Affects on Terrorism

Terrorism is a social vice that has caused national and international disasters by being a threat to peace and stability of humankind. This is on the way its perpetrators have gone beyond national borders. Acts of terrorism began during the times of French revolution where terror activities were used as means of fighting for freedom. However, the modern day terrorism has mutated to acts of mass murders, which are outside the political criminal activities by staging unexpected attacks on innocent civilian populations. The act of September 11 2001 was an epitome of the extent to which terrorists are ready and willing to go because unwarranted harm to people who are not able to defends themselves. This was a form of international terrorism as the cause and the perpetrators were foreign. According to the UN, terrorism encompasses all of the unlawful acts which are subjected toward a state with an intention to create psychological fear in the minds of a given group of people, state or even general public (United Nations, 2006). This has become one of the ways that extremist groups to express their dissatisfaction with a given policy.

The resultants of terrorism activities have become more profound now than ever before. The first reason why this country was attacked was based on its vocal and straightforward foreign policies that do not please a certain group of people. Terrorists use terrorism activities as a non-confrontational ways of fighting their perceived enemy (Halwani, 2006). The attack on US on 911 and the continued attack on US interests has demanded the institution of increased security measures in and out of this country. The involvement of people of a given religion in carrying out these attacks has increased the extent in which the country treats people of this religion with caution. This form of profiling according to the religion of a person and place of origin has heightened animosity between the people of this country and those who comes from regions perceived to support terrorism related activities. Many countries including the United States has been forced to revisit their laws in order to accommodate the antiterrorism statues. Even if the law still has to respect the basic human rights of a person, the threat posed by the terrorism is a strong ground on which allied states have opted to put forward firm laws relating to terrorism. The US government has vowed and committed itself to pursuing and putting to trial all suspects, supporters and actual perpetrators of terrorism activities (The White house Washington, 1995). It always puts on alert its citizens who are visiting and living in areas that arte prone to terrorism activities. Concisely, the US is concerned over the terrorism activities happening on its soil.

The act of 911 punched holes on the security systems of the United States on its capability to safeguard its citizens on its own soil. This is because, though a superpower with vast security, intelligence and military in and out of its borders, the country became a victim of terror on a single day. This meant that the country has a lot to do to improve its home security. The effect of this has been increase in information gathering in relation to those who entering and already living in this country. It is indisputable that, the recent act of seizing of Russian spy agents in this country is a step forward in ensuring this country gets rid of rogue individuals within our society
This attack increased the animosity that existed between the United States and the Arab World. The achievements that had been achieved  through the embracive US foreign policy in mediating Middle East peace process were thwarted by the acts of terrorists who were not only trying to send a negative signal to the US but also they were trying to coerce the government to abandoning its peace mission. However, the US government has come forward with greater determination to ensure it helps peace to prevail in all areas around the world. One way to succeed in this is by not bowing to this kind of terror-based pressure.

Every business investor always looks for a place that he can invest which is free from uncertainties of any kind. The terror activity tainted the imager of US as a safe place for investment. The government has therefore has a greater challenge in assuring investors and other business people of the security when investing and doing business in the US. The use of Passenger flights by terrorists to carry out property and life destructions has posed another challenge to the governments of the world in ensuring the safety in the aviation industry.

The significance of this attack was followed by an international call for collaboration in fighting this menace. Never before had this form of transport used as a weapons of hitting at another target causing colossal loss of life. From a political and ideological view, this attack could be seen as an attack that targeted US. However, in reality this was an attack on humankind. The victims came from larger community other than US only (Gull, 2010). In addition, this event if left unattended could replicate itself in the future somewhere else. The international community therefore found a genuine reason to come together in addressing the issue as a common agenda.
F
uture affects on criminal justice systems
The increase in occurrence of terrorism related acts has initiated a debate on what constitutes a terrorism activity. Much more has been the call for the legislation of stricter laws that recognizes and prescribes on how to deal with acts of terrorism. The success of combating terrorism in future lies on the application and common laws and cooperation between all countries. This is because, it has become clear that, unless all countries commits themselves in dealing with this menace efforts by only a section of the world nations will end up achieving only a little. All the countries in the world need to ratify and play their part in their obligation as pertains to the International Law in regard to terrorism related activities. The emergence of new wave of terrorism with see the formulation of new criminal laws that will require those nations which do not ratify such laws be sanctioned and segregated from the rest of the world. This is because, terrorism is a new war against humanity criminal law will no longer be lenient to any form of dissident acts that causes threat to peace and harmony in the modern and future world.

Concisely, one thing that has become evident is that terrorists know they are fighting a losing battle. However, their determination to win should never be underestimated that is why future criminal system must be prepared in fighting terrorism more than ever before.

Use of force matrix

Police brutality is a sensitive issue that is discussed or addressed in various parts of the world and being that it is an issue that at given times might interfere with human rights of the citizens.  The law managers and executives have a huge responsibility in trying to change this and although it is not a one-day thing but a process, it takes enough research planning and investing into the methods chosen to reduce police brutality. At the same time teach the police how and when to use certain or the required force (ThorntonShireman, 2008). When it comes to the teaching of the police on issues concerning force researchers and physiologists together with scientists and other specialists in the field have come up with theories that can apply on practical situations for instance the use of force matrix. These methods have worked and proved to be very fundamental in police training, they come with the reduction in use of force, and aid to teach the San Diego police officers know how and when to use force (ThorntonShireman, 2008).

DISCUSSION
In the use of force matrix a diagram that usually represents those scenarios police officers come across, how to deal with them and the measure of force required aids the process of teaching a police officer how to apply. It is a triangle that the upper part stands for the risk perception of the other two sides represent the action of the subject and the other side the represents the action of the officer (Headley  May 2008). This is usually called the UFM and it is used to aid in discussing the various situations that one faces in the training session and the situations present there are the same as ones that one will encounter in real life. A balance of force is also shown here and the triangle gets the name a totality triangle.

The reasonable police officer takes subject action and he or she categorizes it and from the model knows how to deal with the situation with the required or necessary force. The police officers action comes in when the rational officer is to identify the UFM categories that are fit for the situation and make the subject comply. The risk perception is an environment that is perceived by an officer as confrontational and presents risk to an officer (Walker, 2005).

A police officer can perceive various ways risks like ones, which are professional where an officer has duties that he perceives as both a risk and responsibility. Tactical, here the police officers perception is of increased risks with a confrontational environment and here safety strategies are deployed.  The threshold where the specific risks are identified and this level needs a very critical intervention because confrontation is confirmed (Walker, 2005). The main aim of the officer is usually to gain compliance with the necessary force and without any kind of assault to him or to others.

When the risk goes to another level, the police officer is expected to respond directly and become more receptive making sure that he or she follows procedure and should also do respond to the life threatening issue quickly and still in a rational way. There is also a situation perceived as harmful when there is a direct focus of danger on the citizen or officer and defense. The lethal perception is the most intense risks and most crucial for a police officer or the common citizen (Hess  Orthmann, 2008).

There are five various subject action categories and these are the possible ways a person might act when approached by police officers to comply. People think in very different ways because we are not all the same and a police officer might approach for instance a very arrogant and violent subject so this calls for a lot of calm, observation and for use of procedure and choosing the most appropriate way by not using unnecessary force (Alpert  Dunham, 2004). The different categories of subject action include complaint and here the police officer gains compliance of the through traditional methods (Hess  Orthmann, 2008).  There is also resistant or passive here for instance the subject can resist but no physical involvement is usually there and the officer has no need to restrain the subject physically. There is also the resistant or the active action and here there is vivid physical resistance for instance when the officer goes for arrest and the subject starts to shove push and pull resisting arrest and here the police officers have to engage physically to engage the subject (Hess  Orthmann, 2008). Assault or bodily harm subject here the subject presents body harm to the officer and other people and the police officer has for instance to shoot at him or her because for instance when he was approached by the police officer he or she started shooting at him which can cause even death to the officer and the people around.

There are also police officer response categories and these issues are important because the officer must learn to react in accordance to the law and what they have been taught so as to minimize force and brutality in the police force (Alpert  Dunham, 2004). There are cooperative controls and here the officer uses communication skills and body language to get to subdue the subject to comply. Contact controls and here the police officer uses his or her talents to control the subject and these include things like hands on that are used to direct the subject to where the police officer wants. From there, it comes to techniques that involve the officer must have to face resistance and this ranges from physical to the use of weaponry. There is the use of compliance techniques and the police officer takes this action when he or she has encountered force and he himself has to use force to restrain the subject (Alpert  Dunham, 2004).

It goes further even to use of weapons for instance the teaser where the subject has proved to be very violent. There is also use of defensive techniques and here the officer is justified to use weaponry to strike the subject and this is to gain compliance from the subject. There is also use of deadly force and here the police officer results to use more critical and very harsh measures to the subject that may involve death or even very serious injuries for example shooting or using any other necessary means (Alpert  Dunham, 2004).  

The main aim of a police officer is to gain compliance from the subject meaning that if the subject happens to comply there will be no need of force. The law managers and executives through first are combating the force and brutality in the police force and fore most involving the police officers in a vigorous learning exercise, which even sensitizes them on the rights of any human being (Haberfeld  Maria, 2006). The police officers are also being taught how to react to different situations when in a crime scene and all these are programs set up by the law managers and the executives.

