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Waite and Jewell: Environmental Law in Property Transactions

by Andrew Waite Gregory Jones Valerie Fogleman

Waite and Jewell: Environmental Law in Property Transactions provides a comprehensive practitioner guide to the environmental issues that arise in property transactions. It is divided into three key sections:1. Commentary and guidance on the property transaction and identifies where the environmental issues might occur.2. Broader discussion and explanation of specific environmental law issues that the practitioner needs to know about.3. Provision of precedents to assist the busy property lawyer.This edition will give a general update following the last edition in 2009 and covers the Green Deal, Climate Change Regulations and the significant number of Environmental Permitting Regulations and Waste Regulations that have amassed since the last edition. Also includes a whole new chapter on climate change.Contents:Part I Approaching the Transaction: Chapter 1 Introduction to Parts I and II; Chapter 2 The need for information; Chapter 3 Preliminary enquiries; Chapter 4 Freedom of access to environmental information; Chapter 5 Local land charges search; Chapter 6 Local authority and Water Company enquiries; Chapter 7 Other sources of information; Chapter 8 Environmental survey; Chapter 9 Assessing and managing environmental risk: contractual provision and environmental insurance; Chapter 10 Particular transactions – leases and lending; Chapter 11 Development contracts; Chapter 12 Transferring permits;Part II The Broader Context: Chapter 13 Civil liability; Chapter 14 Statutory nuisance; Chapter 15 Contaminated land; Chapter 16 Waste; Chapter 17 Water; Chapter 18 Built environment; Chapter 19 Nature conservation; Chapter 20 Integrated pollution control and atmospheric pollution; Chapter 21 Climate Change;Part III Precedents.Previous edition ISBN: 9781845921064

Wahrnehmungsbasiertes Marketing von Pfarrgemeinden: Eine praxisorientierte Bestandsaufnahme am Beispiel katholischer Akademiker und Studenten

by Thomas Peters

Thomas Peters untersucht kirchliches Marketing und freiwilliges Engagement in Deutschland am Beispiel der Mitglieder des größten europäischen Akademikerverbandes (CV). Daraus entwickelt er konkrete Handlungsempfehlungen für die Konzeption und Vermarktung kirchlicher Aktivitäten und Angebote, vor allem zur gezielten Rekrutierung ehrenamtlicher Mitarbeiter und Sponsoren mit akademischem Hintergrund, z.B. für die Durchführung kirchlicher Bildungs- und Kulturveranstaltungen, für Hilfsprojekte oder zur administrativen Unterstützung.

Wahrhaftigkeit - eine gesellschaftliche Herausforderung

by Sven Van Meegen

Jeder Mensch lügt. Würden wir dies leugnen, würden wir uns selbst belügen. Gefährlich wird dies, wenn die Lüge sich als Normalität in unser Leben einschleicht und zum Automatismus wird. Wenn sie sich so überzeugend darstellt, dass wir nicht mehr in der Lage sind, zu erkennen, was Wahrheit und Lüge ist. Dann braucht es Wahrhaftigkeit! Wahrhaftigkeit stört den Automatismus der Lüge und bricht ihn auf. In diesem Buch beschreiben 26 Autorinnen und Autoren aus den Bereichen der Politik, der kommunalen und öffentlichen Arbeit, der Sozial- und Geisteswissenschaften, der Religion, der Wirtschaft und der Begleitung von Menschen ihre Perspektive auf die Wahrhaftigkeit aus ihren jeweiligen Kontexten heraus. Die Auseinandersetzungen in den verschiedenen Bereichen verweisen auf die vielfältigen Chancen und Herausforderungen für das Mensch-Sein und die Gesellschaft, die die Wahrhaftigkeit mit sich bringt.

Wahlrecht – auch für Kinder? (#philosophieorientiert)

by Johannes Giesinger

Ein Mensch, eine Stimme: Das Wahlrecht ist die Grundlage der Demokratie. Jedes politische System, das nicht allen dieses Recht zugesteht, erscheint als undemokratisch. Folgt man dieser Auffassung, so ist es nicht hinnehmbar, eine große Bevölkerungsgruppe – Personen unter 18 Jahren – vom Wahlrecht auszuschließen. Das Bemühen um ein Wahlrecht für Kinder und Jugendliche hat in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten verstärkte Aufmerksamkeit erhalten. Johannes Giesinger argumentiert gegen ein Kinderwahlrecht, zeigt aber auf, dass die Frage des politischen Status von Kindern philosophisch neu diskutiert werden muss. Die Forderung nach einem politischen Mitbestimmungsrecht für jüngere Personen wirft ein Schlaglicht auf ungelöste Probleme heutiger Demokratien: Wie kann sichergestellt werden, dass die Interessen Heranwachsender im demokratischen Prozess angemessen repräsentiert werden? Wie ist es zu rechtfertigen, dass gewisse Personen staatlichem Zwang unterworfen sind, ohne die Möglichkeit zu haben, mit demokratischen Mitteln dagegen vorzugehen? Wie kann verhindert werden, dass Personen, die politisch nichts zu sagen haben, gesellschaftlich ausgegrenzt werden?

