Everyone, governed and governor, is subject to the rule of law, free from arbitrariness and whims. |
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At the individual level, disadvantageous treatment of the disabled is often rooted in ill-will, disregard, and moral arbitrariness. |
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Corresponding to the interminability of public arguments there is at least the appearance of a disquieting private arbitrariness. |
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It can carry with it aspects of arbitrariness or domineeringness, or whimsicality or abstractedness. |
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In fact, freedom is in danger of degenerating into mere arbitrariness unless it is lived in terms of responsibleness. |
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The coupling of experience to words is arbitrary, just as there's some arbitrariness to the coupling of one word with another. |
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These two failures suggest a degree of arbitrariness in the Foster range tests. |
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The arbitrariness is magnified by the fact that the victim of the crime is not motivating the pursuit. |
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By subjecting him and all other officials to a constitution, it sought to replace the rule of arbitrariness by the rule of law. |
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At the same time, he reveals their mismanagement, the absence of democracy, the arbitrariness of the regime. |
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Evidence of some criteria being met can be seen, i.e., they show some semanticity, prevarication, arbitrariness, and combining ability. |
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Those arguments proceed to the rigidity and arbitrariness of imposed standards. |
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The mock trial scene of his divorce further helps to unveil this arbitrariness of language. |
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Moreover, the arbitrariness of colonial power served to twist changing interests and strategies in unpredictable ways. |
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The collection examines the arbitrariness of color lines drawn both between and within races. |
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The plays were a return to the theme of the arbitrariness yet inevitability of death. |
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At first glance, this passage seems designed merely to call our attention to the arbitrariness of geographical associations. |
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Philosophy and history persistently argue the inherent arbitrariness of what we call reality. |
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Corruption weakens the rule of law and increases the fragility of property rights and the arbitrariness of law enforcement. |
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The court, created in 2003, was widely criticized for what some called the arbitrariness of its trials and sentences. |
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What also has people concerned is the scope of the offense and the arbitrariness with which it might be perceived. |
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Its government desperately needs such a system of accountability to stem the arbitrariness, corruption, and cronyism. |
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Procedural safeguards are necessary to avoid any risk of arbitrariness resulting from a decision to place a prisoner in solitary confinement. |
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Categorizing into bins is labor intensive with inevitable arbitrariness that may vary between laboratories. |
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But the arbitrariness, the unintelligibility, the absolute mysteriousness of totalitarianism are essential to Berman's larger argument. |
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This result reflects the ruling arbitrariness in labour relations and the paltriness of the unions as counterpart to the State as employer. |
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The arbitrariness of these figures is itself an indication of the illusory nature of the benefits. |
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When the rule of law is not respected, arbitrariness and impunity dominate the political scene. |
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More important to seed-sector development, these bans signal the arbitrariness and unpredictability of public policy. |
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Any level of arbitrariness in the information provided in handbooks would only cause noise in our analyses and hence render any detected relationships conservative. |
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In the absence of clear criteria on corruption, he will be open to the charge of arbitrariness. |
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In the instant case the Court noted that there was no appearance of arbitrariness in the proceedings in either Romania or the United Kingdom. |
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Otherwise, they would face the charge of arbitrariness or ad hocery in views about which categories there are or where category differences lie. |
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These principles represent the most important guarantees and protections against arbitrariness and against denial of fundamental rights. |
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The arbitrariness that could happen there would undermine the reason to have the system in the first place. |
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This expression seeks to convey a sense of arbitrariness and of illegality. |
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Seven out of ten reckoned that judicial arbitrariness was a big problem for their businesses. |
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In the present situation, it is a guarantee of plurality and it puts a limit to the arbitrariness of political power. |
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Owing to its tolerance, it encourages solidarity, fosters unity, repudiates violence and hatred and combats arbitrariness and oppression. |
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My group fears that this would open the floodgates to arbitrariness and competitive distortion. |
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And institutional sloppiness and arbitrariness nearly drove me to bankruptcy. |
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He argues that arbitrariness of corrupt transactions adversely impacts on capital inflows, providing a reason that corruption is more harmful than taxes. |
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Moreover, once Greendale is saved, they quickly call of their engagement further revealing its arbitrariness. |