The police officers are also put under some laws that make them more responsible of their actions and penalties for breaking the laws can range from the suspension of an officer to a jail term for instance  if a police officer shoots and kills a suspect without using proper procedure and it is discovered the officer goes in for murder. The  police officers are also involved in regular checks that are directed by the executives and the managers of law and they are very helpful in the sense that the police officers get top is under scrutiny and irresponsible actions do not just escape and go unpunished (Thornton  Shireman, 2008). The police officers also are involved in programs that that include the common citizen in order for them to interact and change their perspective about life and people and this is done in for instance community projects. The media is also a very powerful tool that is being used to combat police brutality because everything is being exposed and no secrets can be kept. For instance during high speed chases that are brought live on television it is easy to pick out the officer who does not follow procedure by using excessive force and that will act as evidence during his or her suspension. The various human right groups and activists are also a powerful tool helping combat police brutality by protesting and urging the governments concern to take action. This turns the heat on the government and leads to reforms in the police force that mostly stop the police from interfering with the human rights through use of excessive force (Headley  May, 2008).

CONCLUSION
In conclusion, the police brutality has been a major concern not only here but also in many nations and in the case we have seen the efforts that the San Diego police department is putting to combat that brutality and the use of force (Haberfeld  Maria, 2006). The teaching methods that have been improved and refined to meet the human rights standards are also very effective to making officers get to know how and when to use force or what can be termed as necessary force.

American Law

The significance of most effective administration approaches to generate efficient legal operations that guarantee access to fairness and impartiality, well-timed and crystal clear dispositions, and enhanced public reliance in courts has been practiced in the US for the past several decades. Consequently, the practice of applying contemporary administration techniques and standards to court procedures has started in the US into a sturdily reputable profession.

Currently, United States has been facing various problems top of the list are struggling economy, two wars pollution, law and order situation, poor health care and illegal immigration. Some of such effective administration approaches are also being applied in Northern America where judicial proceedings are facing delays. It was observed during 1999 by the president of the European Group of Public Administration that in most of the European countries legal proceedings are facing problems of management incompetence and inadequacy that result in legal cases accumulation and unnecessary delays in legal decisions. In this paper, different legal approaches and characteristics of American legal system are discussed.

Taxation and American Law
During past couple of years, the activities of multinational corporations and international tax practitioners were driven to a significant degree by market and competitive forces on the one hand, and constrained by governmental legal actions on the other.

As in recent years, there is every reason to assume that multinational groups will continue to engage in joint ventures as to discrete lines of business. Many joint ventures are part of the trend to divest non-core businesses, because they create a viable entity that can be spun off or sold in an IPO. Multicountry joint ventures between multinational groups from different countries pose significant structural issues that will continue to challenge international tax advisers and their clients.

For reasons that are incomprehensible, the US government also seems to be concerned with international tax arbitrage cross-border hybrid entities, hybrid instruments, or hybrid arrangements that are treated differently by two different tax jurisdictions. The US treasury is concerned, for example, that a hybrid instrument issued to a foreign investor by a foreign subsidiary of a US multinational is viewed as debt for American tax purposes and as equity for overseas tax functions. Because of the treatment of the hybrid instrument as equity for foreign tax purposes, the foreign investor might receive tax credits or an exemption from tax because of the foreign taxes paid by the foreign issuer, while the foreign taxes that underlie the beneficial treatment of the foreign investor in its home country are claimed as credits by the US parent of the issuer. The US Treasury and IRS seem to be terribly upset that both shareholders receive a home country tax benefit as a result of the taxes paid by the issuer. From the US multinationals perspective, however, it is merely achieving an inexpensive form of financing because of the tax preference granted in the foreign investors home country, while obtaining relief from double taxation in a manner consistent with US tax principles. Some multinationals will experience fits and starts, particularly in the high-tech and communications industries, in trying to determine exactly what is within the scope of their core businesses. What one day may appear to be integral to a business strategy may the next day become an unwanted business to be spun off or sold.

The structure of global combinations like Chrysler-DaimlerBenz and BP-Amoco will be very tax sensitive. Combinations of multinationals from different countries place a premium on structuring transactions to achieve the tax-free treatment of both shareholder groups and in developing structures that reduce the inefficiency of cross-border flows of earnings at both the company and the shareholder level. Cross-border combinations have created a resurgence of interest in structures that are intended to reduce the inefficiency of cross-border earnings flows. Ten years ago, only a few practitioners spoke or wrote about dividend access shares, or two-headed multinational structures similar to Shell or Unilever. Those topics now appear regularly in seminar programs and articles by a broader group of practitioners. While these structures have been utilised in Europe and elsewhere, it remains to be seen whether they will become used with any frequency in the US, in part because of accounting issues. More generally, it will be interesting to observe how the structure of transactions will change if the accounting rules on pooling are eventually revised.

The US government seems to be targeting two types of transactions. It seems most concerned with corporate tax shelters that threaten the domestic tax base i.e. the taxable revenue stream from domestic activities of its domestic taxpayers. Many of these transactions create something out of nothing. Some result in income simply not being taxed to domestic taxpayers that economically earn the income others create deductions or losses that shelter what is otherwise taxable income of domestic taxpayers. Because of the broader marketing presence of tax professionals in promoting these types of transactions, the lawmakers and tax authorities continue to respond in a cat-and-mouse fashion.

Analysis of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats, and Trends is the most accurate, efficient and cost-effective way to get a solid understanding of a business. The first key to a good SWOTT is to ask the right questions, and good judgment is required in synthesising information to developing the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats, and Trends in Economy of Business in the United States of America. The US governments concern on international tax arbitrage underlies its efforts to reverse course in permitting taxpayers to elect hybrid treatment of entities. The US government apparently does not wish to tolerate the use of hybrid entities to reduce the foreign tax burden on income from foreign business operations of US multinationals if it means that the income will not be taxed in the US. The US government wants very much to have a single global tax system under which all jurisdictions apply the same tax principles and international tax arbitrage is not possible. The US government has decided that it is evil for US taxpayers to reduce their effective foreign tax rate on foreign earnings, especially in ways that would not be viable if US tax principles applied under foreign law. It seems more important to the US government to save foreign governments from themselves when they apply tax principles different from those of the US, than it is to benefit US multinationals and their shareholders by giving them the benefit of foreign tax reductions. Because it is difficult for the government to articulate any sound conceptual principles against international tax arbitrage, its actions will continue to be ad hoc. Tax planning may become a matter of predicting what might be in the heads of the tax legal authorities from one day to the next.

In the present financial crisis, those with low income need more help than anybody else. In the plan to fight poverty, legal authorities are willing to create more opportunities for citizens. First, government wants to put in 1 billion in five years time to assist low-income Americans to survive. Legal authorities also aim to provide amount of five hundred dollars Making Work Pay tax acknowledgment to counterbalance the tax employees give through each salary.

American law authorities are working to make Making Work Pay tax credit of about one thousand dollars each family unit and to remove income tax for elderly who get below 50,000 dollars within a year. To deal with credit card businesses and to restructure laws for bank frauds, current government intends to1) Produce a bill for Credit Card rules in order to secure its users from interest charges on fees2) Promote banks to formulate micro finances3) Prohibit administrative additional benefits for insolvent organisations and4) Cap payday loans at thirty-five percent. Currently, America is having conflicts with some of the countries. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are two of the most controversial topics. Also, Russias attack of Georgia has come up as a severe threat of protection for America.

American Law for Banking Sector
Historically, banking law in the US has been shaped by three principal policy objectives. The first objective has been to limit the economic power of banks over consumers, business entities and the national economy. The second objective has been to prevent, or at least minimise the impact of, bank failures. The third objective has been to ensure that banks provide adequate service to their communities and promote economic growth.

Examples reflecting the first policy objective include the 19th century political battles over the chartering of the First and Second Banks of the US restrictions on geographic expansion in the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (the BHC Act) as well as McFadden Act of 1927 and restrictions on bank affiliations with other financial and non-financial companies in the BHC Act and its 1970 and 1982 amendments.

Examples reflecting the second policy objective include restrictions on bank powers in the 1864 National Bank Act and the 1913 Federal Reserve Act adoption of deposit insurance in the 1933 Federal Deposit Insurance Act and capital requirements and prompt corrective action provisions in the 1991 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvements Act.

Examples reflecting the third policy objective include the Federal Reserve Act limitation of loans eligible for discount at the Federal Reserve Banks (which was designed to encourage productive lending under the real bills doctrine) single customer lending limits in the National Bank Act the Community Reinvestment Act of 1987 and so-called life line banking account requirements adopted by several states. (Kalven, 74) Although this provision is generally viewed as related to bank safety and soundness, it was originally designed to ensure that a banks loans were well spread throughout the community.

Very few banking laws were designed to improve the competitive position of U.S. banks. One example is the 1919 Edge Act, which liberalised the powers of U.S. banks outside the country. A second example is the 1994 Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking Act which removed almost all geographic barriers, but only after those barriers had been largely penetrated by state and regulatory action. In recent years, the bank regulators have attempted to expand bank powers in such areas as securities affiliates and insurance sales.

