Academic literature on the topic 'Superior Court Department'

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Journal articles on the topic "Superior Court Department"

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Leite, Víitor Ferreira, Carla Araújo, Teresa Cartaxo, Luísa Veiga, and Mário Jorge Loureiro. "No Superior Interesse da Criança: Os Contributos da Pedopsiquiatria." Acta Médica Portuguesa 30, no. 10 (October 31, 2017): 675. http://dx.doi.org/10.20344/amp.8579.

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Introduction: Child and Adolescent Forensic Psychiatry involves a multidisciplinary assessment at the courts’ requested to assist them in the process of justice delivery.Material and Methods: Retrospective study which included 233 forensic requests to two child and adolescent psychiatrists from Coimbra’s HP-CHUC Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Department between 1998 and 2012.Results: Biographic, psychopathology, social and family aspects were analyzed. The response time throughout the process, the origin and nature of the request’s and the type of process which originated the request were also assessed. The authors identified the involved professionals and whether they needed to go to court. When there were questions, they evaluated the capacity to answer them, the forensic difficulties and solutions found, and the presence of recommendations.Discussion: The obtained results met the clinical experience and literature regarding demography and psychopathology. As for the difficulties, there were a number of aspects which could be improved by both parts, aiming to ameliorate the articulation between Health and Justice.Conclusion: With this study it was possible to reflect on the authors forensic practice, in order to develop a closer partnership with the courts to promote the real ‘best interests’ of children/adolescents and their families.
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Gaduš, Ján. "Protest of the Prosecutor as a Tool of Agricultural Land Protection." EU agrarian Law 6, no. 2 (December 1, 2017): 56–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/eual-2017-0008.

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Abstract The prosecutor’s protest is a legal mean by which the prosecutor supervises the observance of law by public authorities. District offices, cadastral departments decide on the deposit of property rights to real estate, as well as on ownership rights to agricultural land, and also decide on the protest of the prosecutor. If the relevant District office, cadastral department, or its superior authority does not remove the non–compliance by issuing a decision or a measure that complies with the law, the prosecutor may bring the case to court. The court may annul the contested decision or measure. The aim of the paper is to collect and analyse data and evaluate the institute of prosecutor’s protest as an effective tool of agricultural land protection in connection with its acquisition or transfer. The paper compares the individual years in the observed period of time and also compares different regions in Slovakia. The result is a comparison and evaluation of the observed time periods.
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Muller, EC, and CL Nel. "A critical analysis of the inefficacy of Court-Annexed Mediation (CAM) in South Africa – lessons from Nigeria." Journal for Juridical Science 46, no. 2 (December 9, 2021): 25–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.18820/24150517/jjs46.i2.2.

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As a result of defects in the South African civil justice system, the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development introduced voluntary court-annexed mediation (CAM) in the magistrates’ courts in 2014. CAM was chosen under the broader need for greater access to justice because it has the potential to make dispute resolution efficient, amicable, and affordable. It can, therefore, contribute to access to justice for all members of society. Since the amendment of the Magistrates’ Court Rules to provide for CAM, the uptake of mediation in terms of the CAM system has unfortunately been inadequate. The aim of this article is to identify reasons for the inefficacy of CAM since its implementation. We use normative research to critically analyse existing court rules and authority. We conclude that there are several reasons for CAM’s inefficacy which are elucidated in the main text. It is important to understand these reasons, as the legislature presents CAM as a mechanism to improve access to justice. From this platform, we evaluate the mechanisms for court-connected alternative dispute resolutions provided by the Nigerian Multi-Door Courthouse (MDC) system. This reveals policies and practices that could potentially improve the efficacy of CAM in South Africa, as these relate to the factors identified as impediments to the optimal functioning of CAM in our civil justice system. As such, we identify valuable lessons that can be learned from this comparison. Building hereon, and on the conclusions reached elsewhere in the article, we postulate that the mediation scheme, as contemplated by Rule 41A of the Uniform Rules of Court (as applied in the superior courts), should also be implemented in the magistrates’ courts. The article concludes that improving CAM in South Africa is of critical importance to advancing access to justice and departing from a culture of conventional adversarial dispute resolution.
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Merenda, Peter F. "Substantive Issues in the Soroka V. Dayton-Hudson Case." Psychological Reports 77, no. 2 (October 1995): 595–606. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1995.77.2.595.

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The Soroka v. Dayton-Hudson case is popularly known as the “Target” case because it was the Target Department Stores against whom the case was filed as a class action by S. Soroka on September 7, 1989, in the Superior Court, Alameda County, California Involved in the case as a major issue were the charges by the plaintiffs that the Rotlgers Condensed CPI-MMPI (RCCM), used in the pre-employment screening of applicants for Store Security Officer, violated the applicants' rights to privacy which are protected by the Constitution of the State of California. Also sought by the plaintiffs were sanctions against unfair discriminatory application of tests and subjugation of the applicants to inquiries regarding sexual orientation and religious beliefs. The parties reached an out-of-court settlement on September 23, 1993. The substantive issues relating to sound test theory and test practices are discussed along with a review of the court proceedings.
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Muniapan, Balakrishnan. "The Industrial Law and Right to Retrench in Malaysia from a Human Resource Management Perspective." International Journal of Asian Business and Information Management 4, no. 2 (April 2013): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jabim.2013040101.

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This paper explores the legal right to retrench employees from a human resource management perspective in Malaysia. The paper is based on the analysis of the relevant statues on retrenchment such the Employment Act 1955, The Industrial Relations Act 1967, the Employment (Termination and Lay-Off Benefits) Regulations 1980 and the Code of Conduct for Industry Harmony 1975. The author has also used criterion based sampling of the Industrial Court and Superior Court awards to analyze retrenchment cases and to provide recommendations to human resource management practitioners. Findings from these cases analyses reveal that many of the retrenchment awards were made against the employers due to poor selection of workforce for retrenchment, and the handling of the retrenchment exercise itself which violated the relevant statutes and the established procedures. The author suggests that retrenchment should not be viewed as a reactive but a proactive exercise, which begins with effective human resource planning aligned with the organizational strategic plan. The retrenchment exercise should also need be seen as a last resort when limiting recruitment, reduction in working hours, helping the employees (workmen) to find alternative employment, encouraging early retirement, offer of voluntary separation scheme (VSS) and other measures have been exhausted. The author hopes with many proactive measures, taken by employers in the management of retrenchment, the number of unfair retrenchment claims made to the Industrial Relations Department will be reduced.
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Monteiro, Nathalie Barbosa Reis, Ana Keuly Luz Bezerra, José Machado Moita Neto, and Elaine Aparecida da Silva. "Mining Law: In Search of Sustainable Mining." Sustainability 13, no. 2 (January 16, 2021): 867. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13020867.

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Mining is an activity that generates inputs to different production chains, making it essential for any country’s development. However, it causes environmental, economic, and social impacts that must be considered. The Mining Law provides guidelines, through laws and regulations, so the activity can be carried out in an environmentally, economically, and socially sustainable way. In this paper, an analysis was conducted of the application of some peculiar characteristics of Brazilian Mining Law (locational rigidity, priority granting, among others) according to the parameters established in the Federal Constitution, in the Mining Code and its updates, and in the National Department of Mineral Production, Environment Ministry, and Mines and Energy Ministry normative acts. Moreover, the Superior Court of Justice Jurisprudence was analyzed to understand how the Mining Law is applied, in practice. It was verified that the Brazilian legislation is not perfect, but it has mechanisms to protect and benefit the miner, the society, and the environment. However, there are many shortcomings like the lack of speed in judging processes and the flaws in the applicability of some principles that compromise sustainability in the activity’s development, especially regarding the environmental and social liabilities left after mine closure.
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7

Robardet, Patrick. "Processus décisionnels, justice naturelle et équité procédurale dans la jurisprudence comparée de la Cour fédérale et des cours ontariennes et québécoises." Les Cahiers de droit 23, no. 3 (April 12, 2005): 687–771. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/042512ar.

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Natural justice and fairness (the « new natural justice ») are well known notions of administrative law. They constitute traditional and newer limits on administrative action. This article analyses these two principles, both as to their nature and the extent to which they are respected by administrative bodies and by government (the Crown and central departments). This latter aspect is illustrated by cases pertaining to the judicial control exercised by the Federal Court of Canada and the Ontario and Quebec superior courts. The approach followed is a comparative one. The paper attempts to identify those judicial trends within the three systems studied which [emphasize] [differences and similarities] in their responses to the various practical issues raised by natural justice and fairness and their respect in administrative decision-making processes. Thus, the study attempts to retrieve from the case law considered those notional and methodological elements, or principles, which structure judicial control and judical reasoning in solving the issues raised by the processes in motion.
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Shukla, U. K., Sateesh Kumar Patel, and Shri Kant. "A comparative study of bacterial qualities of raw milk of cow and sheep." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES 18, no. 1 (January 15, 2022): 206–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.15740/has/ijas/18.1/206-214.

