Legal Controls

2017 ◽  
pp. 205-221
Author(s):  
Michael L. Benson ◽  
Sally S. Simpson
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Rasmon Kalayasiri ◽  
Teerayuth Rungnirundorn ◽  
Robert Ali ◽  
John Marsden

Psychoactive substances – chemical compounds which can alter a person’s mood, thoughts, and behaviors may be liable to misuse and cause addiction. Internationally, many strategies have been implemented in order to limit the supply and demand of illegal substances, with a wide variation at the country level. Thailand is an upper-middle income country in Southeast Asia. Since 2015, Thai authorities and policymakers have instituted many changes to the legal controls on illegal drugs. The aim of this review was to summarise the history of drug control and regulation in Thailand, focusing on opioids (including Kratom), methamphetamines and cannabis, and the outcome of recent strategies. Recent measures towards decriminalising substance use disorders are also discussed.


Legal Studies ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 569-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Fraser

Issues of national sovereignty and membership in the body politic are central to many current political and legal debates surrounding ‘New Britain’ and Europe. Traditional understandings of citizenship and belonging are grounded in the ideal of a territorially limited and defined nation state. In this article, I explore a series of judicial and political decisions surrounding the fate of Roma or Gypsies, both as claimants to refugee status in Britain, or as subjects of domestic legal controls. I argue that these decisions construct this nomadic Other as a fundamental danger and challenge to the coherence of the legally protected body politic of the nation state ‘Britain’. I argue that the deconstructive excess found in the construction of the Roma as dangerous nomads, without allegiance to a fixed and geographically delimited nation state, might contain the kernel for a possible re-imagining of the basis of our understandings of citizenship and belonging.


1941 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 405
Author(s):  
George D. Hornstein
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Stephen Wilson

This chapter studies the aims of antisemitism as far as Jews were concerned. The French antisemites at the end of the nineteenth century proposed a wide range of solutions to the “Jewish question.” These ranged from full assimilation through various legal controls to expulsion and extermination. Both the first and the last would, by very different means, have destroyed the Jews as a social entity, while legal controls would have maintained them as a distinct but inferior group. Generally speaking, one could identify the former as characteristic of “modern” antisemitism, antagonistic towards or oblivious of Jewish social reality and actual distinctiveness, and the latter as characteristic of “traditional” antisemitism, which was conscious of both and prepared to recognize them on its own terms. The chapter then considers how far these solutions are to be seen as serious practical proposals, how far as ritual or rhetoric.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Gómez Pomar

Abstract Not all contract terms pose the same perils for efficient contracting and for consumer welfare. EU Law and the laws of many Member States make a distinction between core and non-core contract terms and tend to exempt the former from the ex-post substantive unfairness review to which the latter are subject to. By reviewing how the CJEU and European legal commentators have justified and construed the terms of Art. 4(2) of Directive 93/13 we may obtain a general picture of the analytical underpinnings deployed to provide useful content to that provision. The prevailing European approach is (unsurprisingly, perhaps) predominantly legalistic and uninterested in empirics. The CJEU analysis remains (unsurprisingly, perhaps) immune to the implications from the theoretical and empirical literature that economics and Law & Economics has produced in order to understand how market forces and other non-legal incentives for contract quality interact with ex post controls implemented by courts and based on broad legal standards. The ALI Restatement on Consumer Contracts may cogently make use of that input in crafting a less formalistic legal regime.


1953 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 809
Author(s):  
William T. Hutchinson ◽  
Morroe Berger
Keyword(s):  

ILR Review ◽  
1953 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 450-452
Author(s):  
Jacob Seidenberg
Keyword(s):  

1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 219
Author(s):  
A.G. Thompson

Increased petroleum exploration and development activities offshore Western Australia will continue to attract the focus of many companies, contractors and investors who will find that their exploration and development activities and operating practices are controlled by a mixed regime of State and Federal legislation. This mixed regime has its sources in international and constitutional law.Working within these controls is not assisted by the complexity of State and Commonwealth jurisdictional problems in respect to offshore areas. Certain governmental arrangements between the State and the Commonwealth, however, facilitate continued exploration activity offshore, whilst some of the legal issues remain to be resolved. Some guiding principles as to what laws apply offshore and to what extent, are indicated.The consultative arrangements between the State and the Commonwealth under the Offshore Petroleum Code allow for Commonwealth ownership and State control of offshore petroleum resources to co-exist. These are commented upon and the Petroleum (Submerged Lands) Acts are analysed with respect to the nature and security of petroleum titles; the setting, performance and variation of work and monetary obligations; the range of administrative discretion in relation thereto; the transferability of petroleum interests and the rate and calculation of royalties.Directions regulating offshore operations generally and covering exploration, reporting, platforms, pipelines, production and work practices are explained. Some of the environmental controls are also mentioned.


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