Wahlbehandlung und direktes Liquidationsrecht des Chefarztes: Vertragsgestaltung, Haftung und Regreß (MedR Schriftenreihe Medizinrecht)

by Klaus Kistner

Ärztliche Wahlleistungen werden durch den Chefarzt erbracht, der im Falle des direkten Liquidationsrechts selbst in vertragliche Beziehungen zum Patienten tritt. In diesem Buch wird die neuere Rechtsprechung des Bundesgerichtshofes zur regelmäßigen Mithaftung des Krankenhauses und - erstmals im Überblick - zur Geltung des Verweisungsprivilegs zugunsten des privat liquidierenden beamteten Chefarztes dargestellt. Im Mittelpunkt steht die gefährdete Einheit von Liquidationsbefugnis und Haftungsrisiko. Das Buch behandelt - unter Einbeziehung des Beamtenrechts und der Eintrittspflicht privater Haftpflichtversicherungen - die Möglichkeiten eines Ausgleichs im Regreßwege. Erwogen wird eine Korrektur der Rechtsprechung zur Haftung des beamteten Chefarztes nach § 839 BGB. Ferner geht es um die Option, abweichend vom Regelmodell die alleinige Zuständigkeit des Chefarztes zu vereinbaren. Die dazu notwendige Abgrenzung der Pflichtenkreise von Chefarzt und Krankenhaus geschieht von einem neuen Ansatz her, anhand pflegesatz- und gebührenrechtlicher Vorgaben. Den konkreten Anforderungen an die Gestaltung von Aufnahmeformularen und allgemeinen Vertragsbestimmungen ist das abschließende Kapitel gewidmet.

Wage Rage for Equal Pay: Australia’s Long, Long Struggle

by Jocelynne A. Scutt

This book ​makes a major contribution to the continuing legal and historical struggle for equal pay in Australia, with international references, including Canada, the UK and US. It takes law, history and women’s and gender studies to analyse and recount campaigns, cases and debates. Industrial bodies federally and around Australia have grappled with this issue from the early-twentieth century onwards. This book traces the struggle through the decades, looking at women's organisations activism and demands, union ‘pro’ and ‘against’ activity, and the 'official' approach in tribunals, boards and courts.

Wage & Employment Patterns in Labor Contracts

by R. Cooper

This book explores the micro-foundations and the macro-implications of the design of labour contracts.

Wage & Employment Patterns in Labor Contracts

by R. Cooper

This book explores the micro-foundations and the macro-implications of the design of labour contracts.

„Waffen-Gleichheit“: Das Recht in der Arzthaftung (MedR Schriftenreihe Medizinrecht)

by K. O. Bergmann T. Ratajczak H. P. Greiner C. M. Stegers G. Hölling A. Krämer R. Lemke M. Lindemann P. Rumler-Detzel J. Schulte M. Stellpflug T. Taupitz

Das Dogma der fehlenden Waffengleichheit im Arzthaftungsprozess begründet die Rechtsprechung mit einem gegebenen Wissensgefälle zwischen den Parteien. Die Autoren dieses Bandes beleuchten Voraussetzungen und Folgen dieser Annahme und gehen der Frage nach, ob die eingeführten Verfahrensmodifikationen Chancengleichheit zwischen den Parteien tatsächlich herstellen oder der Ergänzung bedürfen. Die Verfasser thematisieren die Mitwirkungsrechte und -pflichten der Beteiligten und die Neutralität des medizinischen Sachverständigen.Den deutschen Arzthaftungsprozess kennzeichnet das Alles-oder-Nichts-Prinzip, was leicht zu unbilligen Ergebnissen führen kann. Um so mehr ist in den letzten Jahren die Notwendigkeit erkannt worden, Waffengleichheit im Sinne von Chancengleichheit zwischen Arzt und Patient auch im außergerichtlichen Bereich zu institutionalisieren. Dem widmen sich die Praxisberichte im zweiten Teil des Buches.

