Political Science, asked by eijumkaye724, 10 months ago

long conclusion on justice​

Answers

Answered by ItZbLoOdSiLeNtGiRl
1

Answer:

The term 'access to justice' means different things to different people. For some, the subject centralises the issue of overcoming the procedural barriers within the court system itself. Such an approach tends to concentrate on issues of overcoming delays within the court process, efficiency, formality and cost of proceedings, and the organisation, structure and administration of courts and tribunals.

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Answered by shwetayadav1701011
0

Answer:

Explanation:

A Conclusion: Justice and Exits

William Ian Miller

A discussion of some troubling exits and non-exits of characters: primarily Mord and Hallgerd. Why is the latter just forgotten and dropped without a thought; why does the former suffer no sanction for his putative ill-doings? The writer is too given to realism and refusing easy moralizing. People like Mord tend to land on their feet because at some level they know their limits. Hallgerd’s revenge is appreciated for its utter non-utility, it being purely aesthetic, artfully accomplished, the moral and the aesthetic merging in refusal not to pay back what she owes. The sublimity of the author/narrator’s first person pronoun farewell is evoked.

Keywords:   Hallgerd, Mord, exits, endings, aesthetics of revenge, justice, payback

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