await appeal - translation to italian
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await appeal - translation to italian

Mariam's Appeal; Mariam Appeal Campaign; Marian Appeal; The Mariam Appeal

await appeal      
aspettarsi un ricorso legale
leave to appeal         
  • Supreme Court of Victoria]], Australia
RESORT TO A SUPERIOR COURT TO REVIEW THE DECISION OF AN INFERIOR COURT OR ADMINISTRATIVE AGENCY
Appellate review; Appellate; Appellant; Mandate (law); Appeals; Appealed; Appealant; Appellee; Writ of error; Defendant in error; Legal appeal; Appeal (law); Notice of appeal; Notice of Appeal; Leave to appeal; Grounds for appeal; Legal right to appeal; Judicial appeals; Appeal as of right; Writ of Error; Appellate law; Affirmed in law; Reversal (law); Cross-appeal; Final appeal; Right to appeal; Writs of error; Apeal
autorizzazione di far ricorso in appello
appeal to         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Appeal to; Appeal (patent); Appeal (patent law); Appealing
v. invocare, ricorrere a, appellarsi a; attrarre

Definition

appellant
(appellants)
An appellant is someone who is appealing against a court's decision after they have been judged guilty of a crime. (LEGAL)
The Court of Appeal upheld the appellants' convictions.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Mariam Appeal

The Mariam Appeal ("the Appeal") was a political campaign in the United Kingdom (UK) established in 1998 which ceased operation in 2003. The objects of the Appeal as stated in its constitution were "to provide medicines, medical equipment and medical assistance to the people of Iraq; to highlight the causes and results of the cancer epidemic in Iraq and to arrange for the medical treatment of a number of Iraqi children outside Iraq". The campaign was founded by the politician George Galloway, then a member of parliament, Princess Sarvath, wife of then Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan, was patron of the Appeal.

The Mariam Appeal was intended "to campaign against sanctions on Iraq which are having disastrous effects on the ordinary people of Iraq." The campaign was named after Mariam Hamza, a child flown by the fund from Iraq to Britain to receive treatment for leukaemia. The intention was to raise awareness of the suffering and death of tens of thousands of other Iraqi children due to poor health conditions and lack of suitable medicines and facilities, and to campaign for the lifting of the sanctions seen by many as a direct cause of those problems.

Among the activities undertaken was a daily newsletter on sanctions, a sanctions-busting flight to Baghdad, the Big Ben to Baghdad trip in a red London bus, meetings and conferences, the projection of an anti-war slogan on the House of Commons, and the facilitating of trips to Iraq by dozens of journalists.