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A comparative study of bacterial qualities of raw milk of cow and sheep was conducted at Livestock production and management (unit), Department of NRM, faculty of agriculture, MGCGV Chitrakoot–Satna (M.P.) during January to February 2021. All sanitary precaution were followed to produce clean milk. The sample of the raw milk of three animal each were replicated ten time and tested to deyermine the standard plate count (SPC) (10t), lactic acid bacteria count (LABC) ( 10³), lipolytic bacteria count (LBC) (10²) proteolytic bacteria count (PBC) (10²) and coliform count (CC) in the raw milk. The data obtained for the a foresaid tests were subjected to statitical analysis. The result of the statical analysis showed that the differences in mean values of SPC 10t,LABC/10³,LBC/10² and PBC,10². In view of the finding and result presented above, results that the milk of all the animals was of superior quality, due to low bacteria count and absence of coliform. The bacteria quality of milk of cow was found superior than sheep milk due to minimum bacteria count of SPC, LABC, LBC and PBC and absence of coliform.
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Haider, Rana Zeeshan, Najeed Ahmed Khan, Eloisa Urrechaga, and Tahir Sultan Shamsi. "Mature and Immature/Activated Cells Fractionation: Time for a Paradigm Shift in Differential Leucocyte Count Reporting?" Diagnostics 11, no. 6 (May 21, 2021): 922. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11060922.

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Leucocytes, especially neutrophils featuring pro- and anti-cancerous characteristics, are involved in nearly every stage of tumorigenesis. Phenotypic and functional differences among mature and immature neutrophil fractions are well reported, and their correlation with tumor progression and therapy has emerging implications in modern oncology practices. Technological advancements enabled modern hematology analyzers to generate extended information (research parameters) during complete blood cell count (CBC) analysis. We hypothesized that neutrophil and lymphocyte fractions-related extended differential leucocytes count (DLC) parameters hold superior diagnostic utility over routine modalities. The present study was carried out over a four-and-a-half-year period wherein extended neutrophil (immature granulocyte [IG] and mature neutrophil [NEUT#&]), and lymphocyte (activated/high fluorescence lymphocyte count [HFLC] and resting lymphocyte [LYMP#&]) parameters were challenged over routine neutrophil [NEUT#] and lymphocyte [LYMP#] items in a study population of 1067 hematological neoplasm patients. Extending the classical statistical approaches, machine-learning-backed data visualization was used to explore trends in the study parameters. As a whole, extended neutrophil and lymphocyte count outperformed and was diagnostically more relevant than routine neutrophil and lymphocyte parameters by showing the least difference from their respective (gold-standard) manual DLC counts. The mature neutrophil count was compared to IG, and resting lymphocyte count was compared to HFLC by calling the function ‘correlation’ as a ‘clustering function’ for heatmap based visualization. The aforementioned study parameters displayed close clustering (rearrangement) for their respective study items by presenting distinct trends of equally valuable weights (deviated values), advocating fractions-based extended DLC reporting. Importantly, using a Bland and Altman analysis analogously to a manual neutrophil count, the mature neutrophil count [NEUT#&] remained unbiased since a routine neutrophil count [NEUT#] was found to be a negatively biased. The extended DLC-parameter-driven fractions-based reporting has superior diagnostic utility over classical routine approaches; this finding can largely minimize labor-intensive manual DLC practices, especially in hematology–oncology departments.
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10

Jasim, H. H., and H. H. Al-Naif. "Effect of Adding Chitosan and Oxytetracycline to the Diets of Corn in Physiological and Microbial Performance of Broiler." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 904, no. 1 (November 1, 2021): 012034. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/904/1/012034.

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Abstract This experiment was conducted in the poultry farm of the Animal Production Department/College of Agriculture/Anbar University, from 8/12/2019 until 23/3/2019 for 6 weeks. The experiment aim to compare the addition of two different levels of chitosan and a group of antibiotics to the corn-soybean diet and their effect in physiological and microbial performance at 42 days. The experiment included T1 (control of corn diet without any addition), T2 (0.2 g oxytetracycline/kg corn diet), T3 (1 g chitosan/kg corn diet), and T4 (2g chitosan/kg corn diet). In the experiment, 144 birds (Ross) at the age of 7 days were used with an average weight of 40 g. The chicks were distributed randomly to 4 treatments, with 3 replicates, and in each repeater, 12 birds. The results of the physiological parameters indicated that there were T4 increased significantly (P≤0.05) compared to other treatments in H/L and monocyte count at 42 days, while the results showed that were no significant differences in the biochemical characteristics of blood. As for the tissue of Jejunum, treatment T3 was significantly (P≤0.05) superior to the rest of the treatments in the height, thickness of villi and depth of crypts over the experimental treatment. There was a significant decrease (P≤0.05) for the T3 and T4 compared to the T1 control treatment on the total bacterial count and colon bacterial count.
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Books on the topic "Superior Court Department"

