• unclean hands doctrine – доктрина "нечистых рук"
• Drago doctrine – доктрина Драго
• doctrine of continuous voyage – доктрина единства следования
• Calvo doctrine – доктрина Кальво
• doctrine of territoriality – доктрина территориальности
• military doctrine – военная доктрина
См. также: doctrine of continuous voyage, documents of foreign origin, docket number, documentary
The patent misuse doctrine could also be applied to use of licensing agreements to extend the term of a patent or to extract royalties as a percentage of profit from sales of other products or goods. (Wikipedia)
The concept of party autonomy dates back to the early fifteenth century. The first to express the doctrine of party autonomy is considered to be a French scholar named Charles Dumolin, considered to be ‘the father of party autonomy’.
Dumolin advanced the idea that ‘those who enter into an agreement may stipulate the law that governs their bargain’; when it comes to the choice of law in international contracts, the parties have the freedom, not to restrict themselves to the confines of municipal law, can exclude themselves from rules that are mandatory in the international sense and may also exclude future changes in that law. Zhang Mo has expressed the present scenario as such, “As the party autonomy doctrine has developed, the boundaries have evolved into three major areas: The public policy exception, the mandatory rules mandate and the reasonable connection requirement.” (Party Autonomy in International Contracts: Why Limited Party Autonomy Is Better Than Unlimited Party Autonomy by Arun Ajay Shankar)
Economic liberalization is the lessening of government regulations and restrictions in an economy in exchange for greater participation by private entities; the doctrine is associated with classical liberalism. (Wikipedia)
Locke's most obvious solution to this problem is his doctrine of tacit consent. Simply by walking along the highways of a country a person gives tacit consent to the government and agrees to obey it while living in its territory. This, Locke thinks, explains why resident aliens have an obligation to obey the laws of the state where they reside, though only while they live there. (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
• doctrine
• doctrines
