Agriculture Under the provision of the
World Trade Organization's
Agreement on Agriculture there is no requirement to cap trade-distorting domestic support in any year during which the value of support does not exceed a certain percentage (5–10%) of the national production value per product or of all products taken together if the support is not attributable to any specific product category.
Christian theology The principle of has been commonly used in defence of the
historical reliability of the Gospels. F. W. Upham used the term when speaking of "the [...] minor differences that make up the larger part of the current argument against the
Gospels."
Simon Greenleaf's
Testimony of the Evangelists is perhaps the most famous application of legal rules to the Christian Gospels.
Copyright Courts will occasionally not uphold a claim to
copyright on modified
public domain material if the changes are deemed to be . Similarly, courts have dismissed
copyright infringement cases on the grounds that the alleged infringer's use of the copyrighted work (such as
sampling) was so insignificant as to be . For example, the
NBA 2K video games that included copyrighted tattoos in the recreation of the players' likenesses were found to be in and not copyright-violating. However, in
Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Dimension Films, such a ruling was overturned on appeal, the US appeals court explicitly declining to recognize a standard for digital sampling. was also invoked in the
James Newton v. Beastie Boys copyright infringement lawsuit, where a 6-second sample of Newton's piece
Choir was used in
Pass the Mic; Newton lost the case.
India The principle of can be used as a defense in India in cases of copyright infringement. The important issue is whether the de minimis principle could be used as a separate defence from fair use under section 52 of the Indian Copyright Act. In
India TV Independent News Service Pvt. Ltd. and Ors. v Yashraj Films Pvt. Ltd., the court discussed the applicability of principle at length. Before this case the position was not very clear concerning the applicability. The facts of the case were that five words were copied from a song of five stanzas. After applying the five well-known factors commonly considered by courts in applying , the court reached the conclusion that the infraction is trivial and attracts the defence of .
Criminology and crime In
criminology, the or
minimalist approach is an addition to a general
harm principle. The general harm principle fails to consider the possibility of other sanctions to prevent harm, and the effectiveness of
criminalization as a chosen option. Those other sanctions include civil courts, laws of
tort and
regulation. Having criminal remedies in place is seen as a "last resort" since such actions often infringe personal liberties –
incarceration, for example, prevents the freedom of movement. In this sense, law making that places a greater emphasis on
human rights, such as the
European Convention on Human Rights, falls into the category. Most crimes of direct action (
murder,
rape,
assault, for example) are generally not affected by such a stance, but do require greater justification in less clear cases. The rule in North American
drug law requires a
usable quantity of the substance in question before charges can be brought, known as the
minority rule. In Canada, is often used as a standard of whether a criminal offence is made out at a preliminary stage. For a charge of second degree murder, the test being: "could the jury reasonably conclude that accused actions were a contributing cause, beyond , of the victim's death".
Education In
Endrew v. Douglas County School District, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled, on March 22, 2017, that the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires more than efforts to provide equivalent educational opportunity to students with disabilities. The decision reversed a previous decision by the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.
Planning In
environmental planning in New Zealand, the use of the term is common in the legal and planning professions. While not defined under the
Resource Management Act 1991, it is commonly used in case law concerning an assessment of environmental effect, e.g. "the potential adverse effect of one additional road user on the crossing is considered to be ." It is used when an actual or potential effect may exist, but is so minor that it is close to negligible or zero in nature.
Risk assessment In
risk assessment, it refers to the highest level of risk that is still too small to be of concern. Therefore, only risk levels above this level must be addressed and managed. Some refer to this as a "virtually safe" level. It has applications in the fields of auditing, modeling, and engineering, and may refer to situations of low (negligible) risk. It can be verified in ASA 1.
Transportation Following
bus deregulation in Great Britain in 1986, small contracts for supplementary local bus services could be let by local authorities without competitive tendering. The Department for Transport's "Guidance on New De Minimis Rules for Bus Subsidy Contracts" (2005) notes that "The
Transport Act 1985 (as amended by the
Transport Act 2000) introduced the provisions which govern the duties of local passenger transport authorities to secure local bus services where these would not otherwise be met. In the majority of cases these services have to be secured through competitive tender. The Service Subsidy Agreements (Tendering) Regulations provided local authorities with the scope to let any individual bus subsidy contract in any one year up to a certain maximum value without the need to competitively tender (the limits). There was also a maximum value that contracts could be let with any one operator in any one year." == See also ==