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PhD thesis discusses constitutional regulation of economic justice in federal states

PhD thesis discusses constitutional regulation of economic justice in federal states

A doctoral thesis at the Faculty of Law and Political Science discussed constitutional regulation of economic justice in federal states, using Iraq as an example, by student Binar Nabil Haqi, in the Hammurabi Hall at the faculty.
The discussion committee consisted of the following professors:
1. Prof. Fawzi Hussein Salman/Kirkuk University/Faculty of Law and Political Science...Chair
2. Prof. Majid Najm Eidan/Kirkuk University/Faculty of Law and Political Science...Member
3. Prof. Adnan Qadir Aref/ University of Al-Kitab/ Faculty of Law and Diplomatic Relations... Member
4. Prof. Sakina Ali Karim/ University of Kirkuk/ Faculty of Basic Education... Member
5. Prof. Mazen Mazhar Awad/ University of Kirkuk/ Faculty of Law and Political Science... Member
6. Prof. Dr. Hashim Hussein Ali/ University of Kirkuk/ Faculty of Law and Political Science ... Member and Supervisor
The thesis, which was discussed in the presence of the Dean of the Faculty of Law and Political Science, Assistant Professor Dr. Murad Saeb Mahmoud, aimed to analyse the economic reality and mechanisms of wealth distribution within the federal state, and to explain the impact of multiple levels of government and the distribution of powers between the centre and the regions on the allocation and management of resources in the Iraqi context, as well as to identify the obstacles to achieving economic justice and to clarify the legal, administrative and institutional guarantees necessary for the fair distribution of income and wealth.d. najem1
The thesis concluded that positive economic systems, including capitalism and socialism, suffer from shortcomings in achieving justice in the distribution of resources, as the capitalist system has not achieved financial balance between the wealthy and those with limited incomes.

 

Timing

حالة الطقس في مدينة كركوك