scholarly journals A Lei Complementar Estadual n.º 231, de 17 de dezembro de 2020 e o Direito à Progressão Horizontal de Carreira dos Militares Estaduais / Complementary State Law n.º 231, of December 17, 2020 and the Right to Horizontal Career Progression of State Military

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 110771-110985
Author(s):  
Valmor Anderson Pereira ◽  
Adilson Da Silva
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 399
Author(s):  
Akmal Adicahya

Access to justice is everyone rights that have to be fulfilled by the government. The regulation number 16 year 2011 of legal aid is an instrument held by the government to guarantee the right. The regulation allowed the participation of non-advocates to provide the legal aid. Through this policy, government emphasizes that:1) Indonesia is a state law which legal aid is an obliged instrument; 2) the prohibition of non-advocate to participate in legal aid is not relevant due to inadequate amount of advocate and citizen seek for justice (justiciabelen), and the advocate is not widely extended throughout Indonesia; 3) Non-Advocates, especially lecturer and law student are widely spread; 4) there are no procedural law which prohibits non-advocate to provide a legal aid. Those conditions are enough argument for government to strengthen the participation of non-advocates in providing legal aid. Especially for The Supreme Court to revise The Book II of Guidance for Implementing Court’s Job and Administration.Keywords: legal aid, non-advocate, justice


Author(s):  
Joanna L. Grossman ◽  
Lawrence M. Friedman

This chapter explores the rise and fall of marriage restrictions rooted in racism and eugenics, as well as the persistence of other, more enduring, impediments to marriage—like bigamy, incest, and youth. Central to the story of state marriage regulation is the establishment, beginning in the 1960s, of constitutional protection for the “right” to marry, which limited, at least at the margins, the freedom of states to impose certain restrictions on marriage. But also central, in a system dominated by state law, are the rules of interstate marriage recognition, which dictate whether marriages travel across state lines. In broad brush, this chapter tells a story of increasing marital freedom, reined in only by a handful of seemingly immoveable social norms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne O’Brien ◽  
Páraic Kerrigan

This article explores how gay and lesbian identities are incorporated, or not, into the roles and routines of Irish film and television production. Data were gathered in 2018–2019 through semi-structured interviews with a purposive, snowball sample of 10 people who work in the Irish industries. The key findings are that for gay and lesbian workers their minority sexual identity impacts on the roles that they are likely to be included and excluded from. Sexuality also affects their promotion prospects and their career progression. Similarly, in terms of routines of production, gay and lesbian workers are associated with certain genres, based on stereotypical assumptions about their sexual identities by their hetero-managers and colleagues. In short, Irish gay and lesbian media workers articulated an overarching tension between the heteronormativity of the industry and the queerness of the gay and lesbian media worker. Some workers respond to that tension by adopting a homonormative approach to work while others attempt to forge a queer way of producing.


Author(s):  
Murilo Naves Amaral

The development of legality has intrinsic relationship with the capitalist system, so that it is essential to reconcile the analysis of the current economic model with standards from state law. It happens that, as it turns out the frustration of the applicability of the right post, a crisis arises in statist legal hegemony, which in turn, can only be overcome by expanding collective participation and consequently the implementation of an alternative right that with the consolidation of legal pluralism your mind, be able to establish appropriate channels to meet the social demands.Therefore, it is crucial that the resourcefulness of law expands the participatory way in order to extend, in a democratic way, the recognition of alternative sources of law and the constitution of the legal mosaic to all those who represent the true popular demands, for example, the collective actors.


SASI ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Andress Deny Bakarbessy

Indonesia is a unitary state that determines all regions of the country without exception constituting a unity of administrative and legal territory. However, in the territory of Indonesia there are also regions and unity of customary law communities, in this case the traditional village which has special characteristics that are special because it has existed before the formation of the State and has the right of origin in the administration of its government, and is recognized and respected by the State, so that the interaction between the State and customary villages allows conflicts between State law and customary law and traditions in the administration of government. For this reason, an ideal interaction between the State and the traditional village is needed which can create harmony and balance between the Country and the traditional village.


Author(s):  
Kranenborg Herke

Personal data in official documents held by a public authority or a public body or a private body for the performance of a task carried out in the public interest may be disclosed by the authority or body in accordance with Union or Member State law to which the public authority or body is subject in order to reconcile public access to official documents with the right to the protection of personal data pursuant to this Regulation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Egbe Mpame

After an extensive overview of the GDPR, this work examines the new right to representation enshrined in Art. 80 (1) GDPR, which right permits data subjects to designate a competent association to exercise their rights to enforcement, including the right to obtain compensation, on condition that Member State law so permits. With this right being dependent on national law, this work examines how collective redress for data protection mass harm is dealt with in the major European jurisdictions, before giving an overview of the general EU situation and challenges encountered.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
I Gusti Ngurah Bayu Pratama Putra ◽  
Abdul Rachmad Budiono ◽  
Hariyanto Susilo

This study discussed the Balinese customary law regarding the position and inheritance rights of natural children who were adopted by their grander. This study used an empirical legal study, which was a method of legal study that sought to see and examine the law can work in people’s lives. The results of the study showed that the adoption of a natural child by his grandfather was legal according to Balinese customary law, the position of a natural child adopted by his grandfather was the same as his biological child. State law only had a role to strengthen the prevailing customary law. The right to inherit natural children who were adopted by their grandfathers were the same as biological children, including the inheritance of their rights and obligations both as a child and as a member of an indigenous village community.


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