Results 231 to 240 of about 50,805 (272)
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1996
Abstract Coercivity is the characteristic of hard magnetic materials where magnetization reversal does not take place immediately the applied magnetic field is reversed. The applied field needed to reverse the magnetization is the coercive field Hc.
D Givord, M F Rossignol
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Abstract Coercivity is the characteristic of hard magnetic materials where magnetization reversal does not take place immediately the applied magnetic field is reversed. The applied field needed to reverse the magnetization is the coercive field Hc.
D Givord, M F Rossignol
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Archives of Sexual Behavior, 2009
Sexual coercion is a manifestation of sexual conflict that is not in itself pathological according to Wakefield's (1992) criteria because sexual coercion can increase a man's Darwinian fitness. There are, however, differences among men in their propensity to commit rape and this propensity is linked to antisocial personality characteristics and ...
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Sexual coercion is a manifestation of sexual conflict that is not in itself pathological according to Wakefield's (1992) criteria because sexual coercion can increase a man's Darwinian fitness. There are, however, differences among men in their propensity to commit rape and this propensity is linked to antisocial personality characteristics and ...
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American Journal of Political Science, 2017
AbstractWe develop a model of leadership in which an informed leader has some degree of coercive influence over her followers (agents). Agents benefit from coordination but face two distinct challenges: dispersed information and heterogeneous preferences.
Dimitri Landa, Scott A. Tyson
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AbstractWe develop a model of leadership in which an informed leader has some degree of coercive influence over her followers (agents). Agents benefit from coordination but face two distinct challenges: dispersed information and heterogeneous preferences.
Dimitri Landa, Scott A. Tyson
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Violence Against Women, 2009
This article examines the theory of gender presented in Stark’s Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life. Stark suggests that gender is a form of structural inequality that makes women more vulnerable than men to the strategies of coercive control.
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This article examines the theory of gender presented in Stark’s Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life. Stark suggests that gender is a form of structural inequality that makes women more vulnerable than men to the strategies of coercive control.
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Violence Against Women, 2009
The critical appraisals of Coercive Control focus largely on what my analysis implies for intervention, a matter to which the book devotes only limited space. In this reply, I reiterate core concepts in the book and acknowledge that much more work is needed to translate the realities of coercive control into practical legal and advocacy strategies.
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The critical appraisals of Coercive Control focus largely on what my analysis implies for intervention, a matter to which the book devotes only limited space. In this reply, I reiterate core concepts in the book and acknowledge that much more work is needed to translate the realities of coercive control into practical legal and advocacy strategies.
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Journal of Logic and Computation, 1999
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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2023
Abstract Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life identifies the elements, dynamics, and consequences of coercive control, which includes the harms it poses to liberty rights and privacy rights. The Domestic Violence Revolution that swept the globe in the late 20th century, failed to stem coercive control, the most common ...
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Abstract Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women in Personal Life identifies the elements, dynamics, and consequences of coercive control, which includes the harms it poses to liberty rights and privacy rights. The Domestic Violence Revolution that swept the globe in the late 20th century, failed to stem coercive control, the most common ...
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2007
Abstract The battle against domestic violence has focused primarily on incidents of extreme physical abuse and the resulting trauma to the victim. While there is a growing understanding of some forms of psychological abuse, such as stalking, there is less understanding of the pattern of abuse where physical attacks are combined with ...
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Abstract The battle against domestic violence has focused primarily on incidents of extreme physical abuse and the resulting trauma to the victim. While there is a growing understanding of some forms of psychological abuse, such as stalking, there is less understanding of the pattern of abuse where physical attacks are combined with ...
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2023
Abstract Chapter 5 examines the strategy of coercive diplomacy embraced by George W. Bush to confront Saddam Hussein. After learning that covert action was not likely to be effective, Bush decided that the threat of military force might compel Hussein to allow inspections and relinquish his weapons of mass destruction.
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Abstract Chapter 5 examines the strategy of coercive diplomacy embraced by George W. Bush to confront Saddam Hussein. After learning that covert action was not likely to be effective, Bush decided that the threat of military force might compel Hussein to allow inspections and relinquish his weapons of mass destruction.
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2012
AbstractUsing Robert J. Bursik and Harold G. Grasmick's re-specification of social disorganization theory as systemic theory, Dina R. Rose and Todd R. Clear showed how high levels of incarceration, concentrated in poor places, would be expected to have a “tipping point” at which the incarceration would cause crime to go up rather than down.
Natasha A. Frost, Todd R. Clear
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AbstractUsing Robert J. Bursik and Harold G. Grasmick's re-specification of social disorganization theory as systemic theory, Dina R. Rose and Todd R. Clear showed how high levels of incarceration, concentrated in poor places, would be expected to have a “tipping point” at which the incarceration would cause crime to go up rather than down.
Natasha A. Frost, Todd R. Clear
openaire +1 more source

