Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Procedural justice" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

context and trial
Contempt of court is a court order which, in the context of a court trial or hearing, declares a person or organization to have disobeyed or been disrespectful of the court's authority.
In favor of the later dating of the synoptics, Geza Vermes says that this event provides a clear context and pretext for Jesus ' arrest, trial and execution.
The court found that the clinical language during the trial was realistic and appropriate within the context of the movie.
These rights prohibit the use of force in an arrest or detention context which would amount to punishment or summary judgment and provide that a person accused of a crime is not subject to punishment without legal process and a trial.
In this context, the party seeking the writ is treated on appeal like a plaintiff, the trial court becomes the defendant, and the opponent is designated as the " real party in interest.
* Legal – used in the context of legal trial, to refer to a final finding, statement, or ruling, based on a considered weighing of evidence, called " adjudication ".
In a modern context thought of often as a mini-trial within a full trial to determine the admissibility of contested evidence.
lenalidomide, or bortezomib for patients with multiple myeloma is not definitively established ; such therapy should be performed only in the context of a clinical trial.
Forensic linguistics is the application of linguistic knowledge, methods and insights to the forensic context of law, language, crime investigation, trial, and judicial procedure.
Blakely v. Washington, 542 U. S. 296 ( 2004 ), held that, in the context of mandatory sentencing guidelines under state law, the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial prohibited judges from enhancing criminal sentences based on facts other than those decided by the jury or admitted by the defendant.
The Court's " commitment to Apprendi in this context reflects not just respect for longstanding precedent, but the need to give intelligible content to the right of jury trial.
Constantin Argetoianu, the Minister of the Interior in the Alexandru Averescu, Take Ionescu, and Ion I. C. Brătianu cabinets, equated Comintern membership with conspiracy, ordered the first in a series of repressions, and, in the context of trial, allowed for several communist activists ( including Leonte Filipescu ) to be shot while in custody — alleging that they had attempted to flee.
This was done by having certain units use an experimental model designated Ak 5CF where " F " stands for the Swedish word försök ( in this context, experiment or trial ).
Curtis Bennett attempted to cast her immorality as defensible in the context of the " glamorous aura " of a " great love ," seeking to overlook the point continually being made by the Judge at the trial that the case concerned only an adulterer and an ( adulterous ) wife.
That such an interpretation of a physical erotic relationship did exist as early as the 16th century ( albeit in a heretical context ) is documented, for example, in the trial for blasphemy of Christopher Marlowe accused of claiming that " St. John the Evangelist was bedfellow to Christ and leaned always in his bosom, that he used him as the sinners of Sodoma ".
But when the system stops working correctly, or the users want to access the configuration controls, they are unable to repeat that initial step because of the different context and the unavailable information ( password lost, missing instructions, or simply a hard-to-manage user interface that was first configured by trial and error ).
Also, there is always a case for allowing a prior consistent statement made at any time before trial to help explain away what is arguably only a seemingly inconsistent statement that is subject to interpretation because, for example, it was lifted out of the context that would explain the statement.
In the context of a trial, to proffer ( sometimes profer ) means to offer evidence in support of an argument, or elements of an affirmative defense or offense.

context and for
The critical, rigorous examinations of Nicholas of Cusa and Nicholas of Oresme provided the context ( a late medieval context ) for Nicholas Copernicus' own work.
Thus the films seen as they came in ( coordinated for the regular sections ), were often out of context.
With a few important and a few more unimportant exceptions, no expression can be deemed le mot juste for its context, because each was very probably the only expression that long-established practice and ease of rapid recitation would allow.
Childhood experiences in learning work and self-discipline habits within a context of developing autonomy and initiative have considerable significance for the prevention of illegitimacy.
This is often the case, for example, with idiomatic expressions whose definitions are rarely or never well-defined, and are presented in the context of a larger argument that invites a conclusion.
Regions as defined in this context are merely for statistical, geographical, geological and climate related purposes and do not refer to an administrative division.
In the context of abstract algebra, for example, a mathematical object is an algebraic structure such as a group, ring, or vector space.
The term is often used in the entertainment business, especially in a business context, for musicians and other performers ( less often for actors ).
" Artiste " ( the French for artist ) is a variant used in English only in this context.
The 1982 science fiction film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan used " Amazing Grace " amid a context of Christian symbolism, to memorialize the death of Mr. Spock but more practically, because the song has become " instantly recognizable to many in the audience as music that sounds appropriate for a funeral " according to a Star Trek scholar.
Changing the allophone used by native speakers for a given phoneme in a specific context usually will not change the meaning of a word but the result may sound non-native or unintelligible.
When a specific allophone ( from a set of allophones that correspond to a phoneme ) must be selected in a given context ( i. e. using a different allophone for a phoneme will cause confusion or make the speaker sound non-native ), the allophones are said to be complementary ( i. e. the allophones complement each other, and one is not used in a situation where the usage of another is standard ).
In a current context, one might judge a Lamborghini to be beautiful partly because it is desirable as a status symbol, or we might judge it to be repulsive partly because it signifies for us over-consumption and offends our political or moral values.
* The being which manifests in Christianity also manifests in all faiths and religions, and each religion is valid and true for the time and cultural context in which it was born ;
Arbitration, in the context of United States law, is a form of alternative dispute resolution — specifically, a legal alternative to litigation whereby the parties to a dispute agree to submit their respective positions ( through agreement or hearing ) to a neutral third party ( the arbitrator ( s ) or arbiter ( s )) for resolution.
Euan MacKie has supported Thom's analysis, to which he added an archaeological context by comparing Neolithic Britain to the Mayan civilization to argue for a stratified society in this period.
The Latin word has never been recorded in a surgical context, being reserved to indicate punishment for criminals.
The Coast Mountains and the Inside Passage's many inlets provide some of British Columbia's renowned and spectacular scenery, which forms the backdrop and context for a growing outdoor adventure and ecotourism industry.
As nothing cannot be known by any means or method it must mean, in the context of the question, that a specific named object is present or not present in the observer's experience of a set of objects, conditions for which English uses " is " or " is not.
* Business Context Diagram, a computing term for a schema illustrating the context of an application in a business environment.
Kiernan's reasoning has in part to do with the much-discussed political context of the poem: it has been held by most scholars, until recently, that the poem was composed in the 8th century on the assumption that a poem eliciting sympathy for the Danes could not have been composed by Anglo-Saxons during the Viking Ages of the 9th and 10th centuries, and that the poem celebrates the namesakes of 8th Century Mercian Kings.
Bandwidth typically refers to baseband bandwidth in the context of, for example, sampling theorem and Nyquist sampling rate, while it refers to passband bandwidth in the context of Nyquist symbol rate or Shannon-Hartley channel capacity for communication systems.

