Around the Bloc: Around the Bloc - Romanian High Court Hobbles Legal Reforms
Although meant to bring legal procedures in line with EU norms, critics say changes would hamstring the fight against corruption.
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Although meant to bring legal procedures in line with EU norms, critics say changes would hamstring the fight against corruption.
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The first constitution of the Ottoman-Turkish Empire was adopted in 1876 – the Kânûn-ı Esâsî (Eng. Fundamental Law). In its history, Turkey has had four constitutions. They were adopted in 1921, 1924, 1961, and 1982, with the latter being presently in force. Nowadays, the creation of a new constitution is the main issue on Turkey’s political agenda. The government of Turkey and Mr. Recep Tayyip Erdogan want to amend the constitution, and envisage creating an executive presidential system (Tur. Başkanlık sistemi), similar to that of the Russian Federation and the United States. Critics are concerned about what Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s motivation may be. This article analyzes the historical roots of the constitution, its amendments, the presidential system in Turkey and the arguments of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) and Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) against the adoption of a presidential system. The key issues that the authors address are the changes that could be made under Turkey’s new constitution and whether all political power would be concentrated in president’s hands.
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This article aims to analyze the common manifesto of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany and the Christian-Social Union in Bavaria regarding social security, with regard to the elections to the German parliament in 2017. The basic assumption was to verify whether the CDU/CSU grouping referred to each of the elements of social security, i.e. social security system, welfare security, community security and developmental security, in its 2017 election manifesto. The method used to complete the study was content analysis. The study shows that the CDU/CSU Union in its common manifesto of 2017 – Für ein Deutschland, in dem wir gut und gerne leben. Regierungsprogramm 2017–2021, raised issues related to building the social security of citizens. The proposals that were included in the program allow us to conclude that the CDU/CSU proposed a program that develops each of the pillars of social security in part, but which is still lacking in some ways. It should be noted that the issue of culture has been somewhat overlooked, which undoubtedly has a huge impact on the development of social capital and human capital, despite its enormous impact on two of the pillars, community and development. Other areas and proposals aimed at their development manage to fill this gap. It should also be pointed out that in the electoral proposals included in the manifesto, the most developed pillar was related to social security, implemented as part of the social policy of the state.
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This article reviews and advances existing relevant literature concerning online data privacy. Using data from Adobe/Edelman Berland, Econsultancy /Demographics and Technology Adoption report, Flash Eurobarometer, HubSpot, MarketingCharts, Pew Research Center, Spiceworks, Statista, Talend, and TrustArc, we performed analyses and made estimates regarding actions organizations aim to take to lay the groundwork for the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the proportion of executives whose corporations have taken diverse decisions in preparation for GDPR, enhancements required in organizations in the wake of GDPR compliance, customer positions to online data harvesting routines, the link between customer trustworthiness and retail data infringements, the percentage of grown-ups who indicate varying degrees of trust that the records of their operations preserved by various companies will still be private and secure, and the degree of accountability for protecting a person’s online privacy. Empirical and secondary data are used to support the claim that the difficult tasks for persons to have relevant management over personal data are reflected in the GDPR that is a significantly intricate piece of law taking into account risk-based assessment and analysis by the data controller. To a certain extent, data subjects may be conferred a right to be notified about the presence of automated decision-making and system performance.
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The aim of procurement is to achieve savings of public resources. Domestic and foreign studies point to the fact that the condition of achieving the savings is sufficient competition on the supply side. Slovakia currently belongs to the group of countries with low competition in public procurement deals. Furthermore, in this context we have compared the best practices of using public funds with regard to public procurement in the Czech Republic. The aim of this paper is to create and analyze models of the number of tenders subcontractor participation and open competition on the savings achieved in public procurement. Based on the Wilcoxon signed-rank test in the R software is demonstrated that public procurement in an average is a way to save public funds. Using linear regression in R program positive effect of the number of offers to saving process is identified. Across the investigated group as well as at dividing to limit and above the limit contracts, any further offer increased energy in average of 3%. Participation of the subcontractor has positive effect on savings in the whole study group and at above limit contracts over 1.35 million euros without value added tax. Open competition as a kind of public procurement is not statistically significant in pursuit of savings in procurement for a given sample.
