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  1. Jun 1, 2019 · See Robert C. Post & Neil S. Siegel, Theorizing the Law/Politics Distinction: Neutral Principles, Affirmative Action, and the Enduring Legacy of Paul Mishkin, 95 Calif. L. Rev. 1473, 1473–74 (2007) (examining the possible tension between “the social legitimacy of the law as a public institution” and “the legal legitimacy of the law as a principled unfolding of professional reason ...

  2. In political science, legitimacy is the right and acceptance of an authority, usually a governing law or a regime. Whereas authority denotes a specific position in an established government, the term legitimacy denotes a system of government—wherein government denotes "sphere of influence". An authority viewed as legitimate often has the ...

  3. THE LIBERAL JUDICIAL TREND IN. Legitimation "is a legislatively established process whereby once the father fulfills certain statutory conditions, the bastard's legal status becomes that of a child born in wedlock."'. In California, al-though an illegitimate child inherits from and through his mother as if he were legitimate,2 before he can ...

  4. ing debate in the United States and in other countries on the question of the permissibility of relying on foreign court decisions, a debate on which . 31 C.f. Raz, Authority, supra note 23 at 149 [footnotes omitted]: The best route to the un-derstanding of legally valid is by attending to the fact that it is used interchangeably

  5. legitimate. adj., adv.: 1) legal, proper, real. 2) referring to a child born to parents who are married. A baby born to parents who are not married is illegitimate, but can be made legitimate (legitimatized) by the subsequent marriage of the parents.

  6. Oct 12, 2022 · There are some theorists who believe there is a connection between the two meanings of legitimacy; in particular, it is claimed that the moral legitimacy of a constitution hinges on broad acceptance, namely sociological legitimacy. 11. 11 For this distinction, see Dorfman and Harel (n 6). 12.

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  8. panel - (1) In appellate cases, a group of judges (usually three) assigned to decide the case; (2) In the jury selection process, the group of potential jurors. parties - Plaintiffs and defendants (petitioners and respondents) to lawsuits, also known as appellants and appellees in appeals, and their lawyers.

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