The document defines several legal terms:
- International Treaty: A written agreement between two or more independent nations intended to create a legal relationship under international law for equal public welfare.
- Jurisprudence: The study or science of law associated with legal philosophy that analyzes, explains, classifies, and critiques bodies of law by raising fundamental questions about their application in courts.
- Custom: A common practice or usage that has gained the force of law through tacit consent of the legislature and people, supposing an actual agreement.
- Doctrine: A legal rule, theory, or principle, or a certain belief or canon that can be applied to practical
The document defines several legal terms:
- International Treaty: A written agreement between two or more independent nations intended to create a legal relationship under international law for equal public welfare.
- Jurisprudence: The study or science of law associated with legal philosophy that analyzes, explains, classifies, and critiques bodies of law by raising fundamental questions about their application in courts.
- Custom: A common practice or usage that has gained the force of law through tacit consent of the legislature and people, supposing an actual agreement.
- Doctrine: A legal rule, theory, or principle, or a certain belief or canon that can be applied to practical
The document defines several legal terms:
- International Treaty: A written agreement between two or more independent nations intended to create a legal relationship under international law for equal public welfare.
- Jurisprudence: The study or science of law associated with legal philosophy that analyzes, explains, classifies, and critiques bodies of law by raising fundamental questions about their application in courts.
- Custom: A common practice or usage that has gained the force of law through tacit consent of the legislature and people, supposing an actual agreement.
- Doctrine: A legal rule, theory, or principle, or a certain belief or canon that can be applied to practical
The document defines several legal terms:
- International Treaty: A written agreement between two or more independent nations intended to create a legal relationship under international law for equal public welfare.
- Jurisprudence: The study or science of law associated with legal philosophy that analyzes, explains, classifies, and critiques bodies of law by raising fundamental questions about their application in courts.
- Custom: A common practice or usage that has gained the force of law through tacit consent of the legislature and people, supposing an actual agreement.
- Doctrine: A legal rule, theory, or principle, or a certain belief or canon that can be applied to practical
International Treaty: an agreement in written form made between two or more independent nations, that intends on creating a relationship governed by International Law, and with a view on equal public welfare for the signing parties.
Jurisprudence: derived from the latin term juris prudentia which means the study, or science of law; it is associated with legal philosophy and seeks to analyze, explain, classify, and criticize entire bodies of law, by raising fundamental questions about a certain branch of law, comparing it to other disciplines and judging its application in a court of law, as well as the basis behind its application in practical cases.
Custom: a common practice or usage which has acquired the force of a law. It derives from the tacit consent of the legislature and the people, and supposes an actual agreement.
Doctrine: a legal rule, theory or principle. A certain belief, or canon which may be applied to practical cases of law.