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Juridik

Vårt rättssystem i Sverige består av många olika regler och lagar liksom i många andra länder. Det kan ibland vara svårt att hitta runt och förstå, vilket är anledningen till att böcker med goda uppslagsverk är väldigt bra att ha med sig. Du kommer att ha lättare att hålla dig uppdaterad om de många förändrade reglerna i det svenska rättssystemet. Om du själv har en yrkeskarriär inom juridik, planerar att läsa till jurist eller bara vill veta mer i ämnet så har vi perfekta böcker på området. Hitta ditt nästa uppslagsverk här.
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  •  
    1 775,-

    This book rigorously debates the notion of the person, a fundamental concept which underpins national private law orders worldwide.

  • av Adam (University of Glasgow Tomkins
    359 - 959,-

  • av Caitlin Mollica
    389 - 989,-

  • av Lei Yang
    379 - 989,-

  • av Brendan McGurk (Monckton Chambers KC
    1 839

  • av Sharae Deckard
    379 - 995,-

  • av Charles Freeland
    389 - 995,-

  • av Martin Svensson Ekstrom
    425 - 1 009

  • av William B. Meyer
    389,-

    Uncovers the facts behind the celebrated 1889 case of Riggs v. Palmer and shows how they transform our understanding of the decision.

  • av Richard M. Yon
    409,-

    First-of-its-kind study offering a model for understanding vice-presidential influence in the modern era.

  • av Sarah Haren & Mark Blackett-Ord
    5 475 - 5 805,-

  • av Erin Daly
    275 - 1 025,-

  • av Tim Bakken
    305 - 1 659,-

  •  
    2 045,-

    Digital Internationalisation of Firms offers a comprehensive examination of the digital outward internationalisation of firms, focusing on both Internet-based and Internet-enabled businesses, including SMEs and large enterprises.

  • av R. B. (Lecturer in Law and Politics Bernstein
    145,-

    Alexander Hamilton: A Very Short Introduction provides a brief introduction to the life, work, and legacies of Alexander Hamilton. R. B. Bernstein explores Hamilton's role in revolution, politics, law, constitutionalism, economics, diplomacy, and war, as well as his views on honor and duelling. This elegant profile reveals that Hamilton was one of the key founding fathers of the United States.

  • av Celeste L. (George Washington University Arrington
    1 225,-

    From Manners to Rules traces the emergence of legalistic governance in South Korea and Japan. While these countries were previously known for governance characterized by bureaucratic discretion and vague laws, activists and lawyers are pushing for a more legalistic regulatory style. Legalism involves more formal, detailed, and enforceable rules and participatory policy processes. Previous studies have focused on top-down or structural explanations for legalism. From Manners to Rules instead documents the bottom-up change agents who are shaping legalistic governance in East Asia's main democracies. By comparing recent reforms in disability rights and tobacco control, the book uncovers the societal drivers behind legalism and the broader judicialization of politics. Drawing on 120 interviews and diverse sources, From Manners to Rules challenges the conventional wisdom that law and courts play marginal roles in Korean and Japanese politics and illuminates how legalistic governance is transforming citizens' options for political participation.

  • av Deepa (Emory University Das Acevedo
    369 - 1 089,-

  • av Benjamin Steiner
    449 - 1 375,-

  • av Blake (Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science Emerson
    375,-

    The Public's Law shows how bureaucracy can advance democracy. It develops a Progressive understanding of law and politics from American thinkers' transformation of German theories of the state, emphasizing that the state must provide the goods people need to participate in democratic politics. Using examples from the New Deal and the Civil Rights Era, the book develops a normative theory with implications for deliberative democratic theory, constitutional theory, and administrative law.

  • av Benjamin Fleury-Steiner & Jamie G. Longazel
    625 - 2 035,-

  •  
    379,-

    How and when should we end a war? What place should the pathways to a war's end have in war planning and decision-making? This volume treats the topic of ending war as part and parcel of how wars begin and how they are fought - a unique, complex problem, worthy of its own conversation. New essays by leading thinkers and practitioners in the fields of philosophical ethics, international relations, and military law reflect on the problem and show that it is imperative that we address not only the resolution of war, but how and if a war as waged can accommodate a future peace. The essays collectively solidify the topic and underline its centrality to the future of military ethics, strategy, and war.

  • av Laura S. (University of Nottingham) Martin
    489,-

    Highlights the agency of local people in enabling transitional justice in post-conflict Sierra Leone. Moving past questions of institutional effectiveness, Laura S. Martin explores the diversity of post-conflict experiences and shows how individuals and communities enact justice on their own terms.

  • av Giuliana (University of California Perrone
    419

    After examining more than 700 lawsuits decided by the supreme courts of former slave states, Giuliana Perrone asserts that slavery remained actionable in American law well after its ostensible demise. An important study for scholars of slavery and the US Civil War.

  • av E. Claire (University of South Alabama) Cage
    419 - 1 185

  • av Jon B. Gould
    305 - 619,-

  • av Karen Bartlett
    169

    Combining moment-by-moment drama with an emotional story of friendship and bravery, Escape from Kabul is also a searing insight into the captive fate of women in Afghanistan. In the twenty years since 2001, Afghan women obtained legal degrees, became judges and set out to transform their country - tackling corruption, and reducing horrifying levels of violence against women and children. These educated and powerful women led the mission to build a modern democracy that respected the rule of law and human rights. However, when Western forces withdrew in August 2021, the women judges of Afghanistan faced mortal danger. Escape from Kabul is the extraordinary, never-before-told story of their escape, and the shocking fates of those who were unable to flee. Bestselling, veteran journalist Karen Bartlett has had unique access to many of the women involved, including those in exile and the judges still trapped in Afghanistan, as well as the international network of women judges who were vital to the escape effort.

  • av Cyrus Ali Zargar
    395 - 1 355

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