He said he was hopeful that the courts would grant injunctions ordering the travellers off the land, but this could not be guaranteed. |
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The council's 15-strong Neighbour Nuisance Unit has helped secure more than 1,600 orders and injunctions against thugs. |
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The public doesn't expect praise for refraining from pogroms, but nor does it expect ceaseless injunctions to abstain from them. |
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The applicant commenced proceedings in this Court for writs of mandamus, certiorari and injunctions. |
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This is entirely consistent with the familiar field of interlocutory injunctions granted ex parte. |
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Most rules were justified on the basis of injunctions by the spirits of the land, who were believed to punish any infraction. |
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There are eight classes of injunctions and prohibitions which apply to all deeds and actions of mankind. |
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Again, the Court noted that the injunctions did not constitute a blanket prohibition. |
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While a custody decree is an injunctive order, the courts too often fail to apply the principles that are applicable to all other injunctions. |
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The New Testament injunctions to turn the other cheek and love thy neighbour were a great advance in civilisation. |
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He would do the same if they acted according to His injunctions, and remained forbearing and just. |
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So far there are five injunctions in place but more are currently being processed. |
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Within two years, he believes, the law on prepublication injunctions will have broken down as the internet inevitably leaks stories out. |
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First, it subjects the process of earning to certain divine injunctions, which clearly define the limits of halal and haram. |
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This symbol has a mnemonic function as one of the four injunctions of the Hoa Hao faith is to recognise one's debt to humanity. |
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The set of skills for changing laws, getting injunctions, and confronting officials in an organized, systematic way is quite different. |
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Don't worry about all the doctrinal injunctions in the catechism, they'd tell us. |
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He formed an order of ascetics devoted to develop a sense of community with the help of religious injunctions and instructions. |
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She pulled down the injunctions and ripped them up in a frenzy of anger and joy. |
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This expression is apt to cover Mareva injunctions and Anton Piller orders, as well as the appointment of a receiver. |
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The courts have no similar compunction about making injunctions to prevent torts and these have very much the same effect. |
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More importantly, under the new procedure, declarations and injunctions are merely alternative remedies. |
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Ancient traditions and rituals tend to abound with precepts and injunctions. |
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This discourse was partly inspired by the Qur'anic injunctions concerning peace. |
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Of course, in particular situations conflicts might emerge between different divine injunctions. |
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I saw females wearing trousers and wondered at the biblical injunctions which forbade such things. |
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Commands and injunctions, as I suggested, punctuate the text from the outset. |
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The injunctions were issued under authority of Great Britain's new anti-stalking law. |
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The courts were quick to grant injunctions strictly limiting the number of picketers, so as to ensure the strikebreaking operation could go forward unimpeded. |
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All the Abrahamic texts contain injunctions to violence as well as entreaties for peace. |
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This case is an important statement of the requirements for granting injunctions against picketing during lawful strikes. |
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Proceedings are in writing, with the exception of certain injunctions, which are given orally. |
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If granted, the unprecedented lifetime injunctions would prevent the media from ever disclosing information which would identify the two released killers. |
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The draft reflects a similar innocence about how the media operate, while presuming to call shots and issue admonitions and injunctions in an often condescending way. |
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Even the injunctions of destiny are cancelled if one takes refuge in God. |
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My previous experiences left me unprepared for the civilized notion that for an hour a day we would be free of all educational injunctions save the one to be quiet. |
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Corporations have invoked anti-stalking legislation, supposed to protect women, to get injunctions against lawful protests. |
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The Board explained that it was not bound by the criteria usually used in courts with respect to applications for interim orders and injunctions. |
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Judges working under common law jurisdiction have the discretionary power to order injunctions in libel cases. |
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Security bond requirements for injunctions created an obstacle in Eastern and Western Europe. |
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The Liberal government obtained court injunctions to force some strikers to return to work, but the leaders of the three unions refused. |
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The conditions and modalities relating to such injunctions should be left to the national law of the Member States. |
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According to the injunctions of the IASB, all these models should be based on reasonable hypotheses, which use the best estimates of management. |
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And a consent decree, said the court, must comply with FRCP 65, which sets forth the form and scope of injunctions or restraining orders. |
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In 1999, 2,076 injunctions of this kind were made in Austria. |
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The latter situation might arise, for example, with respect to injunctions relating to things to be done or not done in the territory of the transferring court. |
