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| | Application for Review (Rejoinder), 19 September 2000 |
 | | Impartiality is a condition upon which judges are invested with authority and is necessary for effective legal protection for individuals and it forms an integral part of the rules of natural justice. |  | | Public confidence in the impartial administration of justice can be maintained only if it is clear that cases are decided according to law without regard to extraneous issues or relationships between a judge and one of the parties involved in the case he is trying. |  | | For the courts and for judges it is not sufficient that they be impartial; they must also be perceived to be impartial. |
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http://www.aggivov.com/oie/000919afr2.htm
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| | Impartiality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | A third view holds that impartiality is only necessary when an individual acts in a certain capacity, such as that of a judge, an umpire, or a public official. |  | | Impartiality is a principle of justice holding that decisions should be based on objective criteria, rather then on the basis of bias, |  | | Philosophers disagree as to whether or not it is possible for partiality to be morally admirable in some circumstances. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impartial
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| | Adult Guidance - Impartiality in Guidance Provision for Adults |
 | | The term impartiality does not feature specifically in the UDACE principles, though it is clearly implied in the use of the terms client-centred and independent. |  | | In this case impartiality is less of an issue. |  | | There should be no evidence of self-interest or self-seeking by the giver of advice. However, the assumption that because workers feel impartiality in guidance is a good thing it will happen is not warranted. |
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http://www.strath.ac.uk/Other/adultguidance/imp.htm
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| | R. v. Lippé, 1990 CanLII 18 (S.C.C.) |
 | | Both independence and impartiality are fundamental not only to the capacity to do justice in a particular case but also to individual and public confidence in the administration of justice. |  | | Impartiality refers to a state of mind or attitude of the tribunal in relation to the issues and the parties in a particular case. |  | | The parties agree that the test for both "independence" and "impartiality" should be that set out by de Grandpré J. in Committee for Justice and Liberty v. |
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http://www.canlii.org/ca/cas/scc/1991/1991scc52.html
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| | Kelly |
 | | It is not the case that second-order impartiality provides easy answers to such issues or any answers at all, what it can do however, is set boundaries for such debates. |  | | That is, impartially judging matters and imposing appropriate sanctions without fear or favour, and without concern for the interests or special claims of any of the parties. |  | | All that they are supposed to do is to is to be able to accept the perspective of impartiality as that from which we justify the 'constitutional essentials' of a polity and its distribution of decision-making power. |
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http://www.ceu.hu/legal/Kelly.htm
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| | Impartiality |
 | | Impartiality, in short, as an obligation of justice, may be said to mean, being exclusively influenced by the considerations which it is supposed ought to influence the particular case in hand; and resisting the solicitation of any motives which prompt to conduct different from what those considerations would dictate. |  | | In particular, there is good reason to be wary of objections to impartialism which claim that all impartialists endorse extreme moral demands, or that they require that practical reasoning be completely expunged of every vestige of the partial. |  | | The types of impartiality implied by both of these more demanding versions of the universalizability requirement are likely to be considerably more substantial than the formal consistency required by the minimal version. |
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http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/impartiality
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| | Impartiality and Constitutional Adjudication |
 | | Certainly, discounting the law and impartiality as explanatory variables may be a valid approach, but until they have been adequately conceptualized and tested against the evidence of judicial decisions, such an approach will fail to persuade. |  | | It will not fully have explained away the authority of law and legal norms - such as impartiality - in constitutional adjudication, and will to this extent be restricted from making imperialistic claims about what explains the results in particular cases. |  | | Building on constitutional and legal theory, the paper offers a conception of impartiality which may nonetheless explain aspects of judicial policy-making in the protection of constitutional rights. |
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http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~agibbon/impartiality.html
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| | THE BBC AND THE MIDDLE EAST — SECOND REPORT |
 | | The British public is obliged to pay for the BBC through the licence fee. |  | | The content was assessed for compliance with the BBC’s legal obligations of accuracy and impartiality. |  | | We consider that compliance with each of those obligations is required to ensure fulfilment of the BBC’s primary legal obligations of impartiality and accuracy. |
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http://www.bbcwatch.com/current2.html
