Multi-task Legal Judgement Prediction Combining a Subtask of the Seriousness of Charges

Author(s):  
Zhuopeng Xu ◽  
Xia Li ◽  
Yinlin Li ◽  
Zihan Wang ◽  
Yujie Fanxu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 323-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neha Bansal ◽  
Arun Sharma ◽  
R. K. Singh
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 361-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma L. Briant

This article presents qualitative research examining adaptation to global asymmetric threats and a modern media environment of US Government propaganda systems by planners following 9-11, which proceeded largely unhindered by public debate. It draws on interviews with US elite sources including foreign policy, defense and intelligence personnel and documentary sources to explore how dissent was contained. A ‘merging’ of Psychological Operations and Public Affairs has been identified as a point of concern elsewhere and is argued to have facilitated the extension of US hegemony. It will present an account of the struggles between 2005 and 2009 when planners sought to alter ‘foreign’ and ‘domestic’ audience targeting norms that emerged in an old-media system of sovereign states with more stable populations. It focuses on a key example of transformation: the pressing through of internet policy changes for military Psychological Operations and Public Affairs, against resistance. Policies were brought in to coordinate and overcome discordance in foreign-domestic messaging by Psychological Operations and Information Operations personnel. Viewed as operational necessity for Psychological Operations, these resulted in a ‘terf war’ with Public Affairs who constructed a defense using discourses of legitimacy and credibility with domestic audiences. This article will show how concerns raised by Public Affairs were met by the reduction of their planning role, until a culture change and new orthodoxy emerged. Challenges raised by evolving media demand a reappraisal of propaganda governance and governments must allow greater transparency for public debate, legal judgement and independent academic enquiry to occur.


Author(s):  
Mark Weisburd

This chapter examines restrictions on the International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) capacity to act due to problems of admissibility or justiciability with respect to the use of force. It considers how the ICJ deals with cases requiring the exercise of non-legal judgement in relation to the UN Security Council’s authority. It also looks at disputes involving the use of force that can be decided only through the exercise of non-legal judgement. Five cases are highlighted: Corfu Channel (UK v. Albania), Nicaragua v. US, the ICJ’s advisory opinion on the legality of the threat or use of nuclear weapons, Oil Platforms (Iran v. US), and Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. The chapter concludes by focusing on cases involving matters that are arguably within the province of the UN Security Council.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-129
Author(s):  
Dylan Kerrigan

Trinidad and Tobago’s anti-gay laws can be traced back to British colonialism and European imperialism. Their existence today and their consequences for human lives in Trinidad and Tobago during the past one hundred years are a local entanglement of historic global hierarchies of power. On 12 April 2018, in the High Court of Port of Spain, capital of Trinidad and Tobago, Justice Devindra Rampersad, in a form of judicial activism, trod where local politicians have not dared and intervened in such coloniality by delivering a legal judgement upholding the challenge by Jason Jones to the nineteenth-century colonial laws in Trinidad and Tobago that criminalise homosexual relations and same-sex loving.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 349-368
Author(s):  
Bhaskar Lama

The Indian Supreme Court in the Navtej Singh Johar vs Union of India judgement (6th September 2018), decriminalized homosexuality. However, the space cleared by the legal judgement cannot be immediately availed of by those affected by it because legally determined/defined space doesn’t necessarily become social space. This essay looks at the formation of this social space and the perception of homosexuality in civil society. It will examine the impediments of communication that homosexuals encounter in the heteronormative world, and the ensuing misunderstandings regarding homosexuality. It argues that a proper medium is necessary to provide communication in a social space that would then treat homosexuality as ‘normal’. I argue that Mahesh Dattani’s plays enable the imagination and the construction of such an accepting civil society.


2020 ◽  
pp. 127-149
Author(s):  
Gregory Currie

We start with the idea of the role of imagination in planning and in the formation of conditional beliefs. We then consider ways in which the process of belief-fixation by imagination can be unreliable, taking as my example a legal judgement. I argue that the role of the imagination in learning may be very restricted, and yet have conferred a selective advantage on those who possessed it, paving the way for an adaptive account of the imagination. The role of the imagination in the fixation of conditional belief suggests a role for it in thought experiments. It has been suggested that we should think of fictions such as novels as offering thought experiments, and hence as able to facilitate learning in the way that thought experiments in science and philosophy do. I argue that there are features of fictions-as-thought experiments which should make us pessimistic about their epistemic value.


1986 ◽  
Vol 31 (9) ◽  
pp. 838-842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Syed Naveed Akhtar

This paper examines three categories of mentally abnormal offenders who are held under Lieutenant Governor's Warrants. It explores the psychiatric-legal issues in cases of pre-trial (not fit to stand trial) and post-trial (not guilty by reason of insanity) L. G. W.'s. An attempt is made to provide a structure for such psychiatric-legal evaluations. Clinical guidelines are offered about the objectives, the assumptions and the criteria which form the basis of such evaluations. Suggestions are made for collection of relevant data which should inform psychiatric and legal judgement-making in this area. The role of the psychotropic medication in N.G.I. cases is discussed. It is recommended that whenever medically feasible, a controlled drug-free trial should be carried out in N. G.I. cases prior to their final release, in order to unambiguously establish their need for medication.


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