New Law definition

New Law means any law which becomes operative or effective subsequent to the Effective Date and shall include any City laws, ordinances, resolutions, rules or regulations.
New Law means the principal Law as amended by this Law.
New Law. (□□□) means sections 18 to 25 of the Intellectual Property (World Trade Organization Amendments) Ordinance 1996 (11 of 1996);

Examples of New Law in a sentence

  • An additional brake on investment is the lack of legislative action on a new Law on Mines.

  • The Procurement Law has been revised in July 2008 and amended in January 2009 and issued as a new Law by the Ministry of Justice and was published in the Official Gazette Number 957, 29.10.1387 (18 January 2009).

  • On 1 October 1997 a new Law on Freedom of Conscience and Religious Associations (“the Religions Act”) entered into force.

  • If during the initial term or extension term the Laws are superseded, preempted, adopted, amended or repealed in a manner that is binding on the Parties and that requires the Parties to alter existing Agreements, the Parties shall negotiate an amendment to this Agreement to the extent necessary to comply with any new Law affecting existing agreements.

  • The representative of Yemen added that the new Law "On Patents, Utility Models, Integrated Circuits and Undisclosed Information" had been adopted on 12 January 2011.


More Definitions of New Law

New Law means either of the following, as the case may be:
New Law means the principal Act as amended by this Act;
New Law means the principle Law as amended by the Information and Communications Technology Authority (Amendment) (No. 2) Law, 2016;
New Law means the Law as set out in this Revision.
New Law means the Marriage and Civil Status (Jersey) Law 2001 in force immediately after the commencement of the 2018 Law;
New Law means section 5 of the Lobbyists Registration Act as enacted by section 3 of this Act;
New Law means the Criminal Procedure Code (2010 Revision) as amended by this Law.