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| | Manitoba Provincial Judges Assn. v. Manitoba (Minister of Justice) |
 | | For present purposes, it is sufficient to simply state that the court found the judges of the Provincial Court to be independent. |  | | At various points in their trials, they each brought a motion before the Alberta Court of Queen's Bench, arguing that the Provincial Court was not an independent and impartial tribunal for the purposes of s. |  | | The first question is framed in general terms, and asks the court to determine whether judges of the P.E.I. Provincial Court have sufficient security of tenure, institutional independence, and financial security to constitute an independent and impartial tribunal for the purposes of s. |
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http://www.lexum.umontreal.ca/csc-scc/en/pub/1997/vol3/html/1997scr3_0003.html
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| | 450'98_tng |
 | | Hughes is a party to the performance of the contract because it has to do work under the contract. |  | | A waiver under the basic conflicts of interest rule or a determination under the impartiality rule, allowing you to work on a particular matter even though you have a conflict, are other alternative remedies. |  | | We said under that rule it would normally be ok for you to analyze software contract bids for the Government even though your wife worked for one of the bidders. |
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http://www.defenselink.mil/dodgc/defense_ethics/ethics_training/450test2.htm
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| | How to Maintain Impartiality |
 | | Sometimes a party may be testing your knowledge of the law. |  | | Mediators must use whatever is necessary to avoid a party thinking that they are not impartial. |  | | In training, we were careful to point out that what we do or say about the law may have an impact on whether the parties view us as impartial. |
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http://www.keybridge.org/med_info/impartiality.htm
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| | California Courts: Rules: Title Five: Rule 1620.5. Impartiality, conflicts of interest, disclosure, and withdrawal |
 | | What constitutes a "reasonable effort" to identify such matters varies depending on the circumstances, including whether the case is scheduled in advance or received on the spot, and the information about the participants and the subject matter that is provided to the mediator by the court and the parties. |  | | In a mediation in which there are more than two parties, the mediator may continue the mediation with the nonobjecting parties, provided that doing so would not violate any other provision of these rules, any law, or any local court rule or program guideline. |  | | Although subdivison (b)(1) specifies interests, relationships, affiliations, and matters that are grounds for disqualification of a judge under Code of Civil Procedure section 170.1, these are only examples of common matters that reasonably could raise a question about a mediator ' s ability to conduct the mediation impartially and thus, must be disclosed. |
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http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/rules/titlefive/title5-3-80.htm
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| | Humanitarian Inviolability in Crisis: The Meaning of Impartiality and Neutrality for U.N. and NGO Agencies Following ... |
 | | Yet this question of impartiality is one which applies to any criminal justice system in any state in which the state prosecutes; the state is not itself neutral or even impartial. |  | | Neutrality and impartiality are adjuncts to the main question of justice, because, in the name of the practical value of humanitarian relief, they refuse to address the question of justice. |  | | Neither should it be: the morally preferable criminal justice system is not one which takes place with the neutrality and impartiality of a court system as though on the planet Mars, removed from everything, but instead one which preserves the twin values of being both impartial but rooted in a particular political community. |
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http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/hrj/current/anderson.shtml
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| | Principles of Impartiality |
 | | All certification body personnel, either internal or external, or committees, which could influence the certification activities, act impartially and are free from any undue commercial, financial or other pressures that could compromise impartiality. |  | | Personnel, who have provided consultancy within two years to the organisation seeking certification, are not employed to take part in any part of the certification process. |  | | Aegis Verity ensures that person(s) or committee(s) that take decisions on certification is different from those who carried out the assessment. |
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http://www.aegis-verity.com/page9.html
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| | chapter2 |
 | | Due impartiality is required in relation to all matters of public policy or industrial controversy. |  | | It states that due impartiality does not require absolute neutrality on every issue or detachment from fundamental democratic principles. |  | | The BBC is explicitly forbidden from broadcasting its own opinions on current affairs or matters of public policy, except broadcasting issues. |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/info/policies/producer_guides/text/section3.shtml
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| | Chapter Eight Interlude: Theories Against Theories: Recent Developments |
