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Abahlali baseMjondolo assembly The Poor People's Alliance outside the Constitutional Court in Johannesburg in 2009. Several popular movements, such as the shack dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo in South Africa, [11] the Right to the City Alliance in the United States, [12] Recht auf Stadt, [13] a network of squatters, tenants and artists in Hamburg, and various movements in Asia and ...
The right to the city is a concept coined by Henri Lefebvre in his 1968 book Le Droit à la ville.Lefebvre has an idea of space that encompasses perceived space, conceived space, and lived space. [2]
The borough charter of Flensburg (1284) Medieval square in Spišská Sobota, Slovakia (now in Poprad).The former name of the town literally means "Saturday in Spiš" and it is derived from a day of week in which the town was granted a right to organize a market.
G. Jèze, "Les libertés individuelles", Annuaire de l'institut international de droit public, 1929, p. 180; O. Négrin, « Une légende fiscale : la définition de l'impôt de Gaston Jèze », in Revue de droit public, 2008, n° 1, p. 119-131; Cours de finances publiques 1936–1937, LGDJ, 1937, p. 38
The Meaning of the City is a theological essay by Jacques Ellul which recounts the story of the city in the Bible and seeks to explain the city's biblical significance.. Ellul wrote the book in 1951; it was published in English translation in 1970, and then in French in 1975 as Sans feu ni lieu : Signification biblique de la Grande Ville.
City charter of Kraków, Poland's medieval capital; inscribed in Latin.. Magdeburg rights (German: Magdeburger Recht, Polish: Prawo magdeburskie, Lithuanian: Magdeburgo teisė; also called Magdeburg Law) were a set of town privileges first developed by Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor (936–973) and based on the Flemish Law, [1] which regulated the degree of internal autonomy within cities and ...
Old French law, referred to in French as Ancien Droit, was the law of the Kingdom of France until the French Revolution. In the north of France were the Pays de coutumes ('customary countries'), where customary laws were in force, while in the south were the Pays de droit écrit ('countries of written law'), where Roman law had been
The most common one is the educational route via a licence de droit and a Master 1 in law, followed by the bar exam and 18 months of training at a bar school (one of fifteen Écoles d'avocats, EDAs). The second, less common route is the professional route.