Definition of Accusatorial. Meaning of Accusatorial. Synonyms of Accusatorial

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Accusatorial. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Accusatorial and, of course, Accusatorial synonyms and on the right images related to the word Accusatorial.

Definition of Accusatorial

Accusatorial
Accusatorial Ac*cu`sa*to"ri*al, a. Accusatory.

Meaning of Accusatorial from wikipedia

- The adversarial system or adversary system or accusatorial system or accusatory system is a legal system used in the common law countries where two advocates...
- a tendency in countries with an inquisitorial system to believe that accusatorial proceedings unduly favour rich defendants who can afford large legal...
- twelfth and early thirteenth centuries, there was a shift away from the accusatorial model toward the legal procedure used in the Roman Empire. Instead of...
- bounty hunter and ********in from Dimension X, hired by Krang to dispose of accusatorial witnesses before his trail. Commander Zom, a commanding Triceraton officer...
- School. Joneydi maintains that procedural justice is "inquisitorial and accusatorial". She believes "there is no hindrance that prevents women from serving...
- support of Malloy. The court noted that "the American judicial system is accusatorial, not inquisitorial" and the Fourteenth Amendment protects a witness against...
- to suit local conditions. The South African system today is basically accusatorial: that is, the state accuses and the accused defends. The accusation and...
- guaranteeing the rights of the accused. The system became almost completely accusatorial, and the judge, although still able to question witnesses, decided a...
- controversy, with some describing the notices as "unnecessarily menacing and accusatorial". In November 2011, whilst Theresa May was Home Secretary, the Home Office...
- 2) and accusations against a pope (canon 3), known as the Sylvestrian Accusatorial Canon: '. . . the supreme bishop should not be judged by anyone, since...