The question whether these three policy objectives should continue to shape banking law in the US has been sharpened by three crucial trends that will almost certainly shape banking business in the new century. The first trend is increased competition for banking services from non-banking institutions. The second is the globalisation and consolidation of the banking industry outside the US, often with governmental encouragement. The third, and potentially most important trend, is the delivery of banking services through new technology, the computer and Internet.  Because banking law is by definition political, predictions as to its future are hazardous.

Together with tackling pressure from unions, members of staff within America are trying to create clearly coherent philosophies for compensation that can be applied for staff members of a contributory in a different country. Like, standardised administration of income will be enviable however, dissimilarities in regulation and executive practice should be taken into account prior to coming to a result. Like it is a big misunderstanding if companies decide to send their staffs in other countries thinking that they will prove to be accurately the same beneficial to the company as they expect from them. Organisations must be ready to amend their fundamental business philosophies according to the dissimilarities among various states. For instance application of tax laws has proved to be the most significant part of apprehension for American corporate personnel. Organisations will discover that intensities of taxes differ drastically when talking about America and the remaining parts of world in case of America individual earning levels are much lesser in the country as compare to other parts of the world.

American Law and Immigration System
Since 2000, the number of undocumented immigrants has increased. About a half-million foreigners come in the United States by illegal means each year. Because of that, low-to-moderate skilled Americans are losing their jobs. In order to solve this problem, US legal authorities are working to create more secure borders. Also, to eliminate motivations to come to the US illegally, US new law system will make employees prove that their workers are legal. Those illegal immigrants, who possessed a good status, would be able to give away compensation, become skilled at English and thus get the opportunity to become the United States citizens. In order to decrease the number of illegal immigrants from Mexico, government supports helping in economic development of America.

According to the Department for Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics America, the rate for joblessness in April 2006 appeared to be 5.10  in Texas 4.6 in San Antonio, Texas, and 4.7 nationally, which was comparatively the lowest rate since 2001. The relationship between supply and demand became precarious as unemployment affected the industry in several ways as
 (a) Consumers were unable to afford,
 (b) Unfilled jobs in the industry affect the availability of products
 (c) The overall influence that the unemployment rate can have on the economy of the nation andor a region.

The Country economic growth had been growing at stable level mainly because of high domestic demand, low interest rate, positive external trade balance and increase in 2007 budget. Furthermore, to improve the economic growth rate to an elite level, it was suggested that the central bank must cut interest rate by 25 percent basis point to 3.25 percent to stimulate domestic demand, increase investment and borrowing rate. This reduction in interest would not affect saving due to high disposable income by household. Also the central bank was asked to reduce money supply (M3) to strengthen the ringgit to be consistent with major currency and balance both exports and import growth to maintain the reserves level.

In case of America, there has been a development in restructuring managerial total compensation to take in a larger part of continuing inducements like stock exchange and some other long-standing vehicles. According to a latest research about 96 percent organisations possess yearly plan of businesses and 92 percent possesses single or a couple of long-standing inducements. The major cause for this is to support benefits for individual administrators with performance that boosts investors value.

Capital Punishment Systems in American Law
The executioners work has been interrupted on various occasions in this country since the mid-1960s. Government officials have not sat idly during these enforced periods of inactivity in their execution chambers. Rather, they have busily rewritten capital punishment laws and, more recently, engaged in studies designed to investigate select issues, including actual innocence, ineffective counsel, and race partiality while applying death penalty.

The issues should include the marquis ones involving innocence, defense counsel, and race, but should go beyond those as well. We have identified several additional matters appropriate for investigation, including appellate and post conviction judicial assessment of assets assurances and verdicts clemency decisions the economic expenditure of the death sentence the reasons in support of and the consequences of long-term death row confinement of condemned prisoners deterrence the future dangerousness of convicted murderers the selection and decision-making practices of capital juries, including the role of judicial instructions prosecutorial charging discretion and misconduct the statutory exclusion of certain categories of offenders from death penalty eligibility, including juveniles the available sentencing alternatives to the death penalty, including LWOP and the meaning of life sentences and the impact of capital punishment on innocent victims, including the relatives of both homicide victims and condemned offenders.

Collecting objective and reliable information about how capital punishment systems operate is a necessary starting point. How that information should be used in combination with the normative issues surrounding the death penalty is appropriately left to legislative and, where relevant, judicial bodies. Our plea is a simple one to assemble and make available trustworthy data about the full range of empirical issues implicated by a jurisdictions capital punishment system. It is our belief that when the true facts are marshaled and fully penetrate the public conscience, they cannot help but tip the scales radically against capital punishment. We anticipate that death penalty systems will crumble under the combined weight of their own inefficiencies and inequities. Others may disagree, or may conclude that whatever problems are exposed is remediable, or even inconsequential. Until the debate is fully informed by the totality of available empirical information, which we consider to be a crucial mission of study commissions and social science researchers, the legitimacy of death penalty systems remains very much at issue.

The American Bar Association (ABA) was active in arousing the country to the need to reconsider the rules and regulations regarding law for death penalty. This venerable organisation called for a national cessation on implementations with the help of a resolution adopted February 3, 1997 (Bright, 1845). The ABA expressed particular concerns about the quality of counsel being provided in capital cases and about issues of innocence and racial disparities in death penalty systems. (Coyne, 51). Other state and local lawyers groups have recently echoed the ABAs plea in their own jurisdictions, including the Atlanta Bar Association, the Philadelphia Bar Association, the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association and the New York State Bar Association. (Bright, 1986).

The ABAs 1997 law for a national cessation on capital punishments was principally motivated by apprehension that the states had not gone far enough in ensuring the appointment of competent defense counsel in capital cases. There are large number of stories about disgraceful illustration provided to impoverished defendants on trial for their livesstories involving sleeping lawyers, intoxicated lawyers, lawyers wholly unfamiliar with death penalty law and procedures, lawyers making racist remarks about their clients, lawyers who ended up disbarred and even incarcerated shortly after representing their clients, and lawyers lacking the experience and resources to mount any semblance of an effective defense. The ineffective service of defense counsel is a root cause of many of the administrative problems associated with capital punishment, and in many jurisdictions it remains an issue in need of urgent attention.

A number of factors can be expected to correlate with the excellence of illustration provided in capital cases, including payment levels for lawyers and the investigators and experts with whom they work standards governing experience, training, and overall quality of counsel whether a specialised capital defense unit is created, or whether a system relying on public defenders or private, court-appointed counsel is utilised whether trial judges or an independent agency assumes responsibility for appointing attorneys the number of appellate, trial and post assurance counsel appointed and others. The constitutional set for evaluating unproductive support of advocates, showed within the case for assets of Strickland v. Washington (1984), 9 falls far short of ensuring top-flight legal representation for capital defendants. (Moore, 301). As a consequence, legislative or administrative action that goes beyond the constitutional threshold imposed by the Supreme Court is imperative if meaningful reforms are to be achieved in this vital aspect of capital punishment systems. There is likely to be no area in need of more immediate consideration by commissions with the power to advise or ratify changes in how the death penalty is applied than the selection of competent and sufficiently funded counsel to symbolise impoverished capital defendants.

Studies conducted in several jurisdictions have proved ethnic unfairness with in the procedure for capital punishment that includes charging, selection of jury, sentencing, and leniency decisions (Moore, 304). The Supreme Court, by a 54 vote in McCleskey v. Kemp (1987), declined to disturb the management of the death penalty in Georgia notwithstanding convincing research substantiation, researched by Professor David Baldus along with his co- workers, revealing significant statewide race-of-victim disparities in capital prosecutions and sentences. (Kalven, 62) Justice Powells majority opinion suggested that legislatures, rather than the courts, should be responsive to such disparate sentencing patterns. If researchers of a jurisdiction find out that capital-charging are biased on the grounds of ethnic background of either slaughter victims or offenders, legislative commissions should accept the Courts invitation in McCleskey and attempt to fashion remedies. Numerous proposals have been advanced to inhibit racial considerations from influencing decision makers in potentially capital cases. (Kalven, 60) Suggestions include greater scrutiny of prosecutorial charging decisions, including the implementation and enforcement of guidelines, narrowing the range of capital murder to only the most highly aggravated killings, for which variables like race are less likely to exert an influence, and adoption of legislation that would create a rebuttable presumption that race impermissibly factored into the decision making in an individual case if evidence demonstrates system wide patterns of race-of-victim or race-of-defendant disparities in potential death penalty cases.

An important issue in several jurisdictions involves the statutory exclusion of some classes of offenders from death penalty eligibility. The execution of juvenile (i.e., persons below 18 years when committed crime) and mentally retarded offenders historically has inspired the greatest controversy, although the Supreme Court has partially stilled the debate by ruling that executing psychologically retarded slaughterers breaks the Eighth Amendment. The justices have balked at permitting the execution of 15-year-old murderers but have ruled that the federal Constitution allows capital punishment of offenders as young as 16. Fourteen states presently authorise that practice, and five others permit the execution of 17-year-old offenders.

