Justice
in sentence
2482 examples of Justice in a sentence
Even though they are the heroes of this movie,
justice
must be done, and the girls are thrown back behind bars.
The crew is told that there's a prisoner on board by Detective Dick Berry, who's come aboard to return an escaped criminal to Earth to face
justice.
This Movie was to funny , The trailers don't do enough
justice
for this movie , I didn't want to see this film but my niece dragged me and I'm glad that I went I laughed the whole time.
Together, they muddle through car-crashes, shoot-outs and weirdly-decorated apartments to bring crooks to
justice.
The one-liners are crap, the jokes feel forced, and the script, which alternates between taking itself too seriously and sheer stupidity, does no
justice
whatsoever to the energetic and talented cast.
But I wonder if it does
justice
to the real events and the actual persons.
In addition to markets, society needs institutions to serve such social goals as political freedom and social
justice.
Superficially, it describes the positive aspects of democracy: the greatest degree of freedom compatible with social
justice.
We do not have adequate international institutions for the protection of individual freedoms, human rights, and the environment, or for the promotion of social justice, not to mention the preservation of peace.
The thinking minority needs a system of laws and institutions, real presidential elections, a working parliament, and
justice
that is independent, rather than merely following orders from above.
By banishing all trappings of justice, this mindset is oblivious to the suffering of the peace-loving civilians who comprise the vast majority of those living in Pakistan’s tribal areas.
Just prior to the June 2016 Brexit referendum, Gove, who was
justice
secretary in David Cameron’s government at the time, dismissed the all-but-unanimous view of economists and others that a decision to leave the European Union would deeply damage the British economy.
The language of
justice
and injustice, and demands of unconditional surrender and criminal retribution for the vanquished only promote – indeed, provoke – total war.
“Security of property and tolerable administration of justice,” as Smith put it.
His legitimacy rested on free elections and his project for economic and social
justice.
State institutions should deliver public goods (like defense, justice, and fiscal and monetary policy), society should deliver social goods (like culture, education, and assistance to needy people), and the market should deliver economic goods (which are connected with profits, growth, and employment).
But if words cannot do
justice
to the magnitude of the crisis, they can guide the world’s response.
That progress began in 2007, when a group of lawyers initiated a mass protest movement in response to an unconstitutional decision by Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s fourth military president, to suspend the chief
justice
of the Supreme Court.
Featuring a platform that includes a focus on
justice
and good governance, PTI had been gaining ground since the 2008 election, and received a new surge of support from urban youth demanding better services and less corruption.
Start with the growing calls for greater social
justice.
By using high taxes to finance a high level of government services, these countries have balanced high prosperity with social
justice
and environmental sustainability.
Consider Strike Debt, an offshoot of the Occupy movement, which calls itself “a nationwide movement of debt resisters fighting for economic
justice
and democratic freedom.”
Their anger, inflamed in March when he tried unsuccessfully to sack the Supreme Court’s independent-minded chief justice, rages on.
As a Supreme Court justice, of course, Holmes opposed antitrust regulations.
It is easier to mobilize against injustice than for
justice.
What about – as Michael Gove, Cameron’s
justice
minister, has suggested – establishing a free-trade zone with Bosnia, Ukraine, and Albania (the “Albanian model”)?
It is a matter both of incentives and social
justice.
But, even more important, gender equality is a matter of justice.”
Common sense would seem to leave no other conclusion than that his arrest – in a country that is obliged by treaty to extradite fugitives from US
justice
– serves no purpose at all.
The former culture minister, Jack Lang, said the “American system of
justice
had run amok.”
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