These rules can be termed proscriptive and jural, because they exclude people rather than include them and are open for negotiation. |
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Land, in this sense, appears merely as a geographic stage for the enactment of the jural elements of Aboriginal social organisation. |
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In the context of rights, a man may achieve maturity, but it is only upon his father's death that he gains true jural and ritual autonomy. |
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It is also an indication of the sphere of jural freedom within which a person is and must be left free. |
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In this discussion jural and cultural facets are intertwined, to explain the specific character of the Tolai adoption process, culturally and psychologically. |
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While the structures of jural obligations may be associated with kin proximity, there is considerable ethnographic evidence that across many societies this is not the case. |
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The matrilineage is collectively responsible for its members in jural matters. |
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In law the term refers to the complex of jural relationships between and among persons with respect to things. |
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The correlativity of this jural relationship shows that the person against whom the liberty is held has a no-right concerning the activity to which the liberty relates. |
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A breach of norms committed within a kin group may call for religious sanctions, although the same deed involving different kin groups would invoke jural sanctions. |
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Then this action would have become legitimized and transformed into the social structure, changing the jural nature of the tree-focused social isolate. |
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