Wade & Forsyth's Administrative Law

by William Wade Christopher Forsyth Julian Ghosh

Wade and Forsyth's Administrative Law has been a cornerstone text since publication of the first edition in 1961. It provides a comprehensive and perceptive account of the principles of judicial review and the administrative arrangements of the United Kingdom. For over sixty years, this text has been trusted by students and is extensively cited by courts throughout the common law world. The book's clarity of exposition makes it accessible to students approaching the subject for the first time, whilst its breadth of coverage and perceptive insight ensure its value to all interested in the field, academics and practitioners alike.

Wade & Forsyth's Administrative Law

by William Wade Christopher Forsyth Julian Ghosh

Wade and Forsyth's Administrative Law has been a cornerstone text since publication of the first edition in 1961. It provides a comprehensive and perceptive account of the principles of judicial review and the administrative arrangements of the United Kingdom. For over sixty years, this text has been trusted by students and is extensively cited by courts throughout the common law world. The book's clarity of exposition makes it accessible to students approaching the subject for the first time, whilst its breadth of coverage and perceptive insight ensure its value to all interested in the field, academics and practitioners alike.

Waco: A Survivor's Story

by David Thibodeau Leon Whiteson

The basis of the celebrated Paramount Network miniseries starring Michael Shannon and Taylor Kitsch--Waco is the critically-acclaimed, first person account of the siege by Branch Davidian survivor, David Thibodeau.Twenty-five years ago, the FBI staged a deadly raid on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco. Texas. David Thibodeau survived to tell the story. When he first met the man who called himself David Koresh, David Thibodeau was a drummer in a local a rock band. Though he had never been religious in the slightest, Thibodeau gradually became a follower and moved to the Branch Davidian compound in Waco. He remained there until April 19, 1993, when the compound was stormed and burned to the ground after a 51-day standoff with government authorities.In this compelling account--now with an updated epilogue that revisits remaining survivors--Thibodeau explores why so many people came to believe that Koresh was divinely inspired. We meet the men, women, and children of Mt. Carmel. We get inside the day-to-day life of the community. We also understand Thibodeau's brutally honest assessment of the United States government's actions. The result is a memoir that reads like a thriller, with each page taking us closer to the eventual inferno.Originally published as A Place Called Waco.

Vulnerable Workers: Health, Safety and Well-being

by Maria Giovannone

The leading academic authorities contributing to this book have been involved in major studies carried out for international organisations, individual governments, and national trades' union organisations; in Vulnerable Workers they consider the growth of job insecurity, the prevalence of flexible or temporary work, and the emergence of precarious forms of self-employment. They look at the new market economies of post-communist Eastern Europe and China, where economic development may occur at the expense of workers' lives and health; 'misclassification' by employers of workers as 'contractors', denying them access to rights; and the plight of migrant, transient and 'invisible' workers. The impact of supply chain business strategies on the most vulnerable workers; and on the complex relationships between levels of job security and the presence of different kinds of risks are similarly assessed. The contributors also propose responses to the challenges they highlight. The role of employee representatives is examined, together with the potential to enhance worker capability through organisational change. New legislative approaches, and changes to traditional compensation and social security systems are considered. Academics and researchers, policy makers, regulators, trades unionists and occupational health professionals - and wise employers - will all find a use for this book.

Vulnerable Workers: Health, Safety and Well-being

by Maria Giovannone

The leading academic authorities contributing to this book have been involved in major studies carried out for international organisations, individual governments, and national trades' union organisations; in Vulnerable Workers they consider the growth of job insecurity, the prevalence of flexible or temporary work, and the emergence of precarious forms of self-employment. They look at the new market economies of post-communist Eastern Europe and China, where economic development may occur at the expense of workers' lives and health; 'misclassification' by employers of workers as 'contractors', denying them access to rights; and the plight of migrant, transient and 'invisible' workers. The impact of supply chain business strategies on the most vulnerable workers; and on the complex relationships between levels of job security and the presence of different kinds of risks are similarly assessed. The contributors also propose responses to the challenges they highlight. The role of employee representatives is examined, together with the potential to enhance worker capability through organisational change. New legislative approaches, and changes to traditional compensation and social security systems are considered. Academics and researchers, policy makers, regulators, trades unionists and occupational health professionals - and wise employers - will all find a use for this book.

