enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Law of Nigeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Nigeria

    The Law of Nigeria consists of courts, offences, and various types of laws. Nigeria has its own constitution which was established on 29 May 1999. The Constitution of Nigeria is the supreme law of the country. There are four distinct legal systems in Nigeria, which include English law, Common law, Customary law, and Sharia Law.

  3. Polygamy in Nigeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygamy_in_Nigeria

    Polygamous unions are currently recognized under customary law throughout Nigeria, but lack numerous benefits in a Nigerian civil marriage. While civil marriage in Nigeria is monogamous, a dozen states have implanted Sharia into their legal systems and thus are exempt. While the implanting of Sharia was unsuccessful, numerous Sharia courts were ...

  4. Customary law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customary_law

    Customary law is a recognized source of law within jurisdictions of the civil law tradition, where it may be subordinate to both statutes and regulations. In addressing custom as a source of law within the civil law tradition, John Henry Merryman notes that, though the attention it is given in scholarly works is great, its importance is "slight ...

  5. Law in Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_in_Africa

    Comparatively, the primary sources of South Africa law were Roman-Dutch and English Common law, imports of Dutch settlements and British colonialism, which is sometimes termed Anglo-Dutch law. Hence, pluralistic systems were devised by nations that combined the customary law, inherited penal codes and religious laws depending on the ancestral ...

  6. Foreign Correspondent (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Correspondent_(film)

    Foreign Correspondent is a 1940 American black-and-white spy thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. It tells the story of an American reporter based in Britain who tries to expose enemy spies involved in a fictional continent-wide conspiracy in the prelude to World War II.

  7. Amodu Tijani v Secretary, Southern Nigeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amodu_Tijani_v_Secretary...

    The Privy Council, reversing the judgments below, [5] held that although the territory of the Lagos Colony had been ceded to the imperial Crown in 1861 under the Lagos Treaty of Cession [5] and the Crown thereby acquired allodial title to the land, the Crown held only a "limited right of administrative interference" with the land and was required to pay compensation for using it.

  8. Fox News correspondent Trey Yingst has book out this fall on ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/fox-news-correspondent...

    The chief foreign correspondent for Fox News, Trey Yingst, will have a book out this fall timed to the first anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks in Israel. “Black Saturday” will be ...

  9. Peremptory norm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peremptory_norm

    Unlike ordinary customary law, which has traditionally required consent and allows the alteration of its obligations between states through treaties, peremptory norms may not be violated by any state "through international treaties or local or special customs or even general customary rules not endowed with the same normative force".