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The definition of law enforcement in the context of international comparison is not unequivocal. It shows variegation, accordingly it is difficult to emphasize the civil security and property protection’s components. During the confirmation of law enforcement there was an easy to define and still active phenomenon which created the following two types of groups: the classical continental and the British models. In Hungary these days we aspire to firm the civil law enforcement by our traditions. The EU defined common defence policy (3rd Pillar) that was modified by the Strategy of Lisbon on the grounds of subsidiarity. It also supports various organizational models. Different forms of trainings can be experienced. There are virtual colleges, such as the European Security and Defence College and Common Security and Defence Policy which cover exclusively principles and conferences. A modern approach is the one in Krakow, the Education for Defence and Security. In Hungary, the definition of law enforcement concerns a specific field of public administration. The aim is to train civil professionals who meet the civil security systems of the member countries with that of the norms of the Union. In regional contribution they are able to make a good use of their knowledge. They also need to be able to promote the nationalization of law enforcement.
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Digital currencies are a worldwide phenomenon gaining an increasing interest among investors, economists and legal scholars. They are used mainly as a new mean of exchange and as a new way of investing funds, since the rapid changes in their value allow to gain extraordinary profits. Up to this point the legal status of digital currencies has not been clearly established under neither Polish nor EU public law, although some of the existing regulations may be indirectly applied to them. Under current regulations digital currencies cannot be treated as a legal mean of payment, as an electronic money nor a financial instrument. Creation of a complex regulation regarding digital currencies and granting administrative authorities supervisory powers over their trade seems to be necessary. Because of the evolution of financial markets, classifying digital currencies as financial instruments is a possible way of regulating their trade.
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E-government is the way in which institutions can govern citizens better by integrating innovations in the field of information transmission and processing. Through this material, I have shown that there are local institutions, who can use a facebook page to promote their most important events, but also to keep citizens informed about policies promoted at the community level. The article contains an analysis of the pages belonging to the county towns of Romania, with 41 cases being analyzed.
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The specialized legislation on the regulation of public services reflected the specifics of each historical period. Public service is a complex notion, subject to evolution that has given rise over time to many contradictory discussions, being at the same time an essential notion for administrative law. Presenting the foundations of democracy, Aristotle outlined suma divisio between civil society, which relates to private interests, and the political society that defends "general utility" and "common good”.
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As we know, this process has last for middle 90’s of XXcentury. Many political scientists did their best tounderstand all tips of Transnistria, but it’s still ‘open’ anddisputable, because of lack of information.In 2018, after a long break, in the negotiation process onthe Transnistrian settlement, the parties managed toachieve some progress. An agreement was established onthe recognition of university diplomas issued inTransnistria; on cooperation in the field oftelecommunications; about neutral car rooms; resolvedcontroversies around schools that are under the jurisdictionof Chisinau. These agreements should seriously simplify thedaily life of people living on both banks of the Dniester andcreate prerequisites for their further convergence.At the same time, noting the progress in the negotiations, itshould be noted that there is no progress on the main issue- the achievement of a comprehensive settlement of theconflict.Moreover, today there is no settlement plan.This means that the main topic of negotiations is stillfrozen. And, it seems, this circumstance, to a greater orlesser extent, suits everyone.Perhaps the time has come when it is time to startdeveloping a new settlement plan.Without such a plan,minor and private issues can be discussed and consideredendlessly.
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An ever increasing feature of public office is the way in which the recruitment and training of civil servants are controlled by legislation. Civil servants are a basic component of public administration but they are also important for labor law because civil service relations have the characteristics of an employment relationship and also specific features resulting from the rules of public law. The relevant expression of the interferences between public and private law for civil servants is recruitment and training. The originality of this article lies in the multidisciplinary character, combining elements of labor law, administrative law and human resources management, character reflected in the bibliography used. Another merit of this study is that the authors correlated the provisions of various laws: Constitution, Labor Code, Law no. 161/2003 on the transparency in exercising public dignities and public functions, Government Ordinance no. 137/2000 regarding the prevention and sanction of all discrimination forms, Government Ordinance no. 129/2000 concerning adults’ professional training.
