due process
U.S. History
(noun)
The requirement that the state must respect all legal rights that are owed to a person.
Sociology
Political Science
(noun)
The limits of laws and legal proceedings, so as to ensure a person fairness, justice, and liberty.
Examples of due process in the following topics:
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The Right to Due Process
- Due process rights provides legal protections while a citizen is charged by the courts and other legal procedures.
- At a basic level, procedural due process is essentially based on the concept of fundamental fairness.
- The term substantive due process (SDP) is commonly used in two ways: first to identify a particular line of case law, and second to signify a particular attitude toward judicial review under the Due Process Clause.
- The term substantive due process began to take form in 1930s legal casebooks as a categorical distinction of selected due process cases, and by 1950 had been mentioned twice in Supreme Court opinions.
- Summarize the protections afforded by the Due Process Clauses of the 5th and 14th Amendments
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Valuing the Target and Setting the Price
- To prepare an appropriate bid for a target company, the buyer has to accurately value the target company through the due diligence process.
- This valuation process is referred to as due diligence.
- The due diligence process framework can be divided into nine distinct areas:
- In business transactions, the due diligence process varies for different types of companies.
- It is essential that the concepts of valuations (shareholder value analysis) be linked into a due diligence process.
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Transcytosis
- Transcytosis is a process by which molecules are transported into the capillaries.
- Due to the function of transcytosis as a process that transports macromolecules across cells, it can be a convenient mechanism by which pathogens can invade a tissue.
- These examples illustrate that transcytosis is vital to the process of pathogenesis for a variety of infectious agents.
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Potential external relationship obstacles
- Some countries have not achieved the desired benefits from outsourcing, because they have not realized the expected cost reductions anticipated from outsourcing their business processes to a third party.
- Losing control over the outsourced process is not uncommon.
- Additionally, problems and issues may emerge due to the integration of services and systems provided by the vendor.
- Problems within the networked organization usually arise due to the failure in identifying all stakeholders and network partners.
- Therefore, when choosing a supplier or a partner in the networked organization, having similar goals, missions, and similar ways of performing the business processes are vital for the success of the relationship.
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Lasers
- A laser is a device that emits monochromatic light through a process of optical amplification based on the stimulated emission of photons.
- It does so through a process of optical amplification based on the stimulated emission of photons.
- As the incident photon passes by, the rate of transitions of the excited atom can be significantly enhanced beyond that due to spontaneous emission.
- This "induced" decay process is called stimulated emission.
- Identify process that generates laser emission and the defining characteristics of laser light
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Reconciling Cash Accounts and Bank Statements
- This can be due to a few reasons.
- The differences could also be due to mistakes, either by the bank or in the company's books.
- The differences could also be due to something more troublesome, such as theft.
- This process is important because it ensures that any differences are due to the timing of payments and not because of a mistake or theft.
- There may be some cases where the process reveals a legitimate transaction that was not recorded in the books.
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The Communication Process
- Organizations must keep in mind the internal and external factors that influence audience perception during the communications process.
- People play different roles – friend, parent, boss, client, customer, or employee – depending on the exchange during the communications process.
- Thus, we input and perceive advertising messages – a television commercial or a salesperson's pitch – using this process of perception.
- Some people may process the humor in a company advertisement more quickly than others due to factors such as age or culture.
- The communications process involves two or more persons exchanging words or symbols.
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Quality Control and Assurance
- QA includes managing the quality of raw materials, assemblies, products, components, services related to production, management processes, production processes, and inspection processes.
- The critical takeaway here is that QA equates to process observations.
- Due to the high degree of vendor dependency, many corporations find their manufacturing processes are conducted outside of their organization.
- This can lead to difficulties in maintaining process quality.
- Many processes, such as assembly lines, help ensure quality assurance and control by streamlining the production process.
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Chemical Composition of Urine
- Urine is a liquid by-product of the body secreted by the kidneys through a process called urination and excreted through the urethra.
- Urea is essentially a processed form of ammonia, which is non-toxic to mammals, unlike ammonia, which can be highly toxic.
- It is processed from ammonia and carbon dioxide in the liver.
- Proteinuria- protein content in urine, often due to leaky or damaged glomeruli.
- Oliguria- abnormally small amount of urine, often due to shock or kidney damage.
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Modeling
- Two processes are responsible for all three-dimensional art: (1) the additive process, in which material is built up to create form, and (2) the subtractive process, where form is created by removing material from an existing mass, such as a chunk of stone, wood or clay.
- Additive and subtractive processes are not mutually exclusive; it is not uncommon for three-dimensional art to make use of both processes.
- Modeling clays vary greatly in material composition and production processes.
- After the modeling process has taken place, these clays are baked at very high temperatures in a process known as 'firing' to create ceramics such as terra cotta, earthenware, stoneware and porcelain.
- Papier-mâché has a long history as a sculpting material due to its relatively simple composition.