According to Rousseau Citizens should be the authors of societies laws because he believed that the only good government was one that was freely formed by the people, and guided by the "general will of society- a direct democracy.
Rousseau believed that citizens should be the authors of society's laws because it promotes the general will and common good of the people. By having a direct say in the laws that govern them, citizens are more likely to feel a sense of ownership and responsibility for their society, leading to a more just and equitable system. This also helps prevent the concentration of power in the hands of a few individuals or groups.
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay wrote under the name "Publius" when authoring the Federalist Papers, which were a series of essays promoting the ratification of the United States Constitution.
plagiarism. By citing sources and providing proper references, the writer can ensure that their work is original and give credit to the original authors of the information used.
If caught plagiarizing, you may face consequences such as academic penalties (like failing a course or expulsion), legal action in severe cases, reputational damage, and loss of credibility. It's crucial to always properly cite sources and give credit to original authors to avoid these consequences.
A law is effective when it is clear, enforceable, and has the support of the community. It should be able to achieve its intended purpose, address a specific problem, and be followed by those it applies to. Effective laws also need to be periodically reviewed and revised to ensure they remain relevant and achieve their desired outcomes.
John Austin: Law is the command of the sovereign backed by sanctions. H.L.A. Hart: Law is a system of rules that the officials of the legal system follow, and is based on a union of primary and secondary rules. Ronald Dworkin: Law should be understood as an interpretive concept that seeks to provide the best moral justification for the social practices and institutions that it regulates.
According to Rousseau Citizens should be the authors of societies laws because he believed that the only good government was one that was freely formed by the people, and guided by the "general will of society- a direct democracy.
Claire Elmquist has written: 'Rousseau' -- subject(s): Authors, French, Biography, Family, French Authors
Rosemarie Ahrbeck has written: 'Jean-Jacques Rousseau' -- subject(s): Biography, French Authors
Monique Cottret has written: 'Jean-Jacques Rousseau en son temps' -- subject(s): Biography, French Authors, Philosophers
Susan K. Jackson has written: 'Rousseau's occasional autobiographies' -- subject(s): Autobiography, Biography, French Authors, History and criticism
James F. Jones has written: 'Rousseau's Dialogues' -- subject(s): Authorship, Autobiography, Biography, French Authors, French Dialogues, History and criticism
liberty
ACCORDING TO PARETO, "it is the waste of time to investigate what it may be"
The Jahwist, Elohist, Deuteronomist, and Priestly Writer represents the four authors or groups of authors who wrote the Pentateuch according to the Documentary Hypothesis.
The Rousseau-Portalis (not Portallis) Doctrine holds that wars are fought between states, not people. Rousseau wrote (the following passage is a quotation taken from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, in Sir Ernest Barker (ed. in trans.), Social Contract: Essays by Locke, Hume, and Rousseau (London and New York, 1947; 1967 reprint used), pp. 173-78.):War ... is something that occurs not between man and man, but between states. The individuals who become involved in it are enemies only by accident. They fight not as men or even citizens, but as soldiers: not as members of this or that national group, but as its defenders. A state can have as its enemies only other states, not men at all, seeing that there can be no true relationship between things of a different nature ... The object of war being the destruction of the enemy state, a commander has a perfect right to kill its defenders so long as their arms are in their hands: but once they have laid them down and have submitted, they cease to be enemies, or instruments employed by an enemy, and revert to the condition of men, pure and simple, over whose lives no one can any longer exercise a rightful claim ... These principles ... derive from the nature of things, and are founded upon reason.Modern authors have used this doctrine as the basis for genocide definitions. Raphael Lemkin discussed Rousseau-Portalis in his chapter that defined the term genocide in his 1944 work, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe.Keith Pomakoy, Ph.D.pomakoyk@sunyacc.edu
please give me an author and his definition about RESEARCH.. thats my assignment.. please help me
True