Vulnerable Witnesses within Family and Criminal Proceedings: Protections, Safeguards and Sanctions

by Frank Feehan QC Caroline Harris

Are you prepared to protect the vulnerable in court? A guide to the rights of witnesses and the duties of advocates in family and criminal proceedings.Explaining the legal structure currently in place to assist vulnerable individuals, this brand new title covers every stage of proceedings, including the investigation/pre-proceeding, and postproceedings, whilst also looking at anonymity and protective orders. In addition, it discusses the sanctions available to the court if proper consideration and sufficient protection has not been given to vulnerable people at each stage. Covering legislation, regulation and authorities which govern these situations, it offers best practice regarding the examination of those who have difficulty understanding their case, by reason of age, circumstance or emotional and psychological difficulties.Practical help is provided through: Step-by-step guidance at each stage Helpful suggestions as to how to approach the hearing at each stage of proceedings Links to the useful guidance regularly referred to within proceedings including the Advocates Gateway

Vulnerable Transactions in Corporate Insolvency

by John Armour Howard Bennett

This book examines powers and remedies available to a liquidator or administrator that render 'vulnerable' the company's prior contractual commitments or proprietary dispositions so as to enhance the asset pool available to creditors. In the process,the book does two things. First, it offers comprehensive accounts of the relevant causes of action: undervalue transactions, preferences, late floating charges, unregistered charges, transactions defrauding creditors, gratuitous corporate transactions and post-petition dispositions in liquidation. Secondly, it seeks to raise issues about the context and purpose of these causes of action, many of which have not yet been fully explored in the case law or academic literature. These are considered through a discussion of their relationship to the pari passu principle; a restitutionary analysis of the remedial provisions; and issues arising specifically in cross-border and international insolvency proceedings. The book is thus a source of reference both for insolvency litigators and for transactional lawyers seeking advice on potential vulnerability. The thematic approach and rigorous analysis will also make it of interest to an academic readership.

The Vulnerable Subject: Beyond Rationalism in International Relations

by Amanda Russell Beattie and Kate Schick

This book develops a concept of vulnerability in International Relations that allows for a profound rethinking of a core concept of international politics: means-ends rationality. It explores traditions that proffer a more complex and relational account of vulnerability.

Vulnerable People and the Criminal Justice System: A Guide to Law and Practice

by Professor Penny Cooper Hhj Heather Norton

Over the last 25 years there has been a growing recognition that the way in which cases involving the vulnerable are investigated, charged and tried needs to change. Successive judgments of the Court of Appeal have re-enforced the message that advocates and judges have a duty to ensure vulnerable witnesses and defendants are treated fairly and allowed to participate effectively in the process. How do practitioners recognise who is or may be vulnerable? How should that person be interviewed? What account should police and the CPS take of a defendant's vulnerabilities? How should advocates adjust their questioning of vulnerable witnesses and defendants whilst still complying with their duties to their client? How should judges manage a trial to ensure the effective participation of vulnerable witnesses and defendants? Vulnerable People and the Criminal Justice System, written by leading experts in the field, gathers together for the first time answers to these questions and many more. It provides a practical, informative and thought-provoking guide to recognising, assessing and responding to vulnerability in witnesses and defendants at each stage of the criminal process. Backed by authoritative research and first-hand experience and drawing on recent case law, this book enables practitioners to deal with cases involving vulnerable people with calmness, authority, and confidence.

Vulnerable People and the Criminal Justice System: A Guide to Law and Practice


Over the last 25 years there has been a growing recognition that the way in which cases involving the vulnerable are investigated, charged and tried needs to change. Successive judgments of the Court of Appeal have re-enforced the message that advocates and judges have a duty to ensure vulnerable witnesses and defendants are treated fairly and allowed to participate effectively in the process. How do practitioners recognise who is or may be vulnerable? How should that person be interviewed? What account should police and the CPS take of a defendant's vulnerabilities? How should advocates adjust their questioning of vulnerable witnesses and defendants whilst still complying with their duties to their client? How should judges manage a trial to ensure the effective participation of vulnerable witnesses and defendants? Vulnerable People and the Criminal Justice System, written by leading experts in the field, gathers together for the first time answers to these questions and many more. It provides a practical, informative and thought-provoking guide to recognising, assessing and responding to vulnerability in witnesses and defendants at each stage of the criminal process. Backed by authoritative research and first-hand experience and drawing on recent case law, this book enables practitioners to deal with cases involving vulnerable people with calmness, authority, and confidence.

Vulnerable Children and the Law: International Evidence for Improving Child Welfare, Child Protection and Children's Rights

by Suzanne Oliver Patrick O'Leary Lisa Young James Reid Cathy Humphreys Nicky Stanley Helen Richardon Foster Linda Moore Chaitali Das Christine Beddoe Deena Haydon Gill Thomson Gladis Molina Goos Cardol Greg Kelly Jackie Turton Jason Squire Meredith Kiraly Pam Miller Rawiri Taonui Robert H. George Shelly Whitman Terri Libesman Una Convery

This book takes an international perspective on child welfare, examining how frameworks can be adapted to address the rights and best interests of children. Synthesising the latest research, experts redefine the concept of a 'child in need' in a world where global movement is common and children are frequently involved in the law.

Vulnerable Bodies: New Directions in Disability Studies

by Floris Tomasini

This book offers new direction in disability studies, by integrating the medical and social model of disability. The first aim is to provide an integral approach to thinking about impairment and disability through the integrative lens of being vulnerable. The second aim is to transcend the normative trap which impairment and disability debate finds itself locked in.Disability debate is trapped in a normative struggle to escape oppressive norms. Either, by legitimizing the desire to be free from impairment, where a legitimization identity is promoted through the medical model. Or, by resisting discriminative social norms, where the desire is to be free from oppressive social barriers that exist on top of having impairment. Identifying with one’s vulnerability, or embodied uncertainty, allows for the possibility of forging meaning and building new identity. It allows freedom to express embodied difference, rather than to transform or defend it.

Vulnerable Adults and the Law

by Jonathan Herring

We are used to thinking that most people have the capacity to make their own decisions; that they should be free to decide how to live their lives; and that it is a good thing to be self-sufficient. However, in an examination of the legal position of vulnerable adults, understood as those who have capacity under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 but are deemed impaired through vulnerability in their exercise of decision making powers, Jonathan Herring challenges that assumption. Drawing on feminist and disability perspectives he argues that we are all in fact, 'vulnerable' and we need to replace the competent, able-bodied, independent person as the norm which the law is based on and instead fashion which recognises our interdependence and mutuality. At the heart of the law is a distinction between those who have capacity and those who do not. Those who have capacity are given the full rights of the law; they are entitled to enter contracts, dispose of their property, are able to marry. Those who are deemed to lack capacity are unable to make these decisions. Their decisions are made on their behalf based on an assessment of what is in their best interests. This approach is underpinned by the principle of autonomy, and is problematic for those who are deemed 'vulnerable'. The Court of Protection and the Court of Appeal have developed a jurisdiction to deal with cases involving vulnerable adults which has been used in a wide range of cases from those involving people with early stage dementia to cases of forced marriage. This development of law has proved controversial and the courts have struggled to draw its limits and explain the justification for it. Jonathan Herring welcomes the courts willingness to protect vulnerable adults through the inherent jurisdiction, but argues that we need to go much further. It is not just particular groups such as 'the elderly' or 'the disabled' who are vulnerable, but rather vulnerability is part of the human condition. This means that caring relationships are of central significance to our society and should be at the heart of the legal system.

Vulnerable Adults and the Law

by Jonathan Herring

We are used to thinking that most people have the capacity to make their own decisions; that they should be free to decide how to live their lives; and that it is a good thing to be self-sufficient. However, in an examination of the legal position of vulnerable adults, understood as those who have capacity under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 but are deemed impaired through vulnerability in their exercise of decision making powers, Jonathan Herring challenges that assumption. Drawing on feminist and disability perspectives he argues that we are all in fact, 'vulnerable' and we need to replace the competent, able-bodied, independent person as the norm which the law is based on and instead fashion which recognises our interdependence and mutuality. At the heart of the law is a distinction between those who have capacity and those who do not. Those who have capacity are given the full rights of the law; they are entitled to enter contracts, dispose of their property, are able to marry. Those who are deemed to lack capacity are unable to make these decisions. Their decisions are made on their behalf based on an assessment of what is in their best interests. This approach is underpinned by the principle of autonomy, and is problematic for those who are deemed 'vulnerable'. The Court of Protection and the Court of Appeal have developed a jurisdiction to deal with cases involving vulnerable adults which has been used in a wide range of cases from those involving people with early stage dementia to cases of forced marriage. This development of law has proved controversial and the courts have struggled to draw its limits and explain the justification for it. Jonathan Herring welcomes the courts willingness to protect vulnerable adults through the inherent jurisdiction, but argues that we need to go much further. It is not just particular groups such as 'the elderly' or 'the disabled' who are vulnerable, but rather vulnerability is part of the human condition. This means that caring relationships are of central significance to our society and should be at the heart of the legal system.

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