The Illyrian Provinces were a rather short lived creation of Napoleon. The reasons for their foundation were strategic and economic. In order to bring the new territories closer to the French empire the administration of the Illyrian Provinces launched several reforms including a redesign of their territorial administration. Napoleon%s decree on the organization of Illyria established a new territorial division into provinces, districts, cantons, and municipalities (communes). Municipalities were basic territorial units. They were not units of local self-government but part of the centralized state structure. Therefore the mayors, their deputies, substitutes and members of municipal councils were not elected but nominated.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14639441
The commentary deals with the directives on labor law and divides them into four groups. Directives on health and safety at work are not included. The work consists of five parts: Part I: Introduction to European labour law, European legal framework, Provisions of the Treaty on EU and The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights; Part II: the directives on equality; Part III: Conditions of Employment; Part IV: Protection of employees; Part V: Informing and consultation. Coauthor Končar commented the Directive 94/33/ES on protection of young people at work, which is on of the directive on the protection of employees.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14149969
The EU encourages and funds several projects aimed at exploring the possibilities of unifying legislation of the Member States. One of the most important and largest of these projects is research on the possibilities of unification of European contract law. The result of this project is a series of books that contain drafts of unified provisions of European Contract Law (Draft Common Frame of Reference, the DCFR). The ninth book in the series (Proprietary Security and Movable Assets) deals with property insurance of claim by movable. The author comments on the provisions of the ninth book from the perspective of Slovenian law, in such a way that in each clause of the ninth book presents appropriate arrangements in Slovenian legislation.
COBISS.SI-ID: 4819243
The paper deals with Pitamic as a cofounder and critic of pure theory of law. Pitamc's final answer is that the law is one and it cannot be artificially divided into natural and positive law. We are moving in the field of law as long as its content is not "obviously, clearly and significantly" inhumane. Pitamic valuably contributes to the upgrade of the pure theory of law. Getting closer to the normative purity of the law opens the field in which we (e.g., the judge) can be creative.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14266705
Resentment regarding judicial discretion is not limited to postcommunist countries. The prevailing views in England have changed since the mid-eighteenth century. This chapter of the book concerns discretion in procedural law. Discretion in procedural law can be defined as the possibility of a judge to choose between two different courses of action in proceedings which are both equally lawful. However, this chapter understands the concept in a much broader sense: it covers different methods and procedural tools, which all have in common that they enable greater flexibility in conducting proceedings.
COBISS.SI-ID: 14588753