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In recent years, the study of street-level bureaucracy has been developed as a major interest in diverse types of research on public policy, management, public administration, and politics. The scholars are particularly concerned with understanding discretion of street-level bureaucrats and finding useful means of measuring the impact of government on people. In this sense, on the one hand the paper describes and analysis strategies and mechanisms that street-level bureaucrats develop in order to deal with the strains imposed by internal and external context, and on the other hand presents the evaluation of the social workers from the street-level bureaucracy perspective and the impact of the mechanisms developed by street-level bureaucrats on clients. From a methodological standpoint, and taking into consideration the theoretical and normative framework from Romania, the research relies on comprehensive and systematic search of the vast literature on street-level bureaucracy and document analysis. Further, in order to complete the missing data the authors use the Law no. 544/2001 on free access to information of public interest for gathering information.
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Even though the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms does not recognize the ”right to health” as one of the conventional rights, the case law of the European Court of Human Rights has recognized and developed protection of human rights of patients and their next of kin within the Convention, when they deem their rights have been violated by the medical negligence or medical malpractice. Most important, these rights were recognized under positive obligations which were imposed on the Member States within the right to life (Article 2 of the Convention) or under prohibition of torture (Article 3 of the Convention). In substance, the positive obligations developed through the Court’s case law demand from the Member State prompt, effective and patient-friendly system for detecting and eliminating the violations of the Convention on national level. There are three specific cases that were decided upon by the Court in respect of the Republic of Croatia regarding the positive obligations under Article 2 of the Convention in relations to medical malpractice (Bajić v. Croatia, Kudra v. Croatia and Bilbija and Blažević v. Croatia). These cases showed weakness in the national system and opened this theme for a wider public debate. The process of execution of these judgements before Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe lead to number of measures taken for improvement of the domestic system in terms of medical negligence and medical malpractice.
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This paper, based on the study of information on clay tablets, examines land-tenure relations at the Mycenaean palace of Pylos in comparison with the situation in the Near East countries in the late Bronze Age. Special attention is paid to the question of how the palace administered the landholding in some regions, and investigates what obligations the landholders had in return. The paper contains eight sections: 1. Among the Linear B documents from the Mycenaean archives, especially from those at Pylos, there are tablets classified in E series regarding landholding. Their content is of great importance for investigations of the economic life and the social system in Mycenaean times. They record very complicated interrelations which penetrated all spheres of the Mycenaean society. The most privileged personages (wanax, läwägetäs) are mentioned as holders of land as well as some palace and temple functionaries, people of different trades and professions (cowherd, shepherd, swineherd, charioteer, potter, fuller, etc.), and even slaves of some functionaries who used a part of the possessions of larger landholders. It is significant that in the documents of a fiscal character, some specialized craftsmen, e. g. bronze-smiths, are levied with impost in some agricultural products (flax), which they had to produce. The syntax, abundantly represented in these texts, is quite clear. One and the same thought is expressed here in several different ways (especially in Py Ea set). Along with short phrases long sentences (even with ACI constructions) appear in Eb/Ep tablets. The majority of the vocabulary words is also known from the classical and later Greek. In spite of all that, the interpretation of these texts encounters great difficulties because of the numerous technical terms, the meaning of which alters with the changes of the social organization. Even words which have been in use until the present day, e. g. da-mo dâmos, represent a great problem, because in Mycenaean times they had a special meaning. These texts, both partially and as a comprehensive whole, have often been carefully examined. However, there are questions still unsolved. After a survey of the PY E series, especially the Eo/En, En/Ep, Ed and Ea tablets, which represent a kind of cadastral list, the main technical terms used in these documents are reexamined and possible conclusions are derived about the organization of the economic life in the Mycenaean society. 2. The most complete documents about land ownership and land use are related to the district of Pa-ki-ja-ne, where the shrine of Potnija was located, as we can see from PY Tn 316. That is the reason why so many priestesses and theoio doelai are recorded in these texts. The surface of the land in Mycenaean times was measured by the quantity of seed required for sowing. That practice is in use up to the present day in the Near East, Mediterranean and Balkan countries, a„ well as in some places in our country. At the end of every line of the Pylos cadastral list the quantity of seed is indicated by the phrase to-so, pe-mol-ma; the ideogram *120 which very likely represents a monogram of si + to (si-to), a word probably from the pre-Greek supstrate; and then, by parts of the basic unit for dry measure, and the numerical signs of the decimal system. The other interpretations of the phrase to-so, pe-mol-ma (taxes, fénpo, seed from the palace granaries, etc.) are rejected as unsound. Counting the quantities of seed mentioned on the PY E tablets and presumed in the missing ones, one can conclude that about 400—500 hectares of land could be sown with it. Obviously' the entire cultivated land of the Pylos kingdom is not recorded, but only a small part, probably the land that belonged to the palace and the shrine in Pa-ki-ja-ne. In contemporary Messenia, 170.000 out of a total of 250.000 inhabitants cultivate 160.000 hectares of land, which is approximately a ratio of one rural inhabitant to one hectare. If we admit that in the Mycenaean Pylos kingdom there lived about 50.000 people, then we can conclude that the PY E series contains evidence only for about 10% of the arable land. 3. The land of the Pakijanija cadastral list is divided into two categories: a. Eo/En tablets record ko-to-na ki-ti-me-na ktoinai ktimenai, possessed by individual holders, called te-re-ta tclestai, and understood from the very beginning as ‘private land’; b. Eb/Ep tablets register keke- me-iia ko-to-na, held by da-mo dâmos, supposed to mean approximately ‘communal’. The Ed set contains a recapitulation of both kinds of land. Regarding the etymology of ko-to-na ki-ti-me-na there is a communis opinio that both words are from the same stem of the athematic verb *kteimi, from which the 3m person plur. of ind. pres, ki-ti-je-si ktiensi is documented, and in classical Greek the trans, verb ‘build, establish’ is derived. However, among the Mycenaeologists there is no argeement about the exact meaning of the medio-pass. pres, participle ki-ti-me-na. Taking into consideration several different suggestions it seems that the meaning ‘settled, inhabited’ is the most probable. It can be supported by other derivatives from the same stem: ki-ti-ta ktitai ‘inhabitants’, cf. Horn. ‘neighbours’, me-ta-ki-ti-ta ‘immigrants’, Horn, pexavdoxai, péxoïxoï. The original meaning of the Homeric epithet ‘a place with many ktitai’ was almost forgotten, but in IL 2.712 it was still kept. Its meaning ‘well built’ is of a later development. The adjective a-ki-ti-to with a-privativum, which was also disputed, denotes ‘land, without ktitai’ rather than ‘non cultivated’. In PY Na 926 we read that at Pa-ka-a-ka-ri (a place name) there was land a-ki-ti-to, but A^ku-mi-ni-jo (a personal name) holds it, and the place was levied with an impost of flax, which means that the land was cultivated. The meaning of a-ki-ti-to becomes clearer if it is investigated from a larger contextual aspect. It is well known that the tablets are from the year proceeding the disaster of the palace. In the tablets other than the E series, there is evidence that some ktitai were engaged in carrying out military service for the kingdom: some of them, e. g. ke-ki-de, were watchers at several coastral places, others were obliged (o-pe-ro-ta ophehmtajs) to row (e-re-e helehen). J. Chadwick, who previously thought that nothing indicates whether any of the obligations imposed on the occupiers of land include military service (Docs2 444), has now discovered the muster of the Pylian fleet (Traetata Mycenaea in press) by ktitai and metaktitai from some coastral places. That is the reason why some places are a-ki-ti-to, i. e. without ktitai. It is noticeable that in Ugarit in the second half of the II millennium there was a similar custom of impost levy on some villages to supply people for naval and land military service, as M. Heltzer pointed out (The Rural Community in Ancient Ugarit, 1976). The etymology of the perf. participle ke-ke-me-na is more problematic. There are several different interpretations of this term (cf. A. Heubeck, ŽA 17, 1967, 17ss.). The connection with *kikhëmi ‘abandon’, Skt. jahâmi ‘leave’, Gr. -/yjga ‘widow’ (Calderone, Ruijgh, etc.) is the most satisfactory one from the Linear B orthographic point of view, kekhemena ‘abandoned’, but the identification with ‘fallow’ is to be modified. According to the author’s opinion ke-ke-me-na denotes land usually left, unploughed for longer than one summer in order to rest and improve its quality. In the mountainous Balkan countries there is such a practice, and in the Slavonic languages there is a special term for such a land — prelog —, different from fallow. While the fallow is ploughed and usually sown in the autumn, prelog is left uncultivated for one or more years. A fallow left for more than one year is called „barren fallow” or prelog. 