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Union Royale Belge des Sociétés de Football Association ASBL v Jean-Marc Bosman (1995) C-415/93 (known as the Bosman ruling) [1] is a 1995 European Court of Justice decision concerning freedom of movement for workers, freedom of association, and direct effect of article 39 [2] (now article 45 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union) of the Treaty of Rome.
It is an important part of UK labour law, protecting employees whose business is being transferred to another business. [3] The 2006 regulations replace the old 1981 regulations (SI 1981/1794) which implemented the original Directive. [4] The law has been amended in 2014 and 2018, and various provisions within the 2006 Regulations have altered. [5]
This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict. A map showing the participant countries The Hague Group is a group of nations from the global south formed on 31 January 2025 to protect and uphold the rulings of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC) in relation to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict ...
A legal advocacy group has accused SUNY-affiliated Alfred University of illegally banning white students from a “BIPOC” arts residency program on its upstate campus. The Equal Protection ...
The Transfers of Undertakings Directive 2001/23/EC is a European Union law that protects the contracts of employment of people working in businesses that are transferred between owners. [1] It replaced and updated the law previously known as the Acquired Rights Directive 77/187/EC. [2]
An assignment does not necessarily have to be made in writing; however, the assignment agreement must show an intent to transfer rights. The effect of a valid assignment is to extinguish privity (in other words, contractual relationship, including right to sue) between the assignor and the third-party obligor and create privity between the obligor and the assignee.
Although fraudulent transfer law originally evolved in the context of a relatively simple agrarian economy, it is now widely used to challenge complex modern financial transactions such as leveraged buyouts. Fraudulent transfer liability will often turn on the financial condition of the debtor at a particular point in the past.
Transferred intent (or transferred mens rea, or transferred malice, in English law) is a legal doctrine that holds that, when the intention to harm one individual inadvertently causes a second person to be hurt instead, the perpetrator is still held responsible.