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Ex. 5. Answer the following questions.

MODULE 3 | Vocabulary | Ex. 4. Add the necessary words into the sentences. | Ex. 8. Answer the following questions. | THE UNITED STATES POLICE SYSTEM | Vocabulary | Ex. 3. Put the necessary words into the sentences. Translate them into Ukrainian. | Ex. 9. Answer the following questions. | JUDICIARY OF UKRAINE | Vocabulary |


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  2. Choose the right answer.
  3. Complete the following sentences in appropriate ways, using one word for each blank space.
  4. Complete the tag-questions and let your groupmates answer them.
  5. Do you know the parts of a newspaper? What information can you find on the following pages?
  6. Ex 2. Fill in the blanks with one of the following words. Mind your grammar
  7. Ex 2. Fill in the blanks with one of the following words. Mind your grammar.

1. What are the main types of courts in the Ukrainian court system?

2. What does legal procedure system consist of?

3. What functions do regional and district courts carry out?

4. What is a court?

5. What institution settles disputes through a legal process?

6. What role does a court play in the life of society?

7. Are the judges of the Supreme Court elected or appointed?

8. Are the judges of District Courts appointed in Ukraine?

 

MODULE 4

UNIT 2

  Text: British Judicial System.
  Grammar: Sequence of Tences. Direct and Indirect speech.

BRITISH JUDICIAL SYSTEM

There is no single body of law in Britain and there are dif­ferences between the separate systems, especially between Scot­land and the rest of the country. However, some features are common to all systems: the sources of law, the distinction bet­ween criminal law, which is concerned with wrongs against the whole community, and civil law concerned with the rights, duties and obligations of individuals between themselves.

The English criminal law has never been reduced to a single code. The sources of law include statutes (Acts of Parliament) and ’unwritten’ or common law, based on judicial precedent. In this system, court decisions establish legal principles and rules of law. They also call the common law ’case law’ or ’judge-made law’.

In England there are two main classes of trial courts: the Magistrates’ Court and the Crown Court. Magistrates’ Courts are lower courts of trial in which less serious offences are tried before magistrates without a jury. More serious cases are also brought before Magistrates’ Courts, but the proceedings then do not amount to a trial, they are only a preliminary investi­gation. Magistrates’ Courts, sometimes called police courts, try the majority of criminal cases and some civil cases. They are courts of summary jurisdiction.

The Crown Courts sit in various circuit centres for the trial of serious criminal offences before a judge and jury. The courts are presided over by a High Court judge or by a Circuit judge. The Crown Courts have a double function. Sitting without a jury they hear appeals from Magistrates’ Courts. The Crown Court for London is called the Central Criminal Court. Trials in this court are presided over either by a High Court judge or by one of the special judges, such as the Recorder of the City of London.

The High Court hears those civil cases that cannot be decided by County courts. The Court of Criminal Appeal hears appeals from the Crown Courts and the House of Lords is the supreme court of appeal in criminal matters.


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