Law of Canada: The legal system of Canada is pluralist: its foundations lie in the English common law system (inherited from its period as a colony of the British Empire), the French civil law system (inherited from its French Empire past), and Indigenous ... (none) [100%] 2024-01-10 [Law of Canada]
Cultural property law: Cultural property law is the body of law that protects and regulates the disposition of culturally significant material, including historic real property, ancient and historic artifacts, artwork, and intangible cultural property. Cultural property can be any property, tangible or intangible ... (Social) [86%] 2023-11-17 [Cultural heritage]
Intellectual Property Law: -Judge Richard Posner. [86%] 2024-01-01 [{{PAGENAME}}] [Law learning projects]...
English property law: English property law is the law of acquisition, sharing and protection of valuable assets in England and Wales. While part of the United Kingdom, many elements of Scots property law are different. (Law in England) [86%] 2023-12-20 [English property law] [Economy of England]...
Scots property law: Scots property law governs the rules relating to property found in the legal jurisdiction of Scotland. As a hybrid legal system with both common law and civil law heritage, Scots property law is similar, but not identical, to property law ... (Rules relating to property in Scotland) [86%] 2024-02-11 [Scots property law] [Scots law]...
Australian property law: Australian property law, or property law in Australia, is the system of laws regulating and prioritising the Property law rights, interests and responsibilities of individuals in relation to "things". These things are a form of "property" or "right" to possession ... (Social) [86%] 2023-11-11 [Legal professions]
Canadian property law: Canadian property law, or property law in Canada, is the body of law concerning the rights of individuals over land, objects, and expression within Canada. It encompasses personal property, real property, and intellectual property. [86%] 2024-03-02 [Property law of Canada]
Proper law: The doctrine of the proper law is applied in the choice of law stage of a lawsuit involving the conflict of laws. When the jurisdiction is in dispute, one or more state laws will be relevant to the decision-making ... (Social) [86%] 2024-01-01 [Legal doctrines and principles]
Insolvency law of Canada: The Parliament of Canada has exclusive jurisdiction to regulate matters relating to bankruptcy and insolvency, by virtue of Section 91(2) of the Constitution Act, 1867. It has passed the following statutes as a result: In applying these statutes, provincial ... [86%] 2023-12-31 [Insolvency law of Canada]
Law Commission of Canada: The Law Commission of Canada was an independent law commission that gave advice to the Canadian government on matters of law. The body was created in 1971 as the Law Reform Commission of Canada and was disbanded in 1992. (Canadian independent law commission) [86%] 2023-12-17 [Law commissions] [Law of Canada]...
Property (novel): Property is a 2003 novel by Valerie Martin, and was the winner of the 2003 Orange Prize. In 2012, The Observer named Property as one of "The 10 best historical novels". (Novel) [82%] 2024-01-01 [2003 American novels] [Novels by Valerie Martin]...
Property (programming): A property, in some object-oriented programming languages, is a special sort of class member, intermediate in functionality between a field (or data member) and a method. The syntax for reading and writing of properties is like for fields, but ... (Programming) [82%] 2023-11-09 [Object-oriented programming]
Property: Property is anything that has an owner. Its two identifying characteristics are exclusivity and transferability. [82%] 2024-01-01 [Law]
Property: PROPERTY prop'-er-ti. See AGRARIAN LAWS; JUBILEE; POOR; PORTION; PRIMOGENITURE; WEALTH. prop'-er-ti. See AGRARIAN LAWS; JUBILEE; POOR; PORTION; PRIMOGENITURE; WEALTH. [82%] 1915-01-01
Property: The term "Property" may refer to either the tangible valuables themselves or the system of rights that gives individuals the authority to exercise legal control over such valuables. An owner of property may have the right to consume, alter, share ... [82%] 2024-01-13 [Property] [Economic anthropology]...
Property: Physical property in law, economics, business and for tax purposes is an extension of, or store of, the produce of unconsumed labor. Private property, i.e. [82%] 2023-02-17 [Legal Terms] [Law]...
Property: Property, that which is peculiarly one's own, that which belongs to or is characteristic of an individual. The Latin proprietas (formed from proprius, one's own, possibly derived from prope, near) in post-Augustan times was extended to ownership ... [82%] 2022-09-02
Property: In logic and philosophy (especially metaphysics), a property is a characteristic of an object; a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to ... (Philosophy) [82%] 2023-10-13 [Abstraction] [Concepts in logic]...
Property: Property is a system of rights that gives people legal control of valuable things, and also refers to the valuable things themselves. Depending on the nature of the property, an owner of property may have the right to consume, alter ... (Entity owned by a person or a group of people) [82%] 2024-05-22 [Property] [Economic anthropology]...
Property (mathematics): In mathematics, a property is any characteristic that applies to a given set. Rigorously, a property p defined for all elements of a set X is usually defined as a function p: X → {true, false}, that is true whenever the ... (Mathematics) [82%] 2025-02-27 [Mathematical terminology] [Mathematical relations]...
From search of external encyclopedias: