juridically - meaning and definition. What is juridically
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What (who) is juridically - definition


Juridically      
·adv In a juridical manner.
Juridical         
·adj Pertaining to a judge or to jurisprudence; acting in the distribution of justice; used in courts of law; according to law; legal; as, juridical law.
Juridic         
  • [[Philosopher]]s of law ask "what is law, and what should it be?"
  • [[Aristotle]], by [[Francesco Hayez]]
  • Bentham's]] utilitarian theories remained dominant in law until the twentieth century.
  • Mill]] believed law should create happiness.
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes]] was a self-styled legal realist.
  • [[Plato]] (left) and [[Aristotle]] (right), a detail of ''[[The School of Athens]]''
  • [[Thomas Aquinas]] was the most influential Western medieval legal scholar.
THEORETICAL STUDY OF LAW, BY PHILOSOPHERS AND SOCIAL SCIENTISTS
Legal theory; Juris prudentes; Jurispendence; Legal Theory; Legal studies; School of Jurisprudence; Iurisprudentia; Legal Philosophy; Juridic; Philosophy of the law; Legal Studies; Normative jurisprudence; Jurisprudential; Legal theorist; Concept of law; Theory of law; Law (Jurisprudence); Juridical work; Law theory; Jurisprudent; Law studies; History of jurisprudence
·adj ·Alt. of Juridical.
Examples of use of juridically
1. After the Six–Day War, in which Israel captured east Jerusalem, the West Bank, Gaza and Sinai, successive governments kept these territories juridically separate from Israel and treated them as bargaining counters for future negotiations.
2. That would lead to juridically enshrining inequality and open the way to ethnic separatism." Some critics say the problem is not cultural integration but straightforward discrimination in a society that has not allowed the arrival of millions of immigrants from different countries to change its view of itself.
3. Winfried Hassemer, the court‘s vice–president and chairman of the eight–judge court panel which will rule on the election, said Mr Schröder‘s argument for calling a fresh ballot – that he no longer enjoyed a stable parliamentary majority – would be "hard to prove juridically". The comment echoed the argument of Otto Schily, the interior minister and the government‘s representative at the hearing, that the court should consider political, and not simply legal, arguments in their decision.