4. The participle ke-ke-me-na is closely related to the agricultural term ka-tna, which alternates with ke-ke-me-na ko-to-na. Etymologically the word is connected with xdpvto ‘toil, win by toil’, xdftaroç ‘trouble’, which corresponds well with work on such kind of land, especially when it is tilled with primitive means of production. In the Slavonic languages there is a semantic support for this explanation of ka-rna. Old Russian stradati, a semantic equivalent of xà/tvto, among the others is used for agricultural work: stradomaja zemlja = arable land. The gender of ka-ma has long been disputed. The Hesychian gloss xdpav xov âyoàv gives us reason to expect a feminine noun. However, the phrase aio-ro-ki-jo-ne-jo (not -ne-ja) ka-ma is a contradiction to the feminine gender. Ka-ma is very likely a neuter stem kamas. [...] The I.-E. etymology of damartes is dubious. The alternation of the stem vowel oju (da-majdu-ma) makes its connection with I.-E. *dom doubtful. It is very likely of pre-Greek origin. The words for masters are often borrowed from other languages. The holder of the ke-ke-me-na land was dämos, a board of a number of important ktoinookhoi. Their role was probably intermediary between the palace and the population in the villages. Very likely they had to organize military service and other activities connected with landholding just as it was in the Near East countries of the II millennium B. C. Analysing the Mycenaean landholding texts in comparison with similar ones from the Near East, one can conclude that the power of the Mycenaean palaces was relied upon landholders: telestai of ki-ti-me-na land, who send their ktitai for some services, and damos — of ke-ke-me-na land, who organized kamaëwes for such purposes, as one can conclude from An 724. 6 . Section six investigates different kinds of land use from the juridical point of view: o-na-to onâton, e-to-ni-jo etonion ‘truly’ + o-ni-jo ,a well known term from post-Mycenaean times (with some semantic differences). While the users of the first possession — onätcres — were obliged to do some service for the palace in return for onäton, the two others were privileged holdings. 7. The analysis of the E tablets shows that this text is related to a region near Pylos and Pakijane, because people of different trades and professions associated with the palace and the temple are mentioned here as holders of land. They were engaged in some service for the palace and temple functionaries,, e. g. charioteer and swineherd of the läzvägetäs, as well as king’s potter, fuller, etc. in Eo/En tablets. This spontaneously raises a question about the relation of different economic and social activities to the landholding and land use. It is remarkable that among the numerous qualifications of people according to their professions, the name for farmer does not appear in the tablets. Only the personal name of a shepherd from Crete A-ko-ro-qo-ro Agroquolos, which can be identified with Lat. Agricola, points out that the appelative agroquolos, also existed, but in the tablets known so far it does not occur. Certain personal names display some specialized branches of agriculture, e. g. A-pe-ri-ta-wo ‘viticulturist’, Pu-te perhaps Phutêr ‘planter’. However, a common name for a farmer is absent. According to the author’s opinion the reason for that is the fact that nearly everybody was associated in some way with land possession and land use, so that there was no need for using such a term. The statement that in Mycenaean times craftsmanship was absolutely separated from agriculture (cf. VDI 1, 1961, 33) is revised here. Although the specialization of labour was highly developed in Mycenaean Greece, the craftsmen owned land and had to cultivate it. That is the reason why so many khalkêwes (nearly 400), mentioned in the Pylos kingdom, had to produce only small quantity of finished bronze goods. Obviously they were not engaged full time at their trade. 8 . At the end the following two main conclusions can be derived: a. There is no doubt that in the ethnic and linguistic development there is a continuity between Mycenaean and Homeric Greece, but in the social organization there is a break. The Mycenaean society collapsed forever, and together with it the technical terms of that organization disapeared, because they were used no longer. The Homeric poems describe this epoch in an idealized form, but it does not correspond to the historical situation of a bureaucratic and centralized state. However in Homer there are examples of how wanax can give land to somebodv (cf. Od. 7. 31 lss.). b. The Mycenaean bureaucratic state was not the result of a natural development, but it was organized by imitating the Minoan model. Looking for the origin of the principles on which the Minoan and Mycenaean societies were organized, the author finds the pattern in the Near Eastern contemporary countries (of the II mill. B. C.), where the dominant system was an autocratic power and centralized state administration with the palace and the temple in the centre. They were, in fact, the main land-owners and distributed land to the citizens for some services. Besides, numerous documents from the Near East contain information about private possessors of land. On the Mycenaean tablets two centres, palace and temple, are well differentiated. But there is not a separate temple administration. As the tablets related to the Pakijane temple are found in the palace of Pylos, it is natural to conclude that the palace controlled the sanctuary. In the tablets there is no direct evidence that along with these two centres a private sector of landholders existed as in the Near East. However, there are indirect indications that in the Mycenaean society there were also private landholders, just as some people owned their own cattle along with the herds that belonged to the palaces; but this will be the subject of another study.
