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Towards an Historic Svalbard Judgment in Norway’s Supreme Court
Published 2023-02-01“…The Supreme Court of Norway has heard the parties in a case that a Latvian shipping company filed against Norwegian authorities because the company was not permitted to catch snow crab on the continental shelf around the Svalbard archipelago. …”
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Betydelsen av samiska traditioner i svensk rätt
Published 2011-04-01“…Comparisons are made with the ways in which Supreme Court of Norway treats Sámi culture and traditions. …”
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On the relevance of citizenship in criminal law: Implications for proportionality, equality, and justice
Published 2023-12-01“…By examining a recent judgement by the Supreme Court of Norway, and drawing on the ECtHR jurisprudence, the article then proceeds to discuss the legal and normative implications of membership status for criminal law and the unequal criminal justice outcomes. …”
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Policing the Penal Provisions on Repeated and Severe DomesticViolence
Published 2019-01-01“…According to the Supreme Court of Norway, a regime of control and violence in a close relationship must be evident. …”
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Judging Climate Change: The Role of the Judiciary in the Fight Against Climate Change
Published 2020-01-01“…The paper also considers the upcoming climate case in the Supreme Court of Norway. In particular, the question is asked whether the separation of powers in Europe and the United States is a doctrine mandating systems of power balance rather than of strict separation. …”
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Precious blood and nourishing offal: past and present slaughtering perspectives in Sámi reindeer pastoralism
Published 2022-04-01“…Although the Supreme Court of Norway in 2008 ruled that traditional slaughter practice without stunning was illegal, this historical account provides evidence that the giehtadit method was a rational way to kill a reindeer, as bleeding (haemorrhage) in the thorax offers both high-quality blood, offal, and meat for human consumption. …”
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