Nitschke made worldwide headlines when he helped four terminally ill people end their lives in Australia's Northern Territory between July 1996 and March 1997 under a short-lived law allowing voluntary euthanasia.
12.
It was also intended to be a living law at work when the Oneida people and Haudenosaunee peoples interacted within their long houses, families, clans, within their nations, and their entire Confederacy.
13.
He parallels Eugen Ehrlich�s idea of living law when he states that " the true practice of civil law or any law is not to be found in the courts, but altogether elsewhere.
14.
Some influential approaches within the sociology of law have challenged definitions of law in terms of official ( state ) law ( see for example Eugen Ehrlich's concept of " living law " and Georges Gurvitch's " social law " ).
15.
However, some argued that Ehrlich was distinguishing between positive ( or state ) law, which lawyers learn and apply, and other forms of'law', what Ehrlich called " living law ", that regulate everyday life, generally preventing conflicts from reaching lawyers and courts.
16.
The point Ehrlich sought to make was that the " living law " which regulates social life may be quite different from the norms for decision applied by courts, and may sometimes attract far greater cultural authority which lawyers cannot safely ignore.
17.
He wore on his breast a badge with his title of " P�re ", was referred to by his preachers as " the living law ", declared himself to be the Saviour ( the latter quest was very costly and altogether fruitless ).
18.
Kim Tae Hyun, director of the planning department at the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, which led the strikes a year ago when a short-lived law made it easier to dismiss workers, said the group first wanted to press employers to shorten working hours.
19.
It remained living law, subject to modifications, both in the Kingdom of the Lombards that became the Carolingian Kingdom of Italy and in the Duchy of Benevento that became the Kingdom of Naples and continued to play a role in the latter as late as the 18th century.
20.
In Tennessee, the boundaries are not used to control growth per se, but rather to define long-term city boundaries . ( This was a response to a short-lived law in the late 90's allowing almost any group of people in the state to form their own city ).