Injunction

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    Amendment. The District Court’s ruling to terminate the injunction and then later the decree were perfectly logical. The injunction had started in 1972 and by 1977 the school had desegregated the school by the government’s standards. Over the five years, the school changed enough that the government had claimed the district had achieved “unitary” status and desegregation was complete. Therefore, the case was rightfully terminated. These injunctions and decrees were not meant to be a sword…

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    Tobin's Ruling

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    teens who as of right now, are not being treated as equals by law. Tobin’s article starts with a brief summary on district judge Reed O’Connor’s most recent injunction on the federal government’s allowance of bathrooms in high school being available to all gender identities. She quickly follows by addressing her argument; Connor’s injunction is unlawful. Tobin’s article is directed towards the general audience, but her overall purpose is to inform those who may not…

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    (120). This was further exacerbated by the banning of church ales. These, too, were not only an important source of church income. Church ales were “a lynchpin of social life, the raison d’être of the church houses” (120). The changes caused by the Injunctions were catastrophic to the villagers, both economically and socially. It was not long before they would join the rebellion against the government that encroached on their way of…

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    as the anti-injunction act, was also in powerful piece of legislation that was passed in the 1930s. The Norris LaGuardia Act picked up where the Clayton Act of 1914 stopped, curtailing the use of injunctions more effectively. The purpose of this act was to protect workers against anti-labor injunctions. At the turn of the century the government and law was totally in favor of the employers and business owners. Whenever workers would try to organize the courts would order “injunctions”, and these…

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    On September 21, 2007, the court case Palmer v. Waxahachie I.S.D. took place because a student by the name of Palmer wore a t-shirt with the words “San Diego” on it to school. The administrators at school informed the student that he was in violation of the school dress code, which states that t-shirts with printed messages were not allowed. As a result, the student called his parents to bring him a different shirt. When they arrived, they had another t-shirt, but this time the message…

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    Wang Kon Analysis

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    wrote the ten injunctions as a set of instructions to ensure the continuation of the dynasty; however, there are still remaining aspects of this dynasty through stories and even the organization of cities. Specifically, the concept of geomancy has survived through revolutions and a different dynasty; it is a major part of the traditional Korean society. Geomancy is an idea borrowed from China (fengshui); since it is a Chinese idea, it’s almost hypocritical that Wang Kon’s fourth injunction is…

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    Therefore, the yellow dog contract was an intimidating strategy that worked in the favor of the employers and suppressed the fruition of unions. The first piece of legislation to protect union employees from harsh injunctions was the Norris–LaGuardia Act in 1932, according to the textbook, the act sought to remove the courts from labor relations (Budd, 2013, p. 115). By doing so, this allowed workers the freedom to join unions and to have a union representative advocated…

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    The Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929 was aimed to restrain the solemnisation of child marriages. It was applicable to all person irrespective of religion i.e. Hindus, Muslims and Christians etc. This Act defines the terms ‘child marriage‘, ‘child’, ‘minors’, etc. It prescribed the minimum age for marriage for both boys and girls. In 1929, the minimum age of marriage for girls was fifteen and for boys it was eighteen. This Act prohibited the solemnisation of child marriages but it did not…

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    The Pullman Palace Car Company was a company that manufactured railroad cars, founded by George Pullman. George Pullman required all of his workers to live in Pullman City, a three thousand acre plot. In addition, he also expected his workers to accept pay cuts at any time and not to criticize the workloads. It 1893, the depression resulted in Pullman cutting wages by about twenty-five percent. However, the costs of living in Pullman City did not change. The decrease in pay combined with the…

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    extending even further, how much legal effect should constitutional conventions carry. It can be argued that although technically Lord Widgery did not enforce the constitutional conventions (of confidentiality of cabinet proceedings) by refusing an injunction, he did however expand an existing common law doctrine (of confidentiality) so that some purpose of the constitutional convention could still be achieved in the future. On the other hand, some may argue that Lord Widgery ‘stretched’ the…

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