A Confident Law System

May 30th, 2011 posted by admin
A Confident Law System

If not for the current state of economic development, then the legal system is what deserves admirations in the USA. The confident approach is widely dominated by a largely incorporated federal law and a well established law hierarchy - something the UK needs to take into account.

What is impressive is the representation of the judiciary. When the judicial structure is representing minorities and majority of the population, we are talking about a confident law application because of the impartiality and the absence racial or religious prejudice among judges. To be applied discretionary, common law needs to be firstly applied with consideration on whether the judge can be biased and prejudiced towards applicants and defendants. The American judiciary is composed of various backgrounds and what is relied upon is not the color but the ability of the judge - something that the UK still needs to implement as a legal system closely influencing the developments in the US Law.

Secondly, the composition of the federal law is a largely determinative factor. Its supremacy indicates the ability of the legal system to adjust itself to the needs of the public and to have the separate states subordinated to a more regulated legal system by democratically elected law makers. The doctrine of precedent, working alongside Parliamentary Acts, is successfully filling in the gaps where the federal law cannot interfere. In contrast, the UK has not even a written constitution which gives wide powers to the courts in their consideration on the Parliamentary law so twisting the words is common (for example, some applications of the Companies Act). Even people holding a GP job or the highest private sector positions in the US are thus accountable before the rule of law.

Similar Posts:
Tories Stories : Well we all wanted this glorious, amazingly…
Truth Hurts : And while many people tend to believe that N…
Tips for buying cheap flights : …
Osama Bin Laden : May 1, 2011 mark the calendar as a historic…

Comments are closed!