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In this respect, it takes a variety of decisions, notably relating to warnings, recommendations, requests for temporary exemptions, injunctions and sanctions. |
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Chapter 6 argues that performance of Vedic injunctions generates this supersensible force and that the merits and demerits accumulated lead to moksha. |
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He was up against an army of lawyers deployed by the Distillers group, which owned the drug, enforcing endless injunctions and pursuing bullyboy tactics with the plaintiff families. |
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For instance, the afore-mentioned law provided regulations concerning price indication, general rules on consumer sales, unfair contract terms and injunctions. |
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Human rights tribunals and the courts will inevitably be filled with related grievances resulting in claims for damages and injunctions against discrimination. |
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Permanent injunctions should not, however, go further than necessary: they should, for example, be limited to the specific statement found to be defamatory. |
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In addition, the bill gives the tribunal new power to impose interim injunctions to stop the disposal of assets by anyone engaged in deceptive marketing practices. |
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These have been prepared in the hope that they will be read, not as simple injunctions, but as pointers to help more detailed reflection on an area of policy where progress has been very hard to come by. |
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Especially in Orthodox Judaism, the Biblical laws are augmented by Rabbinical injunctions. |
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For instance, the EOC used only to have the power to get injunctions against bodies with a bad track record of discrimination. |
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Personal freedoms should never be taught as the freedom to challenge God's injunctions or trespass over the limits He drew. |
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Until the Common Law Procedure Act 1854, the Court of Chancery was the only body qualified to grant injunctions and specific performance. |
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He works mainly in the protection of personal information in the public and private sectors of access to information and extraordinary remedies such as injunctions, agricultural law and estate litigation. |
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In particular, these injunctions expose the spuriousness of claims that national sovereignty, rather than human life, is sacrosanct. |
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In the meantime, injunctions were issued against the infringers, forcing their payments of the royalties to be placed in escrow. |
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As you know, temporary prohibitory or mandatory injunctions can be issued under national legislation, preventing damaging activities from starting or continuing until a decision is taken on whether or not they are legal. |
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Equity, however, enters injunctions or decrees directing someone either to act or to forbear from acting. |
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Counterinjunctions are injunctions that stop or reverse the enforcement of another injunction. |
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One manifestation of this is that injunctions are subject to equitable defenses, such as laches and unclean hands. |
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Injunctions in the United States tend to come in three main forms, temporary injunctions, preliminary injunctions and permanent injunctions. |
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First, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, federal courts used injunctions to break strikes by unions. |
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Second, injunctions were crucial to the second half of the twentieth century in the desegregation of American schools. |
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Rule 65 governs the procedure on applications for preliminary injunctions and temporary restraining orders. |
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The Court's most significant power is its ability to issue preliminary and permanent injunctions and temporary restraining orders. |
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Companies may respond by increasing security forces and seeking court injunctions. |
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These unions therefore advocate a permanent solution to the circumstances of strikes, injunctions, and crossing other workers' picket lines. |
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Despite such injunctions, it is clear that the ruler's assignments would still be completely up to him. |
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Media: Leaks and half-truths Leaks, injunctions, half-truths and conflicting accounts characterised the media's coverage of the cash for honours affair. |
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Padraig Reidy, editor of the Little Atoms website and a commentator on Irish media, condemned the use of injunctions that applied to the Irish parliament. |
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However, with the exception of temporary injunctions or restraining orders, interlocutory decisions are appealable only in conjunction with the final judgement. |
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The book is particularly entertaining on the subject of prep stinginess, passing along injunctions to fly coach, reuse manila envelopes and resole shoes. |
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ReprintsMost of them have forgotten that the words of the Prophet contain enough injunctions against ostentatious burials to make clear that headstones, let alone mausoleums, are out for the truly devout. |
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There is only one way to ensure that those pictures never make it into the press, and it's not injunctions, the courts or the PCC … it's simply a bikini top, or an indoor sunbed. |
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Distinctions between acceptable and unacceptable practices have been maintained, as have time-honoured taboos and injunctions proscribing the indiscriminate targeting of civilian populations, especially children and women. |
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In this sense, Webster's speller becoming what was to be the secular successor to The New England Primer with its explicitly biblical injunctions. |
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Sometimes the court even ordered injunctions within a few days. |
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For both temporary restraining orders and preliminary injunctions, the goal is usually to preserve the status quo until the court is able to decide the case. |
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In the common law, the primary protection was found in the law of nuisance, but this only allowed for private actions for damages or injunctions if there was harm to land. |
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