diversity$22349$ - translation to ελληνικό
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diversity$22349$ - translation to ελληνικό

U.S. COURT JURISDICTION OVER PERSONS OF DIFFERENT STATES OR NATIONALITIES
Complete diversity; Diversity of citizenship; Diversity suit; Diversity (law); Diversity suits; Diversity clause

diversity      
n. ποικιλία
academic freedom         
  • [[Michael Polanyi]] argued that academic freedom was a fundamental necessity for the production of true knowledge.
  • Self-censorship in a Chinese academic journal: an editor asks the article's author to remove a sentence about [[blocking of Wikipedia in mainland China]] as it could cause trouble with the "authorities".
LIBERTY OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS TO DECIDE COURSES AND RESEARCH, AND OF TEACHERS TO TEACH SUBJECTS, WITHOUT OUTSIDE COERCION
Academic Freedom; Society for Freedom in Science; Scientific freedom; Institutional autonomy; Academic freedom in the United States; Viewpoint diversity; Academic freedom in China; Freedom of inquiry
ακαδημαϊκή ελευθερία
computer science         
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STUDY OF COMPUTATION
Computer Science; Computer sciences; Computing science; Comp.sc.; Computer scientists; Compsci; Computing Sciences; Datalogy; Computing Science; Comp Sci; Diversity of computer science; Computer-science; List of computer science fields; Alternative definitions of computer science; Computer Sceince Engineering; Computer Science Engineering; Department of computer science; Computer Studies; Com sci; Comsci; Department of Computer Science; Systems and Computing Engineering; Comp. Sci; Computer studies; Computer Sciences Engineering; Computer science engineering; CompSci; Computer Science and Technology; Draft:Yugoslavic Cartesian Bitmapping; Informatics Practices; Draft:Informatics Practices; Department of Computer Science and Technology; Computer Sciences; Comp sci
πληροφορική

Ορισμός

diversify
(diversifies, diversifying, diversified)
When an organization or person diversifies into other things, or diversifies their range of something, they increase the variety of things that they do or make.
The company's troubles started only when it diversified into new products...
Manufacturers have been encouraged to diversify...
These firms have been given a tough lesson in the need to diversify their markets.
= branch out
VERB: V into n/-ing, V, V n
diversification (diversifications)
The seminar was to discuss diversification of agriculture...
N-VAR

Βικιπαίδεια

Diversity jurisdiction

In the law of the United States, diversity jurisdiction is a form of subject-matter jurisdiction that gives U.S. federal courts the power to hear lawsuits that do not involve a federal question. For a U.S. federal court to have diversity jurisdiction over a lawsuit, two conditions must be met. First, there must be "diversity of citizenship" between the parties, meaning the plaintiffs must be citizens of different U.S. states than the defendants. Second, the lawsuit's "amount in controversy" must be more than $75,000. If a lawsuit does not meet these two conditions, U.S. federal courts will normally lack the power to hear it unless it involves a federal question, and the lawsuit would need to be heard in state court instead.

The United States Constitution, in Article III, Section 2, grants Congress the power to permit federal courts to hear diversity cases through legislation authorizing such jurisdiction. The provision was included because the Framers of the Constitution were concerned that when a case is filed in one state, and it involves parties from that state and another state, the state court might be biased toward the party from that state. Congress first exercised that power and granted federal trial circuit courts diversity jurisdiction in the Judiciary Act of 1789. Diversity jurisdiction is currently codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1332.

In 1969, the American Law Institute explained in a 587-page analysis of the subject that diversity is the "most controversial" type of federal jurisdiction, because it "lays bare fundamental issues regarding the nature and operation of our federal union."