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  2. Colloquy (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colloquy_(law)

    In law, a colloquy is a routine, highly formalized conversation. [1] Conversations among the judge and lawyers (as opposed to testimony under oath) are colloquies.The term may be applied to the conversation that takes place when a defendant enters into a plea bargain and the judge is supposed to verify that the defendant understands that he is waiving his right to a jury trial.

  3. Stefano Guazzo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefano_Guazzo

    Guazzo studied law and thereafter worked for Lodovico Gonzaga and other members of the family, for which he was active as a diplomat in France and the Papal States. In 1561, he and other colleagues founded the l'Accademia degli Illustrati in Casale Monferrato. He died at Pavia, where he had moved to supervise the studies of his son.

  4. Criminal conversation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal_conversation

    Crim. Con, a cartoon of Sir John Piers and Lady Cloncurry witnessed in an embrace by the painter Gaspare Gabrielli.The caption claims that the sketch "has been valued by 12 Connoisseurs at Twenty Thousand pounds!", a satirical allusion to the sum awarded to Lord Cloncurry by the jury in the ensuing criminal conversation court case of 1807.

  5. Civil discourse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_discourse

    Civil discourse is the practice of deliberating about matters of public concern in a way that seeks to expand knowledge and promote understanding. The word "civil" relates directly to civic in the sense of being oriented toward public life, [1] [2] and less directly to civility, in the sense of mere politeness. Discourse is defined as the use ...

  6. Free Law Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Law_Project

    Free Law Project has a number of initiatives, including: CourtListener.com, [7] which provides a searchable and API-accessible website with court dockets, 900,000 minutes of oral argument recordings, more than eight thousand judges, and more than three million opinions. All of the opinions on Court Listener are interlinked by a citator, and the ...

  7. Civil law (common law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_law_(common_law)

    Civil law may, like criminal law, be divided into substantive law and procedural law. [5] The rights and duties of persons (natural persons and legal persons) amongst themselves is the primary concern of civil law. [6] [7] The common law is today as fertile a source for theoretical inquiry as it has ever been. Around the English-speaking world ...

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  9. Between Facts and Norms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Between_Facts_and_Norms

    Between Facts and Norms offers an original reconstruction of the philosophy of language (drawing on the author's Theory of Communicative Action, first published in 1981), a theory of jurisprudence, an understanding of constitutional theory, reflections on civil society and democracy, and an attempt to construct a new paradigm of politics that goes beyond, but without discarding, the liberal ...