Legal recourse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A legal recourse is an action that can be taken by an individual or a corporation to attempt to remedy a legal difficulty.

See also

Legal principles

Examples

  • Arranged marriages may leave the woman without legal recourse.
  • Bookies and confidence tricksters rely on the mark being involved in illegal activity to block legal recourse.
  • Victims of bullying may have legal recourse in the United States.
  • The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 purportedly leaves consumer groups without legal recourse.
  • Diploma mills and essay mills employ various legal techniques to leave their customers without legal recourse.
  • In termination of employment, an employee may have legal recourse to challenge such a termination in at-will presumption of employment in the United States.
  • Victims of joke theft have little legal recourse, but have occasionally exacted their own vengeance.
  • Lynchings
  • Military tribunal
  • Rumsfeld v. Padilla
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