-
evidence will
trigger a
nullification. The
early history of juries supports the
recognition of the de
facto power of nullification. By the 12th century,...
-
American jury
draws its
power of nullification from its
right to
render a
general verdict in
criminal trials, the
inability of criminal courts to
direct a...
- Look up
nullification or
nullify in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Nullification may
refer to:
Nullification (U.S. Constitution), a
legal theory that...
-
Nullification, in
United States constitutional history, is a
legal theory that a
state has the
right to
nullify, or invalidate, any
federal laws that...
-
nullification of the act is the
rightful remedy: that
every State has a
natural right in
cases not
within the compact, (casus non fœderis) to
nullify...
-
Virginia Resolutions End
of Atlantic slave trade Missouri Compromise Tariff of 1828 Nat Turner's
Rebellion Nullification crisis End
of slavery in
British colonies...
- Calhoun's role in the
Nullification crisis: "Calhoun
began it.
Calhoun continued it.
Calhoun stopped it." As
tensions over
nullification escalated,
South Carolina...
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enforcement of federal law.
Interposition is
closely related to the
theory of nullification,
which holds that the
states have the
right to
nullify federal...
- The
Christian right,
otherwise referred to as the
religious right, are
Christian political factions characterized by
their strong support of socially conservative...
-
argue that they had a
right to
nullify federal law and to
secede from the union. For example,
during the
Nullification Crisis of 1828-1832, John C. Calhoun...