Disuniform

Dis`u´ni`form


a.1.Not uniform.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
There was, of course, no suggestion that there was a disuniform approach to [section] 284.
As written, the Military Command Exception is disuniform and injects an unnecessary and unacceptable degree of inconsistency and uncertainty into the MHS.
(99) National actors, in short, have plenty of reasons to prefer the "disuniform implementation of national law." (100) So, too, Rodriguez argues that decentralized conflict and the percolation of national debates often inure to the federal government's benefit, an insight reflected in statutory delegation as well as federal enforcement schemes.
Congressional creation of an administrative agency with rulemaking powers can help achieve nationwide uniformity, of course, but the agency might fail in its task if lower courts across the land review the agency's interpretations de novo, thus substituting their own (predictably disuniform) preferred readings.
disuniform framing, normative considerations, and the problem of frame
The court then looked to the legislative history of DOHSA and found that, by excluding it from territorial waters, Congress had intended that the remedy be disuniform and that it had endorsed "remedies on territorial waters which differed from those provided for death on the high seas." (93)
(141) It simply means that disuniform federal constitutional law is prevalent and, in some and perhaps many instances, not especially problematic.
In making sales at these stores, as well as by phone and over the Internet, Barnes and Noble endures all of the costs associated with multiple, complex, and disuniform state sales and use tax laws; it faces the same economic burden attributable to these factors as Amazon.com would were Amazon.com required to collect these taxes as well.
By using the early modern term 'foul papers' in a uniform, technical sense to refer only to complete plays, Greg and Honigmann misrepresent its use in its own time when its reference was disuniform (E.
But uniformity no longer seems a useful concept to anchor theories of nationalism when many major federal statutes give states frontline roles precisely because Congress desires disuniform implementation of national law.