Essays about: "British law"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 58 essays containing the words British law.
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1. Transnational Democracy in Europe : A Case Study on the pan-European Party Volt Europa
University essay from Linköpings universitet/StatsvetenskapAbstract : In a setting of rising global challenges, transnational issues, and a deadlocked debate on European integration in the aftermath of the British Brexit referendum, this thesis presents the pan-European political movement and party as a novel approach of a cosmopolitan European generation taking their fate in their own hands. Consequently, the study investigates the characteristics of the ideological foundations of the emergence, vision, and strategy of the pan-European political movement Volt Europa. READ MORE
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2. The First Past the Post System and its Effects on Democratic Representation in the British Parliament
University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för statsvetenskap (ST)Abstract : Democratic representation is crucial in a representative democracy. To elect representatives there are several different electoral systems. In the United Kingdom a majority system, the First past the post system, is used. READ MORE
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3. Ideology, Allegory, and Identity: : A Study of American Political Cartoons, 1770-1815
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Historiska institutionenAbstract : In 1776, war broke out in the Colonies of New England between British Subjects, colonists, and those emplyed by the crown to uphoald law and order across the Atlantic. The union that wuld emerge from the war would have to develop what the colnial powers they migrated from had been adding on for centuries: an understanding of national character. READ MORE
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4. The Influence of Forensic Science and Law Enforcement on the Sherlock Holmes Stories
University essay from Lunds universitet/EngelskaAbstract : Sherlock Holmes is one of the most famous protagonists in the literary genre of crime, but how he came to be is not often discussed. The stories about Holmes were written in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by Arthur Conan Doyle during a period when British society was developing in matters of human rights, law, and science. READ MORE
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5. Will AI Change How We Innovate? - A Study of Inventive AI, Patentability, and Inventorship in Light of the DABUS case
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakultetenAbstract : The U.S. painter Helen Frankenthaler, a behemoth of post-war American abstractionist painting, once described the act of inventing as an activity without rules. ”This is how art is born, how breakthroughs happen. READ MORE