Law: Difference between revisions
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imported>Doug Williamson (Add links.) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Mend link.) |
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*[[Suit]] | *[[Suit]] | ||
* [[Tax]] | * [[Tax]] | ||
*[[United Nations | *[[United Nations Commission on International Trade Law]] | ||
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[[Category:The_business_context]] | [[Category:The_business_context]] | ||
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]] | [[Category:Compliance_and_audit]] |
Revision as of 17:03, 5 July 2022
1. Legal systems.
The enforceable body of rules that govern any society.
2. Legal systems.
One of the individual rules, or classes of rules, making up the body of law.
3.
A principle or model that appears to have high predictive or descriptive value.
For example, the Law of comparative advantage in economics.
Or the Law of large numbers in statistics.
See also
- Adjudication
- Antitrust law
- Arbitration
- BCL
- Boilerplate
- Cartel
- Case law
- Central limit theorem = law of large numbers
- Civil law
- Common law
- Company law
- Competition law
- Conflict of law
- Constitutional law
- Contract
- Criminal law
- Economics
- Enforcement
- European Community law
- Execution
- Governing law
- Injunction
- International law
- Jurisdiction
- Law of comparative advantage
- Law of demand
- Law of large numbers
- Law of supply
- Legislation
- Level 1 law
- LLB
- PhD
- Pro bono
- Private international law
- Proper law
- Public international law
- Regime
- Regulation
- Retained EU law
- Sovereignty
- State aid law
- State immunity
- Suit
- Tax
- United Nations Commission on International Trade Law