Kentucky and Virginia Resolution's.
Doctrine of nullification
Benjamin Franklin - doctrine of nullification
Monroe Doctrine
the supreme court
The Monroe Doctrine was proposed by President James Monroe.
The Kentucky Resolutions (Thomas Jefferson) and the Virginia Resolutions (James Madison) set the basic arguments for states' rights. Both documents seemed to support the rights of the states to interpret the Constitution by saying that if an individual state considered an act of Congress in violation of, or in conflict with the Constitution, that state could then declare that act (law) null and void (not enforceable) within the borders of that state. John C. Calhoun would base his doctrine of Nullification on the arguments set forth in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions.
States' Rights is the theory that state and local government's actions and laws in dealing with social and economic problems are supreme to federal actions and laws. The theory goes back to the founding of our nation. Jefferson and Madison advocated states' rights in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. John C. Calhoun's Theory of Nullification, the South's justification for declaring independence from the US, also advocates states' rights.
The legal doctrine established to control police misconduct is called "qualified immunity." This doctrine protects government officials, including police officers, from being held personally liable for civil damages as long as their actions did not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights.
Monroe Doctrine -Apex
The Truman Doctrine was first established by the US government in 1947. It involved the US pledging support to Turkey and Greece in a bid to prevent them being influenced by the Soviet Union.
the 12 apostels ANSWER 2: The official doctrine of Christianity wasn't established until the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD.