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This is because "Parliament had only conferred the decision-making power on the basis that it was to be exercised on the correct legal basis: a misdirection in law in making the decision therefore rendered the decision ultra vires".
Thenceforward it was to be taken that Parliament had only conferred the decision-making power on the basis that it was to be exercised on the correct legal basis: a misdirection in law in making the decision therefore rendered the decision ultra vires".
Jurisdiction given under the amended Measure could, as the Archbishops hope, instead be regarded as being conferred "by the decision of the Church as a whole", independently of the diocesan.
White privilege conferred the white women in Peoples Temple with mobility, prestige and decision-making power over their black female counterparts.
This process takes hours and confers the sort of decision fatigue that I am pretty sure subscriptions are meant to counter.
In a final letter to Dr Southall in February this year, Ms Doran - who in 2005 had advised Keele's vice-chancellor that "we may... wish to take a view that we don't want him as an emeritus professor because of adverse publicity on the university" - insisted that the decision not to confer the title had been "no reflection on the current difficulties to which you refer".
In a Sept. 18 letter, Joel Conarroe, a former chairman of the National Book Foundation, calls into question the educational and literary mission of the foundation on the basis of our board's decision to confer the 2003 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters on Stephen King.
Although mesenchymal stromal and cellular partners are the chief orchestrators for these cell-fate decisions (8), EpCAM might confer the ability to translate the signal that progenitors sense from their neighborhood by regulating the bioavailability of receptors (i.e., sequestration of corepressor), as was shown for Lrp6 by Lu et al. (81).
It added that conferring those decisions on a government perceived as illegitimate "is a recipe for disaster".
Much medical law – for example, that conferring the right to remove organs for transplant – is predicated on this decision and it is unlikely to be overturned.
Because of the "militia clause," many lower-court decisions had held that the law did not confer the right to bear arms on an individual.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com