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Academic literature on the topic 'Exemption from'

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Books on the topic "Exemption from"

1

1820-1903, Mowat Oliver, and Hallam John b. 1833, eds. Exemptions, special committee of the Council of the Corporation of Toronto, John Hallam, chairman, 1876: Letter addressed to the Hon. Oliver Mowat, Q.C., attorney-general and premier, &c., &c., &c., province of Ontario. s.n., 1993.

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2

Parliament, Great Britain. Cystic Fibrosis (Exemption from Prescription Charges) Bill. Stationery Office, 2005.

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3

A, Borowski Neill, ed. Free ride: The tax-exempt economy. Andrews and McMeel, 1993.

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4

Great Britain. Department of the Environment. Removal of crown exemption from planning law: Consultation paper. [Department of the Environment, Development Control Policy Division], 1992.

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1928-, Balassa Bela, Giersch Herbert, and International Economic Association, eds. Economic incentives: Proceedings of a conference held by the International Economic Association at Kiel, West Germany. Macmillan, 1986.

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6

Florida. Legislature. Senate. Committee on Ways and Means. Subcommittee E. Exemptions from Florida's sales tax: An analysis. The Committee, 1997.

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7

Dutton, C. Gilmore. Report on exempting private employer retirement income from state taxation. Legislative Research Commission, 1991.

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8

Bills, Nelson L. Agricultural districts: Lessons from New York. Dept. of Agricultural, Resource, and Managerial Economics, Cornell University, 1998.

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9

Eileen, Denza. Exemption from Giving Evidence. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198703969.003.0033.

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This chapter considers Article 31.2 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations which states that a diplomatic agent is not obliged to give evidence as a witness during trial. Under customary international law a diplomat was immune from compulsion in regard to appearing or giving evidence as a witness but was probably not exempt from the legal obligation to do so if requested in proper terms. It should be noted that the exemption from the duty to give evidence is not limited by the exceptions to immunity from jurisdiction set out in Article 31.1(a), (b), and (c). It was emphasized that a diplomatic agent involved for whatever reason as plaintiff or as defendant in legal proceedings would always have a strong incentive to give evidence in order to win his case, but that the decision whether to permit him to do so should remain with the sending State.
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Eileen, Denza. Exemption from Personal Services. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198703969.003.0039.

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This chapter examines Article 35 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations which concerns the exemption of diplomatic agents from personal services. The Article states that the receiving State shall exempt diplomatic agents from all personal services, from all public services of any kind whatsoever, and from military obligations such as those connected with requisitioning, military contributions and billeting. This exemption comes from the general international practice that any diplomat must be treated as exempt from the obligations imposed on the general public. The chapter describes how this principle of exemption is rarely discussed as because diplomats as foreign nationals would in any event not usually be subject to civic obligations and in the rare cases where they were liable, the diplomats would be protected by their inviolability.
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