Although the propriety of executing juvenile offenders has a significant normative dimension, related empirical issuesfor example, psychological studies of moral and intellectual development, and even deterrence, future dangerousness, and public opinionalso may be relevant to commissions considering that issue. Hence, significant definitional and diagnostic issues will merit attention in the states that previously had not exempted mentally retarded offenders from death penalty eligibility.

Most death penalty states and federal law allow the sentence to consider LWOP as an alternative to capital punishment. In the minority of states that do not, the choice is between death and a life sentence with parole eligibility. It is particularly important that juries understand the true definition of a life sentence, including whether life means LWOP. At the time of issue of a capital offenders future seriousness, due process requires that juries not be kept in the dark that a life sentence truly means LWOP. Research evidence suggests that jurors making sentencing decisions in capital cases frequently are preoccupied with an offenders likely future dangerousness. They are significantly more expected to enforce a death sentence if they think the offender may be released from prison and thus present a renewed risk to society. Additional evidence suggests that jurors are likely to speculate that an offender sentenced to life imprisonment will be released after serving a relatively short time behind bars.

Commissions studying the death penalty in states that do not recognise LWOP should consider recommending that sentencing option as an alternative to capital punishment. Where life imprisonment with parole eligibility is an available alternative, consideration should be given to instructing juries about the minimum sentence a life prisoner must serve before becoming eligible for parole. It is important that juries be fully informed about the practical consequences of their sentencing decisions to avoid capital punishment being based on fanciful fears that convicted murderers will be released to prey on society again after serving only a few years in prison.

A fresh look at death penalty statutes should invite consideration of a wealth of additional legislative reforms. Both state commissions (e.g., the Capital Case Commission in Arizona, the Illinois Governors Commission on Capital Punishment, the Indiana Criminal Law Study Commission, and the JLARC in Virginia) and scholars have called for careful reexamination of the reach of capital punishment legislation and corresponding statutory procedural safeguards. A host of statutory issues should be revisited in light of the states experiences with the death penalty and burgeoning capital punishment scholarship, including definitions of capital murder, the specification of aggravating and mitigating factors, evidentiary matters, sentencing procedures, and competency for execution, among others.

Juvenile Justice System in American law
Juveniles in America, who commit crimes, can be charged like adults, with a felony, a misdemeanor, or an infraction. Juvenile crime or criminal behavior is the legal term for behavior of kids and adolescents, under the age of eighteen that in adults would be considered to be criminal by law. Under certain circumstances, youthful offenders can be tried as juveniles or adults. Generally, any individual age eighteen or over is considered an adult and treated as such. From the law enforcement standpoint. Juvenile law became effective during 19th century. According to juvenile law, juveniles are usually not guilty of criminal activities, and there is a need of safety and protection for them than that for adults. It was 1800s when the law for juveniles was made to release junior offenders from lockups and defend them from criminal trials and its negative consequences on them.

Weaknesses and Strengths of American Law
In the financial products area, legal actions taken by the US government will undoubtedly constrain the activities of multinational companies and the investment banking community. The market philosophy de jour seems to be too globalised but not too diversified. Hence, multinational companies are likely continued to spin off non-core businesses while pursuing acquisitions to increase their market presence as global competitors within their core businesses. The following five predictions are offered with caution as to their inherent unreliability.

First, as early as 1999, and almost certainly within the next several years, legislation will be enacted authorising US banks and their affiliates to offer a full range of financial services. The barriers between banking and commerce will remain in place, although the authority of bank affiliates to engage in proprietary investments will be substantially liberalised.

Second, the level of US bank consolidation permitted by law is likely to trail behind that permitted in other countries. Absent a major change in US antitrust analysis, it is unlikely that consolidation of the type that has occurred in the Netherlands and Switzerland, and has been proposed in France and Japan, could occur in the US.

Third, safety and soundness legislation designed to prevent bank failures is unlikely to be dismantled. Indeed, this legislation could be expanded if a rash of bank failures occurred again. There may also be changes in approach if the largely untested remedial legislation of the 1990s - depositor preference and prompt corrective action - prove counterproductive when tested.

Fourth, US banks will continue to be subject to a legislative regime that has certain quasi-utility aspects relating to service to communities. The Community Reinvestment Act is unlikely to be dismantled. A particular legislative focus will be protection of the privacy of bank customers financial dealings and condition.

Fifth, even though the present technologyinformation revolution is likely to have a more far-reaching impact on mankind than the industrial revolution, it is questionable whether US banking law will be able to change with sufficient rapidity to accommodate adequately this modern business revolution. A banking law that was developed in part to serve the horse-and-- buggy era and in part to serve the automobile age is inadequate for the computer age. Nonetheless, the legislative approach in the US has been consistently reactive rather than proactive, merely codifying market developments.

The economy of the United States is now experiencing numerous problems. While most of the wages remain on the same level, prices on necessities rise. The GDP of the third quarter in 2008 was negative because of the decrease in consumer spending. Subsequent to continuing market boom, Federal Reserve decreased the rate for interest gradually and slowly subsequent to the incidence of 911. During initial couple of years, the lessening was so apparent that the actual rate of interest appeared negative at times. While the rate of interest was raised nearly 17 times subsequent to that, rate for Federal Funds increased to nearly 5, US Dollar was yet in continuing depreciation. The end users understanding for economics also needed to be improved.

Competitive practices are important considerations all over the world and struggle in the America is at a standstill the leading feature for money compensation and retirement revenue. Nevertheless, in recent times, intensifying costs for health services have eventually proved to be the greatest rising constituent of benefit everyday expenditure within America, to some extent intensifying the conventional apprehension in regards to competitive practices. As far as Canada is concerned, their organisations are less exposed to such types of volatile cost-containment setbacks for the reason that fitness care costs are usually not sponsored by the job affiliation.

Governments preparations to make a White House Office lying on Urban Policy that would guarantee that every bit of central government wealth is effectively spent on the programs in order to make American law more effective and useful for citizens. The office can benefit the residents of cities by controlling corruption and making sure that people get the help they need. The improving of infrastructure, government also would be able to supply the people with new jobs and they need. Also, American government is working to lend a hand to low-income workers to come into the employment market by spending nearly 1 billion dollars in career pathways programs. Many low and middle class Americans are expecting that such programs will prove to be able to make their dreams come true.
The National Reserve affected the fiscal and monetary resolutions of nearly every person, from a family buying a house or making a sound decision to purchase into the auto industry. In context of global financial system, the actions of Federal Reserve presented momentous fiscal and economic effects throughout the globe. Policies of National Reserves made an effort to assist individuals and business by promoting a strong system for banking together with an improving economy, due to utmost manageable job situation and constant prices.

American law for death penalty triggers intense emotions from both supporters and detractors. Hard facts about the death penalty will not silence an essentially endless debate about its propriety but should prove valuable to help inform the related policy judgments that must inevitably be made. The business of death penalty commissions or, in their absence, of independent researchers and policymakers should be to carefully map the full roster of issues relevant to the practice of capital punishment, systematically collect reliable information about those issues, and make the resulting information available for use in the policy arena.

The current crisis relating to law and order situation in America is a giant strike, but can prove to bring positive results in long run. The amendment of American System and its laws in order to shelter end users and normalise antagonism is really imperative Recovery of information in order to improve the security of an energetic economic system is indispensable as well. Immigration law needs to be more effective and in favor of current citizens of America. Juvenile punishments need to be productive for juveniles so that they can understand the severity of getting involved in criminal activities. Capital punishment acts needs revision as well and should show leniency for non-professional criminals so that they can get a chance to live a better life. Many low and middle class Americans and Economists are expecting that President Obama will be able to make their dreams come true and would bring a rise in the U.S. Economy and law and order situation (Omi, 550) Changing should not only be a slogan.

Corporate Law Governance

The major theme of this paper is corporate law and governance and focused on the more than six cases of English Law in the United Kingdom. For example, the case Wood v Odessa Waterworks Company, Andrew v Gasmeter, Birch v Cropper, Hodge v James Howell  CO Ltd, Greenhalgh v Arderne Cinemas Ltd and House of Fraser plc v ACGE Investment Ltd. These are among the English cases that have been discussed in this paper. This paper additionally observed the flexibility of English law in terms of purchasing and selling shares and the rights held by various share holders. Share redemption is a very critical issue in the routine management of a company and this paper discusses the requirements and guidelines of redeeming shares. The corporate governance plays an integral role in controlling the business operation. This paper analyses the role of corporate governance, and concentrating on The United Kingdom setting as a case study.

1.0 Introduction
Corporate law and governance plays an integral role in the performance of UK economy. I n a bid to effectively understand the performance of the UK economy, the paper tries to authenticate the role of corporate governance in elevating the economy of the country. This involves the social accountability and clearness on their operations. The proper understanding of how the corporate governance performs aid both the emerging and established investors by creating adequate faith in terms of investment security.

UK is known for their flexibility in equity finance laws. This has consequently improved the share investment in the countries by both the local and foreign investors. In cases that the business entity has not been performing to the expectation of the shareholders, the law allows for the redemption of shares. This has subsequently encouraged many investors due to reduced fear of making enormous losses when economy slumps. The inclusion of social responsibility guidelines has aided employment of human, capital and natural resources, which further improves the overall performance of the countrys economy. The paper additionally examines the combined codes that consist of regulations, which guide the performance of listed organisations in UK.

2.0 Critical review of UK Cases
2.1 Financial presumption in the UK, hypothetical and realistic advancements
The financial presumptions are extensively used by most companies and organizations in the United Kingdom notwithstanding the difference in opinion by various intellectuals. In the first instance, the UK scheme is currently under the influence by other developed nations such as United States of America. This is reflected on their monetary marketplace and the officially authorized transformations on the wealth administration and impartiality economic regulations, which are usually solved under the legal courts. The second instance has revealed that United Kingdom has been experiencing stiff anxiety to move in the line of greater supple legislative regulations overseeing capital funding and also equity safeguarding.

The agile loom, which is brought about by certain writers of Economic Law has not taken full use in the UK structure. The conventional facet has been characteristically sturdy in the English Law since the previous centenary. Based on the Wood v Odessa Waterworks Company case, Justice Stirling supported the fact each member has the mandate to contribute to the content of article of association in line with the agreement upshot from section sixteen of the 1862 Companies Act as well as section fourteen of Companies Act of 1985. The English Law provides a freedom of choice of different categories of shares because the assumed criterion is extremely broad, and does not specify the meaning of respect, favourite, and particular rights.

2.2 Structuring Set Privileges Fundamentals of Suppleness
2.2.1 Legislative Regulations
Much stress is put by the Company Act of 1985 on the disparity of set privileges as opposed to authority of share issuance, which is reflected in the English rule. This offers significant feature in the suppleness of asset tools in the United Kingdom. As can be traced from Table A of the 1985 Company Act, there is an establishment of the capability of a company to give out various sets of shares, which differ from the normal set of favoured shares, overdue ones or the ones with particular privileges on their purchase. The examples include but not limited to confines adapted on dividends, selection privileges and return on assets among others. One of the mostly stressed limitations comprise of non premature negative judgement on some particular privileges, which had been bestowed in the previous incidences.

2.2.2 The case of Andrew v Gasmeter
This case revealed the aspect of suppleness in the English company rule. In the previous years, among the major codes of corporation rule was that in the nonexistence of articulate prerequisite in the novel statute parity of shares was an indispensable circumstance. Additionally, there was a belief that this stipulation could lead to some difficulty in the modification through amendment of the articles of association.

Some of these codes barred companies from providing shares that are superior to the ones provided in the previous instances. This code consequently blocked companies whose innovative articles of association offered sustained parity of the entire shares, as of organizing the assets through the issuance of a set of shares. In the case of Andrew v Gasmeter, the permitted assets of the company stood at Great British Pounds (GBP) 60,000 as reflected on the memo of a company. This rule offered for the freedom of capital increment devoid of specification of the
. There should also be the proper division of the investment into different shares, and the article of organisation as opposed to memo should show the privileges that the shareholders have on their various amounts of shares

2.2.3 The assumptive code of impartiality among shares
The code which was entrenched in the case of Gasmeter was additionally extended in the case of Birch v Cropper. Following the commentators arguments, there was an implication that companys statute did not position shares evenly and nonetheless a supposition that every share benefits from even privileges in the case of Gasmeter. The assumption may be overcome in the case of articulate offer to the converse in the conditions of subject.

In the case of Birch, the House of Lords upturned the verdict, which was formerly held by the Court of Appeal. The statement that was issues was that all shareholders are allegedly graded evenly. The item of Bridgewater Navigation Company (Bridgewater) had a section that supported the payment of dividends depending on the amount per share but closing down the company remained vague.
Lord Macnaghten passed that the favourite shareholders are different from debenture-holders, and therefore require different treatments. The English Law presumably grade all shareholders evenly, especially in the circumstances that there is no specification on the privileges that other grade of shareholders belong. This is done in terms of dividends, return on investment and the privilege to vote. Viewing at the Birch Case from the business point, there is permission of evasive regulations for investment privileges. For example, following the reimbursement of paid investment, there is equal division of the remaining amount to the shareholders. This regulation supports the fact that companies have the liberty to alter their articles of association as per their fiscal constitution.

2.2.4 Determining tentative circumstances Assessment in support of agile impartiality funding
The English Law provides some vagueness regarding some classes of shares. This confusion of classification of shares has been creating ambiguity in terms of sharing dividends among the potential shareholders in the United Kingdom. This perception of kinds of shares is inexorably connected to the discrepancy of privileges. In an instance where the adjustment in the investment organisation of companies is put into consideration, shareholders may appeal to section 125 of Company Act, 1985. This stipulation calls for an inscribed authorization of 75 of the share price of the apprehensive kinds or sanctioning of the unexpected assembly of shareholders. This gathering is organised prior to the difference of privileges of the kinds of shares, which can be possible completed.

According to the English Law, the inscribed authorisation is used as a tool to block the company director who may desire otherwise to offer novel shares on the fiscal marketplace more frequently. In the consideration of the case of Hodge v James Howell  CO Ltd, the share investment was separated into two different kinds of shares, which included normal and favourite. The favourite shares were supposed to be superior to normal shares and the difficulty in deciding on the disparity issues of share privileges of the normal shareholders. This issue could have been rejected by the Court of Appeal based on the concern of the company that prevailed during that time. This ruling further underprivileged the holders of preferred shareholders the privileges and defence, which was a major, issue but nonetheless, the companies acquired more elasticity in their operations.

The consideration of the case of Greenhalgh v Arderne Cinemas Ltd, there was an issue of subdivision of shares into smaller divisions. For example, the tens shares were to be subdivided into twos shares, which was arguably altering the privileges of the normal shareholders. Greenhalgh retained a bigger proportion of twos shares, which puts the company at the control of over 35 of the ballots. Even though a normal agreement dividing the tens shares into twos shares was voted by the owners of tens shares. Lord Greene MR discarded the declaration of Greenhalgh that the privileges appending to twos shares was mottled by the said decree.

Lord Greene MR summarized the ideologies into two types. The first ideology is that shares that had dissimilar small prices could not be included in the description of kinds of shares. The second ideology held that the transformation in managing of a company could not be measured as a disparity of privileges. The relevancy of this ruling was supported by two justifications first, the judges gave much fondness to the concern of the company in cases of indecisive circumstances. Second, the judges purported that an extensive elasticity on investment funding should be maintained and the change in investment organisation should not consequently give rise to disparity of share privileges.

The case of Re Saltdean Estate CO Ltd provides an instance in which the United Kingdom judges took a stand that favours elasticity of investment funding. Every year, the favourite shareholders of the company were allowed to contribute in the equilibrium of incomes following a ten percent favourite dividend and a corresponding amount in bonus on normal shares was compensated. Nonetheless, favourite shareholders were denied the privileges to take part in extra investment in the instance of closing down .

Justice Buckley considered various perceptions concerning the liberated haggling advancement and also the predicaments regarding the balance amid obligatory and evasive regulations. Justice Buckley further provides a restrictive analysis of section 72 of Company Act, 1948, which was transformed to section 127 of Company Act, 1985. The argument was that certain business rivals put dependence due to the relations to the shareholders privileges to go against the difference.

In the same way, the case of House of Fraser plc v ACGE Investment Ltd, the House of Lords advocated the code included in the Re Saltdean, and argued that in the case of fulfilling and satisfying the privileges of shareholders, the disparity of such privileges stop to subsist. Hence, the anticipated annulment of the first choice shares involved the completion or contentment of short-lived privileges of the potential shareholders and some difference of their privileges. The disparity of privileges presumes the continuation of the share privilege, the disparity of the privilege and the successive continued subsistence of the privileges as diverged.

2.3 The supremacy of share recovery
2.3.1 Universal stipulations and various predicaments of elucidation
According to the English Law, section 159 (1), Company Act offers the corporations the liberty to give out shares, which can be recovered or legally responsible for recovery at the expense of the corporation or the investor. In spite of the extensive modus operandi espoused by item (1), there was a provision of three frontiers. First, the corporation have to be endorsed by their editorials. Second, issuing of exchangeable shares should be put in halt at times when the corporation have no exchangeable shares. Three, redeeming shares should not be allowed unless completely compensated. Based on the monetary viewpoint of the law, these frontiers raise the implication such as bargaining amid the investors on how shares should be redeemed.

According to the English Law, section 159 (1) of Company Acts approval editorial denotes that all the investors in a company are bound to be aware of the business deals that are taking place within the company premises. This law prevents companies from redeeming their own shares to turn out to be the full owners, and hence exploiting other emerging investors. Section 162 (3) of Company Act also denotes that a company should not be allowed to buy their own shares provided no associate of the said corporation will be investing in shares except exchangeable ones or coffers shares. This English Law has resulted into a wider elasticity in the companies economic organization because of the equal capability to buy exchangeable shares out of the recovery system.  

2.3.2 Broadening the authority of share recovery
The imbursement terms of shares recovery is enshrined in the Company Act of 1985. Even though the terms are in fact obvious, some arguments in the exact meaning are still an issue. Some law translators of the English Law argue that the imbursement of recovery entails only cash as a single means of settling the bills, which was ruled against by the recent cases. For instance, in the case of BDG Roof-Bond Ltd v Douglas, there was an entire breakdown of the association amid the 50 investors. Consequent to the implementation of the agreement, BDG succumbed to liquidation and the responsible individual took deed beside the guardians advocate. This was based on the negligence of the company guardians, and thus failing to offer proper advice on the invalidity of the company shares.

2.3.3 Pena v Dale
This case dealt with the predicaments regarding the expansion of authority over shares recovery. The interpretation of section 159 (3) of Company Act, 1985 was very controversial, especially between individuals who claim and the ones who defend the shares. The legal representative for those who defend made a conversion that condition of buying have to offer for imbursement on procuring. The further contention purported that the acquisition of the entire funds should be waged for on conclusion. There is no room for delayed imbursement but instead allows only imbursement in two parts, an instance of Sulakhan Dale, one of the company investors.

The conversion was not established by the lawyer of Dale, which is an establishment of section 159 (3) of Company Act, 1985. In the first instance, section 164 of Company Act, 1985 covered the procurement of investors shares by a corporation, which should follow the agreement, accepted prior to the real deal. According to section 159 (3) of Company Act, 1985, conditions of procurement have to offer imbursement recovery. The implication is that the contract offers that on the procurement of shares, the retailing investor shall be paid. However, complete imbursement is not recommended at the very instance of completion of procurement.

3.0 The UK Corporate Governance
Corporate governance comprises of a group of actions, traditions, strategies, rules, and organizations distressing companies are engaged, governed or guarded. Corporate governance is a scheme in which firms are under control and direction. The design and responsibility, which includes but not limited to the organization and procedures that enable corporations to be effectively managed as per the requirements of their proprietors falls under corporate governance.

3.1 The responsibility of Board of Directors
The success of a company is highly dependent on the Board of Directors. This is because the Board holds the imperative role of making substantive rulings that are solely aimed at uplifting the corporations performance. The Company Board is charged with not only hazard management but also routine operational guidance. For this to be effected there is need for adequate representation of administrative, non-administrative, and autonomous non-administrative managers in order to circumvent deliberation of authority and impartial resolution building.

3.2 The Investors and the Board of Directors
The effective relations between the investors and the Board are very essential in terms of proper management of a company. Some of the factors that should be observed as a yardstick in checking such a relationship comprises of intelligibility and responsibility. The provision of statistics about the occurrences in the market to the company is very vital, which heightens knowledgeable conversation and credible judgment procedure. The investors are consequently required to dedicate adequate moment and then offer efficient contemplation to the statistics offered. This in turn aid judgments procedures, which subsequently improves the performance of a company.

3.3 The United Kingdom governance and the code
The corporate governance is purposely to aid efficient business and practical administration, which is aimed at sustainable performance of a corporation. The initial English Code on corporate governance was created in the early 1990s. Te exact year was 1992 by the Cadbury Commission. According to section two of Code, corporate governance is a scheme which involves the direction and control of corporations, with the responsibility bestowed on the Board of Directors.

3.3.1 Headship
Each corporation require appropriate leadership that is cooperatively accountable for the better sustainability in the ever dynamic market conditions. A distinct clarity is required between the role of the Board of Directors and the top management team in a company to avoid the conflict of interests. For example, the chairperson is held accountable for running the matters of the Board. However, non-administrative associates are supposed to helpfully confront and assist widen suggestion on policies.

3.3.2 Efficiency
The Board of Directors and their commissions are supposed to appropriately achieve balancing abilities, knowledge, autonomy and experience in the firm. This phenomenon permits the Board to perform their duties efficiently. The entire Board team must undergo orientation training about the operations of a given company in order to perform their responsibilities to the best standards.  The selection of the Board of Directors is subjected to customary voting, which is a question of agreeable presentation during their tenure in office.

3.3.3 Responsibility
The Board is charged with the responsibility of reasonably evaluating the firms situation and visions. This involves the determination of the type of potential uncertainties and perils that may dog the company and hinder their achievement of laid strategies. The effective peril execution and the interior organization scheme is a responsibility of the Board. The establishment of official and clear preparation of business presentation and peril administration is a vital role that the Board of Directors should deal with effectively in a bid to maintain the image of the company.

3.3.4 Payment
The payments rates should be appropriate to maintain and inspire managers to perform effectively and consequently improving the general performance of a company. Even though wages and salaries have been successfully used to attract, maintain and inspire human resources of great expertise, overpayments for this course may be hazardous to the companys sustainable development. Transparency in initializing policies on top management payments is very integral to the performance of a company and no sole decision on payment by any manager should be accepted.

3.3.5 Relationship with investors.
The companys goals should be clearly spelt such that the potential investors enter into an agreement after adequate realization of whatever the corporation wants to achieve. This in turn saves the company from unnecessary legal tussle with the shareholders, which may tarnish their reputation. The best forum for addressing such issues is the Annual General Meeting, which can be held ones a year as per the Company Act. This forum is used by the Board to create a better rapport with the shareholders on issues such as shares investment and dividends.

Conclusion
The English Law of equity funding are extremely elastic, hence enabling the investors to nature the investment monetary tools in an extra effective mode. The suppleness of the English Law is attributed to the advancement of capital shares. Under division 162 (A) up to 162 (G), of Company Act, 1985, the corporations are permitted to possess and consequently sell off their individual shares instead of requiring the mandatory annulment of the shares. The countersigning charges can be circumvented through the use of dealers to retail capital shares in minute proportions. The UK corporate governance has played integral roles in shaping the business in the region. For example, the banking sector in United Kingdom seeks to create equilibrium between creditors and shareholders.  This form of corporate governance that comprises of practical responsibility on the side of the controller in harmonizing the benefits of the diverse investor clusters may offer various instructions for those concerned in the corporate governance argument in the non-monetary region.

Critical Analysis of the Trade Mark Act

A trade mark implies any sign that can be represented graphically and is capable of distinguishing goods or services of one undertaking from those of other undertakings. In particular, it comprises of words, designs, letters, numerals or the shape of goods including their packaging. In this regard, Malwanski (2003) state that Intellectual Property Law gives general protection to patents rights, trademark rights and copyrights, in the sense that patent rights, trademark rights and copyrights constitute intellectual property.

It is a point of worth to clearly affirm that Trademark confers rights that prevent third parties from interfering with such rights. However, there have been controversies regarding the same. Holding onto this line of thought, this study shall critically evaluate the Trade Marks Act particularly section 10(4) (c) and section 12. Additionally, the study will evaluate several statute and case-laws in the light of the two sections. Several themes will be explored, such as, the validity of intellectual property law rights of trademark holder and limitations of such rights as well as exemptions.

Trade Mark Act
Trade mark Act spells out the rights of a trade mark holder, how to safeguard them and how to claim them in the event they are infringed. This section will critically evaluate section 10 (4) (c) and 12. Article 10 indicates the infringement of registered trade mark. Infringement occurs if a trader uses a sign or symbol on his goods or services and yet the same trade mark is identical to other goods or services for which it is registered. For example, automobile a manufacture making saloon cars is not supposed to brand hisher cars with the symbol for Ford, Toyota or Chrysler, because trade mark Act deems that as illegal. Moreover, this infringement occurs if the trade mark used on goods and services is similar to those, for which the trade mark is registered, especially usage within similar products. In addition to that, it is also worth noting that infringement of a registered trademark occurs when goods and services used are not similar to those which the trade mark is registered. Additionally, a person uses a sign by affixing it to goods or their packaging or whenever he launches them in the market. More importantly a person uses a sign if he imports or exports goods under the sign.

On the other hand, Article 12 indicates the exhaustion of rights conferred by registered trade mark. Infringement of a trade mark does not suffice by using the trade mark in relation to goods that have been put in the market and within the parameters of European Economic Area under that trade mark by the proprietor or with his consent. On the contrary, this does not apply if there are legitimate reasons for the proprietor to contest further dealings in the goods. This occurs if the conditions of the goods has been altered or impaired in the event they have been put on the market.

In general, Section 10(4) (c) of the Trade Marks Act (TMA) grants the rights to a trademark owner to prevent the importation of goods under his mark. Section 12 of the TMA however provides a defense to such infringement under the exhaustion of rights principle.

Once the trade mark has been registered it becomes a property right to the trade mark holder so long as its registration process adheres to the requirements of the Trade mark act. Moreover, the trade mark holder has all the rights in the trade mark and can sue any party that violates such rights without his consent. These rights take effect from the date of registration or better still the date of filing of the trade mark application.  So, there can be no accusations of infringement if this occurs before the actual date of registration.

As can be seen, the proprietor gets all the exclusive rights as regards the trade mark and any case of infringement can be settled in a court of law. Looking at section 10 (4) (c), it has been stated that the proprietor can prevent trading of goods or services with his trademark. Section 12 counters this position by stating that the rights holder can allow the importation of goods or services through consent and, if the goods or services trade within the European Economic Area. It goes ahead to purport that the rights holder can prevent further dealings of the goods if he feels that such dealings are not fair to the product.  

Clearly, section 12 conditions the rights of the trade mark owner although it does not purely deny him such rights. It is important to clarify several issues in section 12 what does it mean to trade goods in European Economic Area To what extent does consent of the trademark owner entail What leads to the mishandling of goods upon their being put in the market What exactly are the rights of a trade mark owner These are the fundamental issues that one needs to look into.

