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The Law is reason from passion.

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FUNDAMENTALS OF LAW The Law is reason from passion. - Aristotle * * * * * * CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY IS THERE AN OBLIGATION TO SOCIETY AND TO GIVE BACK TO THE ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Law is reason from passion.


1
FUNDAMENTALS OF LAW
  • The Law is reason from passion.

  • - Aristotle

2
The Preamble
  • We the People of the United States, in Order to
    form a more perfect Union, establish Justice,
    insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the
    common defence, promote the general Welfare, and
    secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and
    our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
    Constitution for the United States of America.

3
INSTITUTIONS OF A SOCIETY
  • FAMILY
  • EDUCATION
  • RELIGION
  • ECONOMY
  • GOVERNMENT

4
Laws are Created
  • At all three levels
  • Federal
  • State
  • local

5
Sources of Laws
  • Statutes
  • Case law
  • Constitutions
  • Administrative regulations

6
Constitution
  • Document that sets forth the framework of a
    government and its relationship to the people it
    governs.
  • Highest source of law
  • Federal constitution is the supreme law of the
    land.

7
Constitutions distribute powers
  • Between the people and their governments
  • Between state governments and the federal
    government
  • Among the branches of the government

8
Allocation of Power Between People and their
Government
  • Federal constitution is main instrument for
    distributing powers between people and their
    government.
  • Does this with the Bill of Rights

9
Bill of Rights
  • The first 10 amendments to the US Constitution.
  • Protects people from actions of their governments
  • Was proposed to ensure that individuals would
    have civil rights and could avoid the tyranny of
    an overly-powerful central government.

10
Allocation of Power between Federal and State
  • Many governmental powers over business are
    divided between state governments and the federal
    governments on the basis of commerce.
  • Constitution gives federal government power to
    regulate both foreign and interstate commerce.

11
Interstate Commerce
  • Business that occurs between two or more states.

12
Intrastate Commerce
  • Business that is conducted within one state.
  • Power to regulate is left to the state in which
    the business has taken place.

13
Allocation of Power among the Branches of
Government
  • Distributes governmental powers among the three
    branches of government.
  • Used to create a system of checks and balances
    between each branch.

14
Three Branches of Government
  • Executive
  • branch of the Government is responsible for
    enforcing the laws of the land
  • Legislative
  • law making branch of government
  • Judicial
  • Supreme Court

15
Statutes
  • Formal, written law of a country or state,
    written and enacted by its legislative authority
  • Typically, statutes command, prohibit, or declare
    something
  • Inferior to the U.S. Constitution

16
Ordinances
  • Pieces of legislation created by a town or city
    council or by a county board.
  • Only effective within the boundary of the local
    governments that enacted them.

17
Case Law
  • Created by the judicial branch of governments.
  • Made after a trial has ended and has been
    appealed to a higher court.
  • Appellate court opinion may state new rules to be
    used in deciding the case and others like it.

18
Stare Decisis
  • let the decision stand
  • Requires that lower courts must follow
    established case law in deciding similar cases.

19
Administrative Regulations
  • Federal, state, and local legislatures all create
    administrative agencies.

20
Administrative Agencies
  • Governmental bodies formed to carry out
    particular laws.
  • Examples
  • Social Security Administration
  • Fayette Countys zoning commission
  • Created by legislatures controlled by the
    executive branch.

21
Main Types of Laws
  • Common classifications
  • Civil
  • Criminal laws
  • Procedural laws
  • Substantive laws
  • Business law

22
Civil Law
  • When private legal rights of an individual are
    violated, the matter is governed by civil law.
  • Group of laws that make up for wrongs against
    individual people.

23
Crime
  • An offense against society rather than
    individuals.
  • When citizens rights to live in peace are
    violated, the offense is governed by criminal
    law.
  • Conviction of a crime can result in a fine,
    imprisonment, and sometimes execution.

24
Procedural Law
  • Deals with methods of enforcing legal rights and
    duties. Examples
  • Laws that say how an arrest can be made.
  • Procedures that can be used during trials.
  • Stare Decisis is a procedural law.

25
Substantive Law
  • Defines rights and duties.
  • Defines offenses, such as murder, theft, breach
    of contract, and negligence.

26
Two types of procedural Law
  • Civil procedure
  • Criminal procedure

27
Criminal Procedures
  • Defines the process for enforcing the law when
    someone is charged with a crime.

28
Civil Procedure
  • Used when a civil law has been violated.
  • Civil law is concerned only with private
    offenses.
  • Injured party is entitled to protect his or her
    rights.
  • Police and public prosecutors generally dont get
    involved in the dispute.

29
Law leaves room for interpretation
  • The LETTER of The Law
  • VS.
  •  
  • The SPIRIT of The Law

30
  • The Law is REASON free from PASSION

DO YOU AGREE?
31
  • FIDELITY TO LAW

32
The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
reads
  • No person shall be ... deprived of life,
    liberty, or property, without due process of
    law.
  •  
  •  

33
ETHICS
  • What is the Right Thing To Do?
  • - best interest whose?
  • - majority
  • - greatest good
  • - able to go public
  • - rationalize it

34
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
  • IS THERE AN OBLIGATION TO SOCIETY AND TO GIVE
    BACK TO THE COMMUNITY?
  • At what cost?
  • - White-collar crimes/scandals.

35
Business Law
  • Covers rules that apply to business situations
    and transactions.
  • Concerned with civil lawespecially contracts.
  • The area of the law pertaining to commercial torts
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