释义 |
recusal
re·cuse R0094800 (rĭ-kyo͞oz′) tr.v. re·cused, re·cus·ing, re·cus·es To disqualify or seek to disqualify (a judge or juror) from participation in the decision in a case, as for personal prejudice against a party or for personal interest in the outcome. [Middle English recusen, ultimately (partly via Old French recuser) from Latin recūsāre : re-, re- + causa, lawsuit; see cause.] re·cu′sal (-kyo͞o′zəl) n. recusal (rɪˈkjuːzəl) nthe withdrawal of a judge from a legal caseThesaurusNoun | 1. | recusal - (law) the disqualification of a judge or jury by reason of prejudice or conflict of interest; a judge can be recused by objections of either party or judges can disqualify themselvesrecusationdisqualification - the act of preventing someone from participating by finding them unqualifiedlaw, jurisprudence - the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order" | Translations
recusal
recusaln. the act of a judge or prosecutor being removed or voluntarily stepping aside from a legal case due to conflict of interest or other good reason. (See: recuse) recusal
Synonyms for recusalnoun (law) the disqualification of a judge or jury by reason of prejudice or conflict of interestSynonymsRelated Words- disqualification
- law
- jurisprudence
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