context and example
For example, the same piece of information may be ambiguous in one context and unambiguous in another.
This may exemplify a rare example of insular dwarfing in a mainland context, with the " islands " being formed by the extensive river networks in the Amazon Basin, which form effective biogeographic barriers.
Rodolfo Llinás, for example, proposed that consciousness results from recurrent thalamo-cortical resonance where the specific thalamocortical systems ( content ) and the non-specific ( centromedial thalamus ) thalamocortical systems ( context ) interact in the gamma band frequency via temporal coincidence.
In this context, it is more readily construed as meaning " school of thought ", since it is also used to construct the names of philosophical schools contemporary with Confucianism: for example, the Chinese names for Legalism and Mohism end in jiā.
In this context, the standard example is Cat, the 2-category of all ( small ) categories, and in this example, bimorphisms of morphisms are simply natural transformations of morphisms in the usual sense.
Players can gain a large advantage if their civilization is the first to learn a particular technology ( the secrets of flight, for example ) and put it to use in a military or other context.
The canonical example of a context free grammar is parenthesis matching, which is representative of the general case.
The ISO 8601 standard also has the advantage of being language independent and is therefore useful when there may be no language context and a universal application is desired ( expiration dating on export products, for example ).
In a social context, a convention may retain the character of an " unwritten " law of custom ( for example, the manner in which people greet each other, such as by shaking each other's hands ).
FT is not a “ law of nature ,” and the pattern is influenced by national context ( for example, human population density, stage of development, structure of the economy ), global economic forces, and government policies.
For example, the multiplication symbol,, is sometimes replaced with a dot, or even omitted completely, because its context makes its use obvious ( e. g. 3 a may be written 3a ).
But this would create more spelling inconsistencies ( such as the break / brake example above ) that would need to be resolved via the linguistic context, as they are in the spoken language.
For example, the sentence " The coat is red " has no observer, the sentence " We see the coat as red " ( where " we " indicates observers ) appears more specific in context as regards light waves and colour as determined by modern science, that is, colour results from a reaction in the human brain.
For example, it is a context in which the question " Who is your favorite composer?
Joosten, however, while accepting that the carelessness of the English scribe is the most likely explanation for most such instances, nevertheless argues that a minority of such readings are due to translation errors in the Spanish text: as, for example, where the Italian text employs the conjunction pero, with an Italian meaning ' therefore '; while the Spanish text also reads pero, with a Spanish meaning ' however '; the Italian sense being the one demanded by the context.
Linguistic prescriptions also form part of the explanation for variation in speech, particularly variation in the speech of an individual speaker ( an explanation, for example, for why some people say, " I didn't do nothing "; some say, " I didn't do anything "; and some say one or the other depending on social context ).
Within the residential context, the best remaining example is the pristine Hammond-Harwood House ( 1774 ) in Annapolis, Maryland.
For example, formulations like " as explained in the previous section " are problematic, because the transcluded section may appear in a different context, causing confusion.
King Ottokar's Sceptre could be read against the background of Hitler's Anschluss or in the context of the struggle between the Romanian Iron Guard and the King of Romania, Carol II, whereas later albums-for example, The Calculus Affair-depict the Cold War.
In this context it is also recorded that in the south of Scotland, for example Roxburghshire, there is no < m >, the word thus being Hunganay, which could suggest the < m > is intrusive.

1.032 seconds.