was generally illegal after ‘quickening’
... the anti-abortionists arguments and attempt to show why they are invalid and why abortion is morally right.
To begin with let us see whether the foetus is really alive. The foetus is a biological mechanism that converts nutrients and oxygen ...
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Evaluate Hamilton’s rule using specific behavioural examples
... carry the same genes. Consequently, an organism's fitness is made up of two components, direct and indirect fitness which combine to give a measure known as 'inclusive fitness'.
Hamilton's solution to the problem of altruism was that a gene for altruism ...
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Evaluate recent developments, regarding access issues in the countryside, in order to determine their success at enhancing recreational pursuits.
... to go walking, cycling or horse-riding and 38% were made on foot (Countryside Agency, CA63, 2000). In total there are more than 105 000 miles of public rights of way woven into the fabric of the UK countryside. These paths, ...
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Evaluate the extent to which the Human Rights Act 1998 is consistent with the traditional understanding of parliamentary sovereignty.
... broader approach to interpretation of legislation, giving greater emphasis to liberal individual rights, whereas the UK Parliament adopts a much more restricted and some may say selfish approach. This is the necessary approach for Parliament to take in our current ...
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Evaluate the extent to which the United Kingdom Parliament is sovereign. Consider both legal and political factors
... Scotland and England, many agree that this itself induced limitations on Parliament's Power. This is most strongly argued by JDB Mitchell, TB Smith and Neil MacCormick on two points.
Firstly, the Acts of Union preceded the new Parliament, and were enacted ...