 | | The difficult issue is whether we must be impartial between personal relationships and public relationships. |  | | When this happens, it is good to have more impartial motives available as a motivational backup. |  | | Forward progress is made through tacking back and forth between the partial and the impartial viewpoints. |
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http://ethics.sandiego.edu/lmh/e2/ChapterEight.html
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| | BBC NEWS Americas Cheney faces impropriety claims |
 | | But Mr Cheney is due to appear before the Supreme Court in a case brought by the environmental group the Sierra Club and a legal watchdog, Judicial Watch. |  | | But in this case, Justice Scalia has declined to do so, saying: "I do not think my impartiality could reasonably be questioned. |  | | Justices regularly withdraw from cases where a conflict of interest is perceived. |
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3466191.stm
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| | TomPaine.com - Archives - Looks Like Duckgate |
 | | Reasonably, I doubt Scalia’s impartiality because, in a previous case with the same litigant, he neglected to recuse himself. |  | | But that merely raises another fetid issue: while Cheney’s "official capacity" may fly for Duckgate, what about when citizen Cheney was awarded the White House in 2000? |  | | Thus, as the Supreme Court confirmed, the avowed purpose of the code covering recusal is to maintain the appearance of justice, for the sake of public confidence in the courts. |
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http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/9923
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| | DRAFT: February 1, 2001 |
 | | Neutrality is susceptible of fuller embodiment in the practices of science (systematic empirical inquiry), but their current mainstream trajectories do not promise to bring about that fuller embodiment, so much so that one may query whether mainstream scientific practices are committed to the furtherance of neutrality. |  | | But the conditions required to carry out such research may not be readily available where the modern valuation of control is highly manifested, so that to carry it out may already involve commitment to a value-outlook that contests the modern valuation of control. |  | | 9; Impartiality, neutrality and autonomy are, and ought to be, constitutive values of scientific practices and institutions. |
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http://www.uab.edu/ethicscenter/lacey.htm
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| | impartiality from FOLDOC |
 | | In public life, however, impartiality is a crucial component of justice. |  | | Recommended Reading: Stephen L. Darwall, Impartial Reason (Cornell, 1995); Shane O'Neill, Impartiality in Context: Grounding Justice in a Pluralist World (SUNY, 1997); and Paul Kelly, Impartiality, Neutrality and Justice (Columbia, 2001). |  | | Although moral impartiality has traditionally been regarded as a virtue, in strict practice it would require callous disregard for every special relationship with another person. |
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http://lgxserver.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?impartiality
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| | Courts Impartiality Test - Law Enforcement |
 | | The Commissioner ordered a new Tribunal to consider Victor Duncan's case afresh and ordered that as a preliminary issue the Tribunal must hear full legal argument on the question of the Tribunals links with Freemasonry. |  | | Courts Impartiality Test - Law Enforcement - The-Informer |  | | Victor Duncan Appellant; Appeal From The Appeal Tribunal on a Question of Law. |
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http://www.lawenforcementtalk.com/Courts_Impartiality_Test-1411959-265-a.html
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| | Judicial Impartiality: The Next Steps |
 | | Below is a copy of the report and a news release summarizing its contents. |  | | The conveners of the Next Steps Forum on judicial impartiality have issued a progress report with specific recommendations for significantly reforming the judicial selection process in Ohio. |  | | View video interview clips from the conveners on the importance of the "Judicial Impartiality: The Next Steps" forum |
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http://www.thenextsteps.org
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Martin Luther |
 | | Eck saw this, and accepted the duty only under compulsion. |  | | Moreover, his personal feelings, as the relentless antagonist of Luther, could hardly be effaced, so that a cause which demanded the most untrammelled exercise of judicial impartiality and Christian charity would hardly find its best exponent in a man in whom individual triumph would supersede the pure love of justice. |  | | Luther's attitude towards him was that of implacable personal hatred; the dislike of him among the humanists was decidedly virulent; his unpopularity among Catholics was also well known. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09438b.htm
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| | Egoism [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] |
 | | Impartiality, it can be retorted, can only exist where there are competing selves - otherwise the attempt to be impartial in judging one's actions is a redundant exercise. |  | | At this point the possibility of conflicting reasons in a society need not be introduced, but one could claim that reason may invoke an impartiality clause, demanding that, in a certain situation, one's interests should not be furthered. |
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http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/e/egoism.htm
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| | Red Cross Red Crescent - The fundamental principle of impartiality |