Exhaustion of Trade mark Rights
In a pedestrian language, rights cannot be conditioned to external factors since by virtue of themselves they are not to be violated or overruled. Again, rights take different forms in that they can be classified as natural, congenial, positive, alienable or inalienable rights. In this regard, it seems a contradiction in terms to say that one has a right to this and at the same say that the same right may not apply in this or that condition. This is where the borne of contention arises whenever considering the rights granted to a trade mark owner. The trade mark act states very clearly that the proprietor acquires those rights on the date of filing of the trade mark. Seemingly, these rights incline more to the prevention of other parties from interfering with the trade mark. For instance, trading with such a trade mark or selling goods that do not relate to goods under which the trade mark was registered. Illustrative examples can be better placed to argue this case out clearly and precisely. For instance, consider the following example trader A registers a trade mark namely Safaricom trader B designs other products but puts the trade mark, safaricom on them. In this case, trader A can sue trader B for violating his trade marks rights. Consider this other example trader X registers a trade mark toto on school bags that he releases in the market during back to school shopping trader Y seeks trader Xs consent to use his trade mark and comes up with school sweaters but puts the trade mark toto. In this case trader X can sue trader Y for violating his rights because of use of trade mark for the wrong reasons.

A trademarked product lawfully enters the market if the trademark proprietor manufactured the good and sold it voluntarily by either placing it in a store or through other channels. In most cases, the buyer may decide to resell it at higher value with a view to make some profit. This reselling can take place in the buyers country, region or in a different country. Now, such products will be resold together with their trademark. This implies selling a trademarked product which in commerce implies use of the trade mark. In this event, the trade mark owner can block the reselling of such product and accuse the buyer of trademark infringement. Various countries have resorted to exhaustion of such rights in order to bar the trade mark holder from manipulating the reselling of his product.  

In this sense, a trademark holder cannot claim any infringements if his product entered legally in the market. Now, turning back to section 12, it derives validity whenever one thinks of the universality principle. This principle legalizes grey markets and parallel imports. But, it fails to recognize that countries have diverse legal systems. By virtue of the territoriality principle, trademarks are regarded as national matters. This means that legality of trademark applies in the country where it is registered. In this context, grey markets can be prevented moreover, the trade mark owner can control the rights of its distribution in that market.

Therefore, it would be of no relevance for one to have an identical trade mark while in another country that is the originator of the grey market product. In support of this opinion, it is because trade mark requirements would be as per that countrys national affair. As a result of this contradiction, this principle can undermine fair situations as well as feasibility in developing common markets, especially in the European Union.

It is important to note that the exhaustion principle has two variations namely exhaustion in local good will and exhaustion in commerce. In the latter case, once the product has been sold for the first time the trademark proprietor loses his rights. The argument is that since the trademarked product is legally in the market, then its parallel import is also legally justified. In the former case, local goodwill applies to a domestic holder who manages to develop a substantial goodwill in the market for a foreign trademark. In most cases, this local goodwill surpasses the goodwill linked to the trade marked goods themselves. It can be argued and justifiably so that the trademark as found locally does not identify with the manufacturer either in law or in fact.

Exhaustion in European Community
According to Attilio (2000) reports that European Community advocates for free flow of goods between the Member States. Therefore, from a simplified understanding of implied perspective, Trade mark, patents and copyright can be a hindrance to this end. In this regard, there are various restrictions that have been advanced to regulate such rights. The main restriction was geared towards harmonization of the laws of the Member States of the European Community with respect to trademarks. In addition, this was later modified by Annex 17 of the European Economic Area Agreement which had the following provisions

The trademark holders rights shall not prohibit usage of the goods which have been put on the market especially if there exists a contract under that trademark moreover, if this contract involves the proprietors consent.

Looking at the above assertion, it can rightly be argued that whenever trademarked products get launched in the market within the confines of European Economic Area and with the trademark owners consent, he will therefore have no rights to oppose the import or re-import of the said product into another country in the European Economic Area. In the same respect, the European Court of Justice interprets this clause as follows

The exhaustion of trademark rights only apply in situations when there trademark owner gives consent furthermore, this provision applies across all Member States including their domestic law as pertains to trademark rights. It is important though to note that, for there to be consent, it must relate to each individual item of the products in respect of which exhaustion is pledged.

In this regard, the exhaustion policy only applies to products that are legally put in the European market. Despite focal on European Market, the member states cannot reinstate more liberal exhaustion laws like in the case of allowing worldwide exhaustion. For instance, if a trademark holder put the product on the market in Asia without any restrictions, he will have the rights to block parallel import of the product at European boarders. On the contrary, if the trademark holder put the product on the market in countries like Scotland or Belgium, he will have no rights to block parallel import to a country like Netherlands and the same applies to re-importion from the Netherlands back to Belgium or Scotland.  

Critical Evaluation of the Trademark Act
Section 12 of the Trademarks Act is somewhat self-contradictory. In other words, it is not consistent with the spirit of the intended rights of the trademark holder. On one hand, it states that the trademark holder has no rights to block parallel import or re-import of the trademarked product if this takes place within the Member States. On the other hand, it states that the same trademark holder has rights to block import or re-import of the product if this takes place outside the Member States. The former case is utilitarianism because it is geared towards an economic interest within the Member States. Critically, this statement clearly shows that European countries do not have the interest of the trademark holder but their interest mainly how much the Member States can benefit. This in itself is good because it seeks to promote the good of the European Community. In other words, it operates within the principles of economic solidarity so to speak. Thus, body becomes useful in meeting objective aimed indicating unity and common purpose. The challenge is that this unity suppresses the rights of the trademark holder.  In fact, universality principle does not take into account the consent of the trademark holder. Section 12 clearly, undermines or disregards the consent of trademark holder, and to this extent it suppresses his rights.

If it is the case that a trademark holder cannot block the trading of his trademarked product if it takes place within European Economic Area, then he has no trademark rights to the product, which is all. Again, if it is the case that a trademark holder can block the trading of his trademarked product if it takes place outside the European Economic Area, then he has rights to the trademarked product. This is the contention as regards the rights of the trademark holder. So, in the former case, what rights does the trademark holder have It was mentioned earlier that once the person registers the trademark, the rights to it start from the date of application, period So, what are those rights if the product cannot be blocked within Member States The Trade Mark Act should be clear on this. It should substantiate the kind of rights conferred on that event of registration. At least, it should state that the rights conferred to a trademark proprietor at inception only apply to situations not within the Member States. This should be stated from the beginning and not provided in the later sub-clauses to avoid possible misinterpretation.

It can be argued and justifiably so that trademark rights should apply in all instances both domestically and internationally. It should safeguard the holder upon any malicious misappropriation of the trademarked product in the local settings. Further to that, the trademark holder should be compensated any time his trademarked product is of benefit to the Member States. The Trademark Act does not elevate the trademark proprietor neither does it spell out the compensation procedure for the use of his trademarked product. One of the ways to penalize attempts to benefit from the intellectual property rights of another person is by making up for losses incurred by the owner. Section 12, therefore, does not consider that Member States potentially could misappropriate the product or they could be a barrier to the financial gains intended by the trademark owner.

Every entrepreneur has a vision. In this context, the Trade Mark Act must respect the wishes, objectives and scope of the entrepreneur. He is the inventor and has sole rights to direct how his product sails in the market. However, this does not mean that he is exempted from certain legal regulations like product safety and custom duty. The main point here is that, the spirit of entrepreneurship surmounts the spirit of Member States.

In general, section 10 (4) (c) and section 12 refute each other by limitation. They can be considered as two statements that serve as counter arguments and refutations to each other. Principles of Logic demand that an instance which refutes A, makes A invalid and no-entity. Assuming that this instance is B, then upon refutation of A, B gains validity and it becomes an entity. In so doing, it replaces A, not unless A provides a refutation which again makes B invalid and no-entity. This analogy can be applied in the two sections contended in this study.

So, if it is the case that a trademark holder can prevent the import or export of goods bearing his sign and it is also the case that he cannot block import or export of goods bearing his sign, if this is done within the Member States, then section 10 is null and void. There should be an amendment to it. So long as section 10 applies and remains authentic then section 12 literally denies the rights conferred to the trademark holder in section 10.

Case Analysis
Perry v Truefitt
This case prohibits another person to sell his own products and at the same time insinuate that the goods are of another trader. This is well entrenched in the passing off policy which actually led to the modern Trademark Law. It essentially safeguards the goodwill and reputation of a business.

Additionally, it safeguards the public from accessing low quality products advanced through deceitful procedures.

Section 12 does not take into consideration the goodwill of the trademark holder. In deed, it cannot be assumed that there are not deceitful motives within the European Economic Area. To what extent does section 12 safeguard the goodwill and reputation of the trademark holder Clearly, this does not come out very well. There is a very big possibility that some Member States may take advantage of the situation and trade the trademarked product under the pretence that they are the goods of another trader. To reiterate, how does the Trademark Act (section 12) intend to control such an occurrence
Nice and Safe Attitude v Piers Flook

This case illustrates the extent in which goodwill can go. It is laudable that a trademarked product enjoys rights that prohibit misappropriation of the product in the Diaspora. Nice and Safe traded with a logo similar to NASA logo without the consent of NASA. Eventually, NASA allowed Piers Flook to use this logo, a move that was challenged by Nice and Safe. This is an indication that goodwill need not be acquired rightfully to be protected even against the originator of the trademark. Passing off actions safeguard goodwill arising from well known international companies. Moreover, it does not matter if they trade in the European Economic Area. It is up to the claimant to defend that their goodwill is well established in the UK.

