Jurisprudence in a sentence as a noun

Standards vary and the jurisprudence is not clear, but indeed you "can't give up your civil rights with single click.

There are years of jurisprudence and years of common law precedent that form the true vision of what the First Amendment means today.

Our entire system of democracy -- of jurisprudence -- rests on informed citizens making judgments about areas where they spend their money.

I wrote a 3000-word review of one book[1] that diverged into fuzzy logic, theories of jurisprudence and a few other areas in order to properly explain my reaction.

The most important part of that clause is the use of the term "substandard width lane", which although not defined in the statute, has been established via jurisprudence to be approximately 14-15 ft.

It is one of the most incomprehensible things about contemporary life to me. I don't understand how it's possible given the intellectual pedigree of Western jurisprudence.

The idea that 'data' vs 'metadata' loophole has been scaled beyond belief to undermine the plain english understanding of 'reasonable' is worthy of new jurisprudence.

A decision, which had banned deep linking by search engines to databases could have influenced other EU member states' jurisprudence and caused significant difficulties for search engines outside the European Union as well.

"> conservative judges knock down decades of established jurisprudence as in the campaign finance or the Voting Rights Act decisions they're not being "activist".I didn't say that conservative judges weren't activist.

"The legal protections of the First Amendment are some of the broadest of any industrialized nation, and remain a critical, and occasionally controversial, component of American jurisprudence.

Jurisprudence definitions

noun

the branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do

noun

the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order"