1

Commission, Connecticut Bail. State of Connecticut, Judicial Department, Superior Court Bail Commission, May 1, 1985 - April 30, 1986. Hartford, Conn: The Commission, 1986.

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Massachusetts. Department of the State Auditor. State auditor's report on the activities of the Berkshire Juvenile Probation Division - District Court Department, July 1, 1986 to June 30, 1987. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Auditor of the Commonwealth, 1987.

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Commission, Connecticut Bail. State of Connecticut, Judicial Department, Superior Court, Bail Commission: [report] May 1, 1984-April 30, 1985. Hartford, Conn: State of Connecticut, Bail Commission, Office of the Chief Bail Commissioner, 1985.

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Bayer, Michael J. Pretrial litigation primer 2013. Boston, MA: MCLE New England, 2013.

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Nominations of David F. Heyman, Marisa J. Demeo, and Florence Y. Pan: Hearing before the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, of the One Hundred Eleventh Congress, first session : nominations of David F. Heyman to be assistant secretary, U. S. Department of Homeland Security, Marisa J. Demeo to be associate judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia, and Florence Y. Pan to be associate judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia, May 13, 2009. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2011.

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Committee, New Jersey Legislature Senate Judiciary. Committee meeting before Senate Judiciary Committee: Nomination interview of Christopher J. Daggett to be the Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection : January 26, 1989, Room 424, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey. Trenton: The Committee, 1989.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Judiciary Committee. Committee meeting before Senate Judiciary Committee: Nomination interview of Judge Richard S. Hyland to be a Judge of the Superior Court, to succeed himself for the term prescribed by law : February 17, 1988, Room 424, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey. Trenton, N.J: The Committee, 1988.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Judiciary Committee. Committee meeting before Senate Judiciary Committee: Senate bill 3320 (the "New Jersey Advance Directives for Health Care Act"), Senate Bill 2067 (establishes the "New Jersey Health Care Directive Act"), Senate Bill 2659 (enacts the "New Jersey Declaration of Death Act") : June 8, 1989, Room 424, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey. Trenton, N.J: The Unit, 1989.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Judiciary Committee. Committee meeting before Senate Judiciary Committee: Nomination of Robert N. Guido, to be a member of the Board of Public Utilities, to succeed himself, for the term prescribed by law, December 14, 1987, Room 424, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey. Trenton, N.J. (State House Annex, CN 068, Trenton 08625): The Committee, 1987.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Judiciary Committee. Committee meeting before Senate Judiciary Committee: Nomination interviews of Dr. Molly Coye to be Commissioner of Health, Drew E. Altman to be Commissioner of Human Services; and Frank Dodd, Dr. Roy Gottesman, Thomas J. Leane, and Maxwell Weiss to succeed themselves on the Hazardous Waste Facilities Siting Commission : May 19, 1986. [Trenton, N.J.]: The Committee, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Superior Court Department"

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"Mental Health and Drug Treatment Need vs. Capacity." In Community Risk and Protective Factors for Probation and Parole Risk Assessment Tools, 108–23. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-1147-3.ch009.

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In 2018, the local District of Columbia auditor found that a section of the Department of Behavioral Health that performed psychiatric evaluations had significant staff turnover and long-standing position vacancies and that there had been a several-week period when approximately one-fourth of the Division's full-time positions were vacant. As a result, the Department's psychiatric evaluation waitlist grew, delaying many defendants' evaluations beyond the statutorily permissible timeframe. When the problem persisted, DC Superior Court judges threatened contempt citations. Moreover, the Department relied on a network of small to mid-sized nonprofit agencies to provide the vast majority of public behavioral health services. However, many of these nonprofits had experienced lengthy delays in reimbursement stemming from the Department of Behavioral Health's billing software, and some were forced to close. These circumstances suggested the CSOSA clients would have been unlikely to have received mental health treatment.
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