Search for dissertations about: "LAW JURISPRUDENCE Public law"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 13 swedish dissertations containing the words LAW JURISPRUDENCE Public law.
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1. Assessing Capacity to Decide on Medical Treatment: On Human Rights and the Use of Medical Knowledge in the Laws of England, Russia and Sweden
Abstract : To provide a valid consent to – or refusal of – medical intervention, a patient must be legally capable to decide. This dissertation evaluates and compares when the assessment of mental abilities to refuse – or consent to – somatic medical intervention is required in England, Russia and Sweden, and what criteria must be applied to assess the ability to decide about somatic medical interventions in these legal orders. READ MORE
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2. The Legal Status of Non-Governmental Organisations in International Law
Abstract : Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are increasingly the subject of public debate, and it is often asserted that they play an informal role within the international legal system. At the same time, the classical concepts related to the subjects of international law seem to be constructed for a situation where non-state actors have no or limited international legal personality. READ MORE
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3. Intern kommunal kompetensfördelning
Abstract : In Sweden, the competence to make decisions is divided between different organs withinthe municipalities. The duties of a municipality are divided between the directly electedassembly and the indirectly elected committees. READ MORE
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4. Polisens rättsliga befogenheter vid spaning
Abstract : This thesis investigates the legal authority to use power available to police in pursuing secret surveillance to detect and take legal measures against crimes. It analysis the regulations governing different methods of surveillance, and how they balance public and private interests in legislation as well as in its application. READ MORE
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5. Themis v. Xiezhi: Assessing Judicial Independence in the People's Republic of China under International Human Rights Law
Abstract : The first of three parts in this study elaborates on international human rights law and drawing on the most essential international instruments and jurisprudence, the criteria constituting judicial independence are distilled as a framework for assessment. The point of departure is that judicial independence is a necessary guarantee for the enjoyment of human rights rather than a privilege of judges. READ MORE