What's the difference between juridical and jurisprudence?

Juridical


Definition:

  • (a.) Pertaining to a judge or to jurisprudence; acting in the distribution of justice; used in courts of law; according to law; legal; as, juridical law.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The ability to think in terms of criminalistics and the corresponding working procedures has always been a crucial precondition for the forensic physician, since forensic medicine is the application of medical knowledge for juridical purposes.
  • (2) The additional juridical protection of a microbial strain is not necessary.
  • (3) "The United Kingdom lacks any right at all to pretend to alter the juridical status of these territories even with the disguise of a hypothetical referendum," said Argentina's foreign minister, Hector Timerman.
  • (4) The cumulating data serves multidisciplinary sciences, juridical and insurance purposes and legislation.
  • (5) Although all protective measures taken by the physician against his patient may be useful from the juridical point of view, they often turn out to be insufficient in case of legal action when the burden of proof regarding the information given to the patient lies on the physician.
  • (6) In this regard, he suggests to avoid any strict qualification, even in the evaluation of the most abnormal processes of psyche and he recommends--in conformity with a few juridical trends appeared in some countries--not to limit the investigation on the ability of understanding and will to the moment when a crime is committed, but to extend it to a single evaluation of the whole personality of the criminal.
  • (7) This procedure avoids to strain the relation between physician and patient with juridical problems, a situation which is not at all desired by the wellminded patient seeking for help as well as by the responsible physician.
  • (8) He concludes that the Federal Court was successful in it's attempt to draw the juridical arguments near to those of forensic medicine.
  • (9) The present article deals with the assumptions and preconditions, of both an objective and subjective character, underlying the application of this juridical institute, and also tackles, by referring to some cases previously occurred, the problems posed by the various types of subjects.
  • (10) Legal induced abortion in Switzerland is authorized for medical, eugenic, or juridic reasons, with more or less liberal legislation according to the different cantons.
  • (11) The present obligation to notify according to the burial laws of some states applies to pathologists even when possible medical contributary faults are established, but he faces a dilemma which cannot be solved juridically at present.
  • (12) A register of applications of six mental hospitals in the northern part of The Netherlands reveals that there are significant differences between admitted and refused patients with regard to juridical status, urgency, catchment area, referral source, age and type of problems.
  • (13) Also juridical and psychological problems are discussed.
  • (14) In Denmark the desire for psychiatric cooperation within the juridical system has on the whole been on the decline during the past decades.
  • (15) The Author points out that the recent contributions to the study of the crime require an improvement of the traditional principles followed for the investigation and qualification of the crime, as regards both its psychological dynamics and any juridical implications.
  • (16) Many new problems and dilemmas have occurred in the practice of medical geneticists with the development of human genetics and its subdisciplines--molecular genetics, ethic genetics and juridical genetics.
  • (17) A constant tendency to improve professional and general knowledge among nurses had led recently to juridical regulations requiring that nurses holding managerial posts possess a higher education.
  • (18) It is the continuation of several anterior declarations which principles it recalls in its preamble: fundamental responsibility of the family for the care and the protection of the child, necessity of a social and juridical child protection depending on the state, vital role of an international cooperation so that the children rights will become a reality.
  • (19) The juridical classification of the homicides was attempted or completed first-degree murder in 17 and attempted or completed second-degree murder in 6 cases.
  • (20) The problem could be a “divide et impera” (divide and rule): a balkanisation, yes, but one in which agents - commercial, political, or juridical - exploit walls and barriers to impose their informational monopoly locally, and have the last say on the region of the infosphere they control.

Jurisprudence


Definition:

  • (a.) The science of juridical law; the knowledge of the laws, customs, and rights of men in a state or community, necessary for the due administration of justice.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "The text in itself is probably not a landmark work of Islamic jurisprudence, but it is important because it adds to … a corpus of treatises by former militants challenging al-Qaida on theological grounds," Thomas Hegghammer of Harvard University said on the Jihadica website.
  • (2) The authors have searched through French and western jurisprudence about transsexualism.
  • (3) It points out that the supreme court itself banned executions of intellectually disabled prisoners – still known as "mentally retarded" in US jurisprudence – in 2002.
  • (4) Certain of the enhanced interrogation techniques apparently approved by US senior commanders in Afghanistan in the period from February 2003 through [to]June 2004, could, depending on the severity and duration of their use, amount to cruel treatment, torture or outrages upon personal dignity as defined under international jurisprudence,” the ICC prosecutor’s office said in an annual report on its activities .
  • (5) In two states that require physicians to pass a separate medical jurisprudence examination for licensure, all four-year medical schools offer a course on health law for medical students.
  • (6) Public health jurisprudence now presupposes that illness is primarily a matter of individual concern.
  • (7) Concerning poorly controlled epilepsies, we believe that experts will be allowed to express their opinion and a new jurisprudence will make up for the silence of the law.
  • (8) Development of a sound jurisprudence of predictions faces major hurdles given the trend toward unscientific predictions in the law and the enormous judicial confusion in dealing with predictions.
  • (9) French jurisprudence about outpatient anaesthesia is resolutely unfavorable.
  • (10) Abbott said he was focused on letting Indonesians know it was in their best interests “and in accordance with their best values, with the quality of mercy that has such a big a place in Indonesian jurisprudence” to stay the executions.
  • (11) The subjects are religion, astrology, history, jurisprudence and medicine.
  • (12) Some derogations could attenuate the severity of these dispositions--as jurisprudence had taken progresses of Epileptology and therapeutics into consideration.
  • (13) What happened next passed into the annals of international jurisprudence as the first time a former head of state had faced arrest under international human rights law, principally the Convention Against Torture that came into force in 1987.
  • (14) Medical ethics, medical jurisprudence, and medical economics are recognized as important components of a medical school curriculum.
  • (15) The supreme court, Grieve said, was not bound to apply the Strasbourg jurisprudence, but only to take account of any judgment of the European court of human rights, adding: "This court is entitled to take its own course and should do so where it has sufficient doubt about the soundness of the reasoning adopted by the European court of human rights."
  • (16) The obligation of the result appears to be distorted in the course of jurisprudence.
  • (17) Referring to the two hadith in which Muhammad reportedly condemns apostasy as a capital offence, Maher Hathout , author of In Pursuit of Justice: The Jurisprudence of Human Rights in Islam writes: "both of them contradict the Qur'an and other instances in which the Prophet did not compel anyone to embrace Islam, nor punish them if they recanted."
  • (18) First preparation camps For the mujahid on the day he joins the Islamic State, whether as a muhajir or from the ansar: and the camp includes sharia sessions through which the mujahid studies the fiqh [jurisprudence] of the rulings, Islamic doctrine, al-wala’ and al-bara’ [loyalty and disavowal], in addition to the arts of fighting and the arts of using weapons, with screening of every mujahid in a specialty in which he excels and completing his camp according to his skill in specific weapons.
  • (19) "The view that sensitive issues of social policy, of this kind, should be decided by national parliaments is," Grieve maintained, "entirely consistent with the jurisprudence of the court.
  • (20) There are no Islamic courts, no practice of its jurisprudence, no laws from the Quran, and yet on Saturday we saw Reclaim Australia rally violently, their placards demanding the country say “No to Sharia!” Reclaim Australia rallies 'hurtful' to new migrants and refugees Read more Seeing barricades, lines of mounted officers, rivals groups brawling over the truth of the “Islamification” of Australia, is a little overblown when we consider that Muslims, as 2% of the population, possess little by way of political power, have no significant representation, and own no capacity to impose their will.