Examples of legal order in the following topics:
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- Weber identified in bureaucracies a rational-legal authority in which legitimacy is seen as coming from a legal order.
- Weber identified in bureaucracies a rational-legal authority in which legitimacy is seen as coming from a legal order.
- According to Weber, the shift from old forms of mobility, like kinship, to new forms, like strict, legal rules, was a direct result of the growth of bureaucracy and capitalism.
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- Rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which authority is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
- Rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which the authority of an organization or a ruling regime is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
- Weber defined legal order as a system wherein the rules are enacted and obeyed as legitimate because they are in line with other laws on how they can be enacted and how they should be obeyed.
- First, an administrative and legal order that has been created and can be changed by legislation that also determines its role.
- According to Weber, rational-legal authority is a form of leadership in which the authority of an organization or a ruling regime is largely tied to legal rationality, legal legitimacy, and bureaucracy.
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- Citizenship carries both rights and responsibilities, as it describes a person with legal rights within a given political order.
- Legally, citizenship denotes a link between an individual and a state.
- This policy is called by jus soli (Latin legal term), meaning "right of soil. " These first two factors are usually lumped together under the term birthright citizenship .
- In general, basic requirements for nationalization are that the applicant hold a legal status as a full-time resident for a minimum period of time, and that the applicant promises to obey and uphold that country's laws, to which an oath or pledge of allegiance is sometimes added.
- It generally describes a person with legal rights within a given political order.
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- A custodial parent is a parent who is given physical and/or legal custody of a child by court order.
- A child-custody determination means a judgment, decree, or other order of a court providing for the legal custody, physical custody, or visitation with respect to a child.
- The term includes a permanent, temporary, initial, and modification order.
- The term does not include an order relating to child support or other monetary obligation of an individual.
- A non-custodial parent is a parent who does not have physical and/or legal custody of his/her child by court order.
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- A court is a form of tribunal with the authority to adjudicate legal disputes between parties, and carry out the administration of justice.
- A court is a form of tribunal, often a governmental institution, with the authority to adjudicate legal disputes between parties, and carry out the administration of justice in civil, criminal, and administrative matters in accordance with the rule of law.
- In both common law and civil law legal systems, courts are the central means for dispute resolution, and it is generally understood that all persons have an ability to bring their claims before a court.
- A legal remedy is the means with which a court of law (usually in the exercise of civil law jurisdiction) enforces a right, imposes a penalty, or makes some other court order to impose its will.
- In the United States, the legal authority of a court to take action is based on personal jurisdiction, subject-matter jurisdiction, and venue over the parties to the litigation.
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- For example, while a mob has the power to punish a criminal, for example by lynching, people who believe in the rule of law consider that only a court of law has the authority to order capital punishment.
- The first type discussed by Weber is Rational-legal authority.
- The power of the rational legal authority is mentioned in a document like a constitution or articles of incorporation.
- Modern societies depend on legal-rational authority.
- God) that is superior to both the validity of traditional and rational-legal authority.
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- Women and men began delaying the age of first marriage in order to invest in their earning power before marriage by spending more time in school.
- Cohabitation is an intimate relationship which includes a common living place and which exists without the benefit of legal, cultural, or religious sanction.
- a desire to live as married when same-sex marriages and / or polyamory are not legal
- Legal obstacles for cohabitation were removed in 1926 in a reform of the Finnish penal code.
- As of the summer of 2014, 19 states and the District of Columbia allow same-sex couples to legally marry, but - especially following the dismissal of half of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) by the Supreme Court in 2013 - many states are shifting their legal opinions on this matter at present and cases continually work through the legal system.
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- Legal systems may perpetuate victim blaming.
- For example, in medieval Europe, a woman could be legally married by her parents to a stranger without her consent and, once married, she could no longer refuse to consent to sex.
- In modern legal understanding, consent may be explicit or implied by context, but the absence of objection never itself constitutes consent, and consent can be withdrawn at any time.
- Rape is often thought of as a crime committed by a man against a woman, but increasingly, social and legal definitions of rape recognize that this does not have to be the case.
- It also ruled that rape was an aspect of genocide, because of the use of rape to impregnate women in order to weaken or eliminate a particular gene pool.
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- There are three main forms of social sanction for deviance: 1) legal sanction, 2) stigmatization, and 3) preference for one behavior over another.
- Formal deviance, or the violation of legal codes, results in criminal action initiated by the state.
- This billboard has been defaced in order to highlight the sexual norms behind the advertisement.
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- Weber defined charismatic authority as "resting on devotion to the exceptional sanctity, heroism or exemplary character of an individual person, and of the normative patterns or order revealed or ordained by him" .
- Charismatic authority almost always evolves in the context of boundaries set by traditional or rational-legal authority, but by its nature tends to challenge this authority, and is thus often seen as revolutionary.
- In order to help to maintain their charismatic authority, such regimes will often establish a vast cult of personality, which is signaled when an individual uses mass media, propaganda, or other methods to create an idealized and heroic public image, often through unquestioning flattery and praise.
- Weber defined charismatic authority as "resting on devotion to the exceptional sanctity, heroism or exemplary character of an individual person, and of the normative patterns or order revealed or ordained by him."