 | | Impartiality means that, for the Movement, the only priority that can be set in dealing with those who require help must be based on need, and the order in which available aid is shared out must correspond to the urgency of the distress it is intended to relieve. |  | | impartiality in its true sense requires that subjective distinctions be set aside. |  | | Only an impartial action can give the image of an organization that can be trusted by people to be assisted or protected. |
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http://www.ifrc.org/WHAT/values/principles/impartiality.asp
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| | Stockholm Spectator GroupBlog » We Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Impartiality! |
 | | Unlike the Swedish election cycle, we have no reason to be impartial and provide equal time for both [the Democratic and Republican parties]. |  | | The radio debate, which promised to be a scorcher, fizzled unfortunately. |  | | Also filed under the rubric “We Don’t Need No Stinking Impartiality,” Dagens Nyheter has now covered MoveOn’s anti-Bush “Vote For Change” rock-and-toll tour featuring, among others, Bruce Springsteen and REM, no fewer than five times. |
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http://spectator.se/stambord/index.php?p=278
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| | Straussian.net - Early Modern Resources |
 | | Locke's political theory concerns the authority of governments, which he takes to be, at bottom, the right of all individuals to uphold natural law transferred to a central agency for the sake of its power and impartiality..." |
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http://www2.bc.edu/~wilsonop/earlymod.html
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| | Impartiality |
 | | So, as an act of impartiality and magnanimity, I would propose the following solution: |  | | France, Russia and Germany will be allowed to participate in the funding of the cashbox necessary for the reconstruction ($87 billion to the tune of $15 billion each. |
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http://www.abolitionist-international.com/impartial.html
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| | BBC NEWS UK Kilroy quits as BBC presenter |
 | | Critics had accused the BBC of gagging Mr Kilroy-Silk by suspending his BBC One show, but Director of BBC Television Jana Bennett insisted the corporation's decision had not been about freedom of speech. |  | | She said: "Presenters of this kind of programme have a responsibility to uphold the BBC's impartiality. |  | | We are very grateful to Robert for his contribution over the years, and we look forward to building on his achievements |
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3404715.stm
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| | 14-7606 - Impartiality |
 | | If a trust has two or more beneficiaries, the trustee shall act impartially in investing and managing the trust assets, taking into account any differing interests of the beneficiaries. |
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http://www.azleg.state.az.us/ars/14/07606.htm
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| | impartiality - OneLook Dictionary Search |
 | | Impartiality : Ethics Terms [ home, info ] |  | | impartiality : Dictionary of Philosophical Terms and Names [ home, info ] |  | | Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "impartiality" is defined. |
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http://www.onelook.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/bware/dofind.cgi?word=impartiality
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| | BIGpedia - Archaeology - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online |
 | | It questioned processualism's appeals to science and impartiality and emphasised the importance of relativism, becoming known as post-processual archaeology. |  | | However, this approach has been criticised by processualists as lacking scientific rigour. |  | | In the 1980s, a new movement arose led by the British archaeologists Michael Shanks, Christopher Tilley, Daniel Miller and Ian Hodder. |
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http://www.bigpedia.com/encyclopedia/Archaeology
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| | PIRP - Impartiality |
 | | We strive for impartiality through support from competing organizations with conflicting views. |  | | No single source is large enough to kill us by withdrawing. |  | | We strive for impartiality by foregoing relationships that promote favoritism. |
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http://www.pirp.harvard.edu/about/impartiality.shtml
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| | The Daily Ablution: A Look at iCAN Impartiality |
 | | 'A lot of work has gone in to making sure that as an impartial public service, the BBC is not directly associated with any of the political activity on the site'. |  | | At the very least, this undermines the BBC claims of impartiality cited above. |  | | Explaining their new iCAN activism site, which will apparently enable one to 'change the world around you', the BBC says : |
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http://dailyablution.blogs.com/the_daily_ablution/2003/11/a_look_at_ican_.html
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| | FORWARD : News |
 | | Ehrman is continuing an ad campaign that first appeared last week under the aegis of the Orthodox Caucus, a civic group of Modern Orthodox lay leaders of which Ehrman is co-chairman. |  | | A spokeswoman for the Times, Catherine Mathis said: "We are very aware of the great sensitivity of news developments in the Middle East. |  | | As always, our staff is instructed to cover all sides of the story thoroughly and with scrupulous impartiality." |
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http://www.forward.com/issues/2002/02.05.03/news6.html
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