mandatory$46642$ - translation to ελληνικό
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mandatory$46642$ - translation to ελληνικό

MINIMUM PENALTIES FOR CRIMES
Mandatory sentence; Minimum sentencing guidelines; Minimum mandatory; Minimum mandatory sentence; Minimum mandatory sentencing; Min-man; Mandatory life sentence; Mandatory minimum; Mandatory minimum sentencing; Manditory sentencing; Mandatory minimum sentence; Minimum sentence; Mandatory minimum sentences; Mandatory minima; Mandatory minimums; Minimum term; Mandatory minimum penalties; Mandatory death sentence; Mandatory death penalty; Mandatory prison sentence; Mandatory jail sentence; Mandatory incarceration; Mandatory capital punishment; Mandatory penalties; Boggs Act; Mandatory prison sentences; Mandatory sentences; History of mandatory sentencing in the United States; Criticism of mandatory sentencing; Mandatory imprisonment; Arguments for and against mandatory sentencing; Mandatory minimum prison sentence

mandatory      
adj. επιτακτικός, προστακτικός
moral obligation         
COURSE OF ACTION THAT SOMEONE IS REQUIRED TO TAKE, WHETHER LEGAL OR MORAL
Obligations; Moral obligation; Obligated; Obligatory; Obligates; Obligating; Obligatorily; Personal obligations
ηθική υποχρέωση
draft card         
  • Ottoman [[janissaries]]
  • Conscription of Poles to the Russian Army in 1863 (by [[Aleksander Sochaczewski]])
  • [[Evzones]] of the Presidential Guard in front of the [[Greek Parliament]] armed with M1 Garands
  • [[Conscription in Iran]]
  • Royal Life Guards]] in Copenhagen
  • Female Israeli soldiers
  • Painting depicting the ''Departure of the Conscripts of 1807'' by [[Louis-Léopold Boilly]]
  • New York anti-draft riots]] of 1863
  • invaded the Soviet Union]], 1941
  • Painting depicting a battle during the Ōnin War
  • terracotta]] soldier with his horse, China, 210–209 BC
  • Assembling and disassembling gun parts by Iranian soldiers with closed eyes.
  • Finnish conscripts swearing their [[military oath]] at the end of their basic training period
  • Swedish conscripts in 2008
  • Young men registering for conscription during [[World War I]], New York City, June 5, 1917
COMPULSORY ENLISTMENT INTO NATIONAL OR MILITARY SERVICE
Conscripts; Military draft; Conscript; Mandatory military service; Mandatory army service; The Draft; Conscripted; Mandatory conscription; The draft; Draft card; Compulsory military service; Forced conscription; Compulsory Military Training; Levy system; Feudal levy; Compulsory military training; Military conscription; Conscript Troops; Conscript system; Draft law; Anti-conscription; Military slavery; Military Slavery; Military conscript; Military Draft; Universal military service; Conscription option; Compulsory draft; Ilkum; Drafting soldiers; Feudal levies; Draft (conscription); World War II draft; General conscription; Draft registration; Register for the draft; Registering for the draft; Slave-soldier; Conscript army; Called up for military service; Arguments against conscription; Military draught; Slave soldier; Slave military; Military slave; Military slavery in the Ottoman Empire; Slave soldiers; Conscription in Bulgaria; Conscription of women; Draftee; Draftee Army; Opposition to conscription; Call-up
κάρτα στρατεύσεως

Ορισμός

mandate
(mandates, mandating, mandated)
1.
If a government or other elected body has a mandate to carry out a particular policy or task, they have the authority to carry it out as a result of winning an election or vote.
The President and his supporters are almost certain to read this vote as a mandate for continued economic reform...
N-COUNT: oft N for n, N to-inf
2.
If someone is given a mandate to carry out a particular policy or task, they are given the official authority to do it.
How much longer does the independent prosecutor have a mandate to pursue this investigation?...
N-COUNT: oft N to-inf
3.
You can refer to the fixed length of time that a country's leader or government remains in office as their mandate. (FORMAL)
...his intention to leave politics once his mandate ends.
N-COUNT: usu with poss
4.
When someone is mandated to carry out a particular policy or task, they are given the official authority to do it. (FORMAL)
He'd been mandated by the West African Economic Community to go in and to enforce a ceasefire...
The elections are mandated by a peace accord signed by the government last May.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed to-inf, be V-ed
5.
To mandate something means to make it mandatory. (AM)
The proposed initiative would mandate a reduction of carbon dioxide of 40%...
Quebec mandated that all immigrants send their children to French schools.
...constitutionally mandated civil rights.
VERB: V n, V that, V-ed

Βικιπαίδεια

Mandatory sentencing

Mandatory sentencing requires that offenders serve a predefined term for certain crimes, commonly serious and violent offenses. Judges are bound by law; these sentences are produced through the legislature, not the judicial system. They are instituted to expedite the sentencing process and limit the possibility of irregularity of outcomes due to judicial discretion. Mandatory sentences are typically given to people who are convicted of certain serious and/or violent crimes, and require a prison sentence. Mandatory sentencing laws vary across nations; they are more prevalent in common law jurisdictions because civil law jurisdictions usually prescribe minimum and maximum sentences for every type of crime in explicit laws.

Mandatory sentencing laws often target "moral vices" (such as alcohol, sex, drugs) and crimes that threaten a person's livelihood. The idea is that there are some crimes that are so heinous, there is no way to accept the offender back into the general population without first punishing them sufficiently. Some crimes are viewed as serious enough to require an indefinite removal from society by a life sentence, or sometimes capital punishment. It is viewed as a public service to separate these people from the general population, as it is assumed that the nature of the crime or the frequency of violation supersedes the subjective opinion of a judge. Remedying the irregularities in sentencing that arise from judicial discretion is supposed to make sentencing more fair and balanced. In Australia and the United Kingdom, sentencing has been heavily influenced by judicial idiosyncrasies. Individual judges have a significant effect on the outcome of the case, sometimes leading the public to believe that a sentence reflects more about the judge than the offender. Subsequently, creating stricter sentencing guidelines would promote consistency and fairness in the judicial system. Mandatory sentences are also supposed to serve as a general deterrence for potential criminals and repeat offenders, who are expected to avoid crime because they can be certain of their sentence if they are caught. This is the reasoning behind the "tough on crime" policy.

United States federal juries are generally not allowed to be informed of the mandatory minimum penalties that may apply if the accused is convicted because the jury's role is limited to a determination of guilt or innocence. However, defense attorneys sometimes have found ways to impart this information to juries; for instance, it is occasionally possible, on cross-examination of an informant who faced similar charges, to ask how much time he was facing. It is sometimes deemed permissible because it is a means of impeaching the witness. However, in at least one state court case in Idaho, it was deemed impermissible.

Notably, capital punishment has been mandatory for murder in a certain number of jurisdictions, including the United Kingdom until 1957 and Canada until 1961.