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Foes of freedom of the press surely welcome the new measures being proposed and discussed on the very highest levels of the EU.
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The automotive industry in Silesia province is becoming more important. It is influenced by many factors among which one of the most important are political activities of the self‑government authorities in Silesia province together with government administration. For example, the element of political activities was “The regional contract for the Katowice province” and Silesian Region Development Strategy. As the result of this activity, the Katowice Special Economic Zone was established, what was clearly affected and continues to affect the creation of new ones and the expansion of existing plants related to the automotive industry. For example, they are Fiat Auto Poland, Opel, Isuzu, Magneti Marelli. The development of this branch of industry is a great opportunity for a big technological leap and restructuring of the economy for Silesia province and for Poland.
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The article discusses the administrative formal and legal conditions (administrative procedures) required when starting a business in order to offer services in the tourism industry. The formal and legal administrative conditions are not uniform in this respect, which can be attributed to both the lack of a common legal basis specifying the conditions for providing particular types of services in tourism, as well as to differences in the procedure of undertaking business activity. The formal and legal conditions have been specified by regulations in the Act of 2 July 2004 about the freedom of business activity and in the Act of 29 August 1997 about services in the tourism industry. Assuming the criterion of the legal basis as the foundation of the division, the article discusses four different legal situations, which can occur under the current legal condition that applies to undertaking business activity in providing services for tourism. In relation to the required administrative procedure three types of business activity have been specified: activity which does not require an administrative decision, activity which can be commenced after issuing an administrative decision and activity which can be undertaken on conditions other than those mentioned above.
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The article contains the results of an analysis of the existing management structure and alternative suggestions for improvement and key features such as manageability norm, horizontal links, and hierarchy. Implementend are methods of collecting, researching and analyzing publicly available documents and information to identify authority, activities, structure, and existing internal organization.
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Savet za borbu protiv korupcije (u daljem tekstu Savet) tokom svog rada obradio je više stotina predstavki koje se odnose na nepravilnosti u procesu privatizacije, o čemu je Vladi Republike Srbije podneto preko četrdeset izveštaja tokom proteklih deset godina.
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Počev od 2009. godine u Ivanjici se svake godine krajem avgusta održava Nušićijada. Reč je o kolaž festivalu satkanom od muzičkih koncerata, pozorišnih predstava, sportskih događaja, performanasa, izložbi i filmskih projekcija, začinjen ceremonijama i paradom kostimiranih građana kao svojim zaštitnim znakom. Ona predstavlja spoj kulture i zabave, tradicionalnog i modernog, mladosti i iskustva, individualnog i kolektivnog. Poznato je da je Branislav Nušić bio odličan besednik i da je napisao jedan od najboljih priručnika za retoriku na srpskom jeziku Retorika – nauku o besedništvu. Imajući to u vidu u okviru Nušićijade u Ivanjici počev od 2012. godine organizuje se Besedničko veče: „NUŠIĆ I REČ“. Ono se sastoji iz dva dela. U prvom delu ugledna ličnost iz javnog života po pozivu govori „Besedu o Nušiću“ na temu o Branislavu Nušiću kao besedniku i teoretičaru retorike. U drugom delu „U slavu reči“, nastupaju revijalno najuspešniji takmičari u besedništvu u Srbiji u tekućoj godini. U ovoj rubrici Hereticusa objavljujemo besede dr Slaviše Orlovića, redovnog profesora Fakulteta političkih nauka Univerziteta u Beogradu i studenata Olivere Ševo, Stefana Dragićevića i Bojane Petrović, koje su održane 27. avgusta 2016. u Ivanjici. Na kraju je beseda dr Đorđa Sibinovića notarima Srbije. [...]
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