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Where colonial constructions force disparate peoples together by the arbitrariness of a colonial map-maker's pen, nationhood becomes an elusive notion. |
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In the government's view, this was especially so when a discretionary life sentence by its very nature avoided the risk of arbitrariness of mandatory life sentences. |
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He reveals the arbitrariness of race in his fragmented self. |
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For Dickens, history has both an inexorability and an arbitrariness. |
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In spite of its arbitrariness, that hypothesis had a singular fortune, for it dominated Western thought in one form or another almost until the eighteenth century. |
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The apparent arbitrariness of equity is better than the turmoil of passions. |
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It is this arbitrariness of framing and perspective that denies the certainness normally associated with Western art. |
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Such complaints reinforce concerns about the opacity and arbitrariness of the settlement process, where fines reflect no known economic rationale. But there were also criticisms that the settlements were too small. |
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You're even going to have trouble explaining why kids can't legally vote or drive or get married, and you're going to be upset by the arbitrariness of the ages at which we decide they abruptly can. |
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As for the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, its purpose was to protect the citizen against the arbitrariness of royal power. |
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However, in the present case, the Committee concluded that the information before it did not point to arbitrariness, manifest error or denial of justice by the courts. |
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This is one of the basic rules of international negotiations, of international diplomacy, and should really provide sufficient assurances when one has fear of surprises of arbitrariness. |
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All over the world men and women are rising to denounce the arbitrariness of States, economic powers or armed groups that pay little heed to the public interest. |
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He mentioned the idea of public interest exceptions and to have certainty whenever possible in these clauses and take most of the arbitrariness out of it. |
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Israel's laws governing freedom of movement are likewise administered in a humiliating manner, but they are characterized by arbitrariness and caprice. |
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More than ever, in these times of crises, human rights defenders, through their rigorous investigations, their uncompromised actions and their unselfish commitment constitute the last rampart against arbitrariness. |
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Thus the use of proportionality as a criterion of restraint and value is largely intractable since one person's concept of proportionality might be another's concept of arbitrariness or tyranny. |
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It is nevertheless important, in the case of candidates subject to an appraisal, that they should enjoy legal safeguards that protect them against arbitrariness in the appraisal of their work. |
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This tendency is clearly a second way to avoid the arbitrariness and posthockery of eclecticism. |
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All the things you're not supposed to do at the beginning of your professional life — transgressiveness, arbitrariness and violating expectations — you find more attractive at the end of your professional life. |
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This represents a further step towards the preclusion of arbitrariness in their regard and compliance with the precepts of the constitutional, democratic rule of law and, moreover, protects the principle of legal reservation. |
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The reason for regulating such matters in the World Trade Organisation context is that bilateral contracts outside this organisation lead to more arbitrariness, uncontrollability and circumstances beyond one's control. |
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Contrary to the expectations of humankind at the end of the cold war, world peace and security continue to deteriorate due to the high-handedness and arbitrariness of the super-Power and all types of conflicts. |
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You can resume a number of the points that have been made around the table under one principle, and it is that the secretiveness and the arbitrariness of decisions that have been made by the CBC board bother us a great deal. |
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Borders throughout the world have been established by war and conquest, and Africa is unusual rather in the abruptness of the transition than in the arbitrariness of the outcome. |
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Neither reverence, awe or passive submission, on the one hand, nor callousness, disregard or arbitrariness, on the other hand, constitute the proper relating to nature. |
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They therefore limit the risk of arbitrariness or favoritism in decision-making, and they ensure that the decisions are made in the light of the real needs, as expressed by the ultimate beneficiaries. |
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But everyone, not just the record breaker, creates these little bubbles of meaning, drawing a line around a tiny portion of the world to make the arbitrariness of life bearable. |
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Perhaps anamnesis, remembering forgetting, is another figure of untruth in truth, the unproof, the arbitrariness and unconvincingness, of every proof. |
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He also rejected accusations of arbitrariness, voluntarism, and populism. |
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However, its severity was reduced by an act of 1540, which retained the death penalty only for denial of transubstantiation, and a further act limited its arbitrariness. |
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Mere logism does not do justice to the import of being, and alogism does not do justice to the forms of thought. The former leads to formalism, the latter to arbitrariness. |
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