Difficulties in determining the diagnostic accuracy of an instrument to verify suspected sexual abuse in young children: 'autopsy' of the PICAS study. [PDF]
van Ham K +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Australian Royal Commissions Into Child Welfare, Abuse and Protection
ABSTRACT Both nationally and internationally, the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (RCIRCSA) is widely viewed as a remarkably successful public inquiry. Unlike many other commissions, it was stable, attracted little controversy, was highly regarded, and led to extensive legal, regulatory and policy reform ...
Shurlee Swain, Katie Wright
wiley +1 more source
Marketing awareness, professional experience, and support for e-cigarette advertising regulation among Polish legal professionals: a latent-class analysis. [PDF]
Zajdel K +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
The choice argument for proportional representation
Abstract What electoral system should a democracy choose? I argue for proportional representation (PR). My main empirical premise is Duverger's law: Under PR there are more viable candidates in district‐level elections than there are under single‐member plurality (SMP) systems.
Adam Lovett
wiley +1 more source
Polarization and rule of law crisis-insights from Poland. [PDF]
Solska M.
europepmc +1 more source
Change in migrants’ political attitudes: Acculturation and cosmopolitanization
Abstract This paper investigates change in international migrants’ political attitudes. It theorizes a novel attitudinal typology distinguishing polity‐specific attitudes influenced by national contexts and transnational attitudes forged by migratory experience. It applies the typology to four dimensions of political competition in contemporary Europe:
Eva Krejcova +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Work of the United States Attorney\u27s Offices across the Sequential Intercept Model [PDF]
Brewer, D. Josev
core +1 more source
What political theory can learn from conceptual engineering: The case of “corruption”
Abstract Conceptual change is commonplace in political theory. Recent scholarship argues that improving a concept, or “engineering” it, can sharpen its normative and explanatory power. This article illustrates what political theory can learn from conceptual engineering (CE) by examining the evolution of “corruption” as a case study.
Emanuela Ceva, Patrizia Pedrini
wiley +1 more source
Court-based education as a focal practice to overcome violence against healthcare professionals. [PDF]
Khani H, Eslamitabar S.
europepmc +1 more source