Section 10 is in line with this claim since it protects the trademark holder from importation or exportation of products with his sign if without his consent.  

Law Society of England and Wales v Griffiths
It is believed that for there to arise goodwill claims there must be an element of trade in two similar activities or two similar customers. In other words, there has to be a common ground in terms of activity. This case involves two claimants where one of them (X) had phone line P1 as 0500192939 whereas the other claimant (Y) acquired phone line 0800192939 which was X line. The two claimants were involved in common trade and so the move by claimant Y was actionable. However, it is important to note that passing off action do not apply to professional trading, for instance, Law Society.

This understanding can be applied to section 12 so that it does not suppress the rights of the trademark holder in less essential matters. It should only extend to those matters involving trade between two beneficiaries or customers.  Then, it should safeguard the goodwill of the trademark holder on matters outside this context. Moreover, the spirit of Member State should not dominate in all inventions or trademarked products. This may kill the efforts of future entrepreneurs who may feel that they creativity will not benefit like in the case of communism.

Conclusion
In conclusion, the paper has discussed in a detail the account of Trademark Act accompanied by various cases. The paper has identified a Trademark as any sign that can be represented graphically and is capable of distinguishing goods or services of one undertaking from those of other undertakings. According to the Trade mark Act, the Act spells out the rights of a trade mark holder, how to safeguard them and how to claim them in the event they are infringed. Importantly, article 10 of the Act indicates the infringement of registered Trademark occurs if a trader uses a sign or symbol on his goods or services and yet the same trade mark is identical to other goods or services for which it is legally registered.

Although Section 10(4) (c) of the Trade Marks Act (TMA) grants the rights to a trademark owner to prevent the importation of goods under his mark, Section 12 of the Trademark Act however contracts right of trademark holder, because it provides a defense to such infringement under the exhaustion of rights principle.

Therefore, this infringement is propagated by the contradictory clause and the profit driven motif of the European Area is the bore of contention regarding the Trademark Act.  Indeed, the Trademark laws should protect the rights of the trademark holder from arbitrary infringement. For instance, a third party trades goods as if they were his own without the consent of the trademark owner. This indirectly legally permitted by the Trademark Act as since some sections violet clauses of the same Act.  On the other hand, infringement occurs if a third party trades goods registered under a Trademark for the wrong reasons. Section 10 and Section 12 come out as counter arguments and due to this, it violates the rights conferred to the trademark proprietor as stated in section10. However, section gains credibility whenever one thinks of monopoly.

It is a point of worth to note that Trademark rights should not lead to excessive monopolistic attitudes. Exhaustion of rights is one way to achieve this. Moreover, it liberalizes economy so that other there is mutual benefit.  In general, section 12 is a good law, but it needs to be reviewed to strike the balance. The situation is made worse by the fact that the states within European market are interested in their own gains rather than genuine concerns of the trademark holders.  Moreover, sections 12 of the Act do not take into consideration the goodwill of the trademark holder, thus, making it possible for illegal use of the trademark. Therefore, in my opinion, the Act needs strong amendment to protect trademark owners as well as emphasizing the role of the states especially within European Union in encouraging them to uphold the rule of law regarding Trademark.

Understanding Terrorism

The word terrorism is derived from the word terror which means to instill fear or cowardice in someone. It also means to carry out acts that are considered inhuman with an aim of punishing or making life difficult and unbearable for the recipient of the terrorist acts. Terrorism is broad in its scope and it is for this reason that there has not been a specific definition for it. Even though there is yet to be a universally agreed definition of terrorism, there seems to be a unanimous agreement on the key components of terrorism. Some of these components include coercion and violence. Many studies have been conducted to unearth what causes terrorism, the tactics used by terrorists and targets for terrorist attacks. This discussion seeks to delve even further to find out what aspects drive terrorism.

Objectives of Terrorist attacks
There are a number of objectives with which terrorist attacks are committed. The main aim as already mentioned is to instill fear in the target party. Acts of terrorism are meant to make one afraid so that they do not continue with a particular state of affairs that may not be favorable to the attackers. Terrorism therefore is used to ensure that there is widespread fear.

Terrorist attacks are also meant to create attention especially in the media so that the group responsible for the terrorist attacks can be recognized. Acts of terrorism are also carried out as a way of weakening embarrassing and harassing the government through its security agencies by making it appear powerless and repressive. As a result, the government ends up overreacting and is thus subjected to public ridicule.

Thornton, in his book, Terror as Weapon of Political Agitation, argues that one of the main objectives for terrorist attacks is to build morale within the terrorist group. Whenever they carry out the deadly attacks, the terrorists feel that their impact in the society is felt and this makes them feel significant within their organization. Terrorism groups also engage in their dubious activities as a way of provoking some form of response or feedback especially from the government. It is thus sometimes used as a way of making known the grievances of a particular group to the government.

Tactics
Terrorist groups have a number of tactics they use in carrying out their activities. Their tactics are such that they are not easily suspected by the law enforcement agencies. Terrorism mainly comes as a result of unresolved conflict especially between the terrorist group and the government in power. The terrorist group therefore attempts by all means to frustrate any efforts by the government. This they do in a number of ways. Some of these tactics include religion fanaticism where people are sort of brainwashed to join certain religious groups which tend to control the manner in which people think and make their decisions. They therefore brainwash people into thinking that the government in power do not have their best interests at heart and this leads to rebellion against the government by the people.

At times, terrorist groups can declare open opposition to the government of the day, as a tactic of carrying out their motives. For example, the very recent attack on the capital city of Uganda, Kampala, is said to be linked to Al Shabab who are opposed to the provision of peace keeping troops in Somalia. Other tactics include depriving the population of their basic economic needs so as to lead to a public outcry. At times, the terrorist groups can impose that there should be only a certain form of government as opposed to the form of government that currently governs a certain country. For example, in Somalia, the Al Shabaab group has been very opposed to the government of Somali and they have made several attempts to take over the government.

Targets
There are various targets that a terrorist group may have depending on their motives. It also depends on the ideologies and beliefs held by the group. For example, a terrorist group that is opposed to a certain religion will always target areas that are frequently visited by that group. If it is a multinational company that is at the center of controversy, then top officials may be targeted by the terrorist groups.

New Terrorism
This term was coined after the September 11 2001 attacks which resulted to death of at least 3,000 people. Although there is not much that has changed in terms of tactics and objectives with the coming of new terrorism, it is believed that this new concept is more destructive than the former. This is because, while old terrorism aimed at creating attention and making known to the society that the group exists with as little damage as possible, new terrorism aims at creating destruction that is devastating and they will go to any measure to achieve their motives. This means that they objectives of terrorism have changed with coming in of new terrorism.

Something else to note is that new terrorism is quite organized unlike old terrorism. New terrorism has a hierarchy of command and there are various ranks which move horizontally rather than vertically. New terrorism is also bended on religion more while old terrorism was bended on political ideologies. With several recent attacks being linked to the Al Qaeda group, these distinctions seem quite true. However, looking at the two concepts from a critical point of view, we note that indeed there is not much difference especially in terms of tactics and target. The new terrorism may seem to have changed the manner in which the dubious activities are carried out, but the underlying principles still remain the same.

Role of the Media in Terrorism
The media is a powerful tool of communication especially to the public. This is so because it is able to reach multitudes of people which other forms of communication may not be able to. For this reason, the media has for along time been used by terrorists to advance their propaganda and other terrorism activities. A good example is that of   Osama Bin Laden who has always used the media to communicate the threat and hate messages by the Al Qaeda group.

Due to the number of people the media is able to reach at any given time, the role played by the media either in stopping or encouraging terrorism is quite tremendous. The language used by the media for instance, when they are reporting on terrorism matters greatly. The words they choose will depend on how the audience of the news will react. A couple of studies have been carried out to establish the relationship that exists between the media and acts of terrorism. On more than one instance, the relationship between the media and terrorism has been described as a symbiotic one. This means that they depend on each other either wholly or partly and that none of the two is considered complete without the indulgence of the other. The symbiotic relationship exists in this manner that terrorist groups usually use the media to pass their message across to the target groups. On the other hand, when the media receives information from the terrorist groups it is treated as exciting as it will catch the attention of the public hence the media becomes popular.

Janny de Graff, in his book Violence as Communication, asserts that more often than not journalists tend to adopt the language of their sources. This means that whenever a journalist interviews a terrorist, there is a high possibility that the journalist will unknowingly pick the language of the terrorist. If then the journalist will use the same language to report to the public, there are high chances that such a report will result into a public uproar.

Terrorism has major impacts on any given country. It is therefore important that governments of all countries guard jealously against terrorism to ensure that all their citizens are protected. Terrorism has seen great countries especially in the Middle East tumble down. It is not possible to overemphasize the importance of guarding any country against terrorism. It is one of the main ways of ensuring that a country does not fall apart