تعبير انجليزي عن law
موضوع تعبير عن القانون
تعبير عن ادارة الاعمال بالانجليزي
موضوع عن  business
موضوع عن التجارة باللغة الانجليزية
تعبير عن وظيفة المحامي بالانجليزي
ترجمة الإنجليزية - حقوق المرأة
 باللغة الانجليزية عن المساواة أمام القانون
 Equality before the lawقوقل

موضوع باللغة الانجليزية عن القانون
تعبير عن حقوق بالانجليزية
حقوق وواجبات الطالب في المدرسة
حقوق الطفل بالانجليزية
موضوع عن حقوق الطفل قصير جدا
موضوع تعبير عن العمل بالانجليزي
تعبير عن الجامعه بالانجليزي قصير جدا
تعبير عن مهنة الطيار بالانجليزي
موضوع عن التخرج بالانجليزي
تعبير عن الطفولة بالانجليزي

Law is a legal rule
The notion of law is defined in relation to the contract and the treaty (which result from a negotiation between equals (on the plane of law)) and on other sources of law: (constitution, "grand charter", etc.), and regulations and other written acts of the executive power, whereas the law is the work of the legislative power, often embodied in a parliament representing the people. In countries that have maintained forms of direct democracy, the law can be passed by all citizens. The law in its broadest sense corresponds to a legal standard, whatever its nature.

Power of the law [
The law is enacted by an organ, the legislator, to whom one recognizes a particular authority, more or less great. There are two main concepts in this respect:
• The law as an expression of the general will of the people, of the general interest. In this conception, the law knows no other limit than that which it may pose elsewhere; this is the traditional design in France. The law has a strong symbolic content, that of proclaiming the social ideal, but at the risk of neglecting the practical aspects and the real effects: it does not matter if the law does not work, provided it is "just". When this aspect prevails, laws are obtained containing generous or firm proclamations of principle, laws of circumstance of response to scandals or management of a collective emotion, all with a practical content (to allow, to prohibit, to tax , subsidize, punish ...) reduced or no significant effect. The legislator (normally the legislator, unless he has fallen under the control of another political body, such as a party or the executive) dominates the political field.
• The law is limited to inter-individual fights for pre-eminence, as a moral tool to avoid the use of real weapons. In this view, the law and the legislator have authority only in proportion to their practical success in organizing a society sufficiently suitable for the inhabitants of the place, that is to say, a limited and subordinate authority multiple moral conceptions of what things should be; superior principles are recognized, which no law can infringe without ipso facto ceasing to be a law. The law remains a very practical thing, but at the risk of cynicism and immorality: it does not matter if the law is not "right" if it meets its goals.
The legislator is only an important but not a dominant organ of the political field.
These two conceptions have contradictory foundations, but they remain compatible in practice when we conceive a law that conforms to the higher ideals (Human Rights, the "general principles of law" ...), which expresses what aspect it wants and which contains practical provisions which make it possible to bring it closer.

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