Abstract COVID‐19 has intensified interest in crisis policy learning, yet the micro‐level interactions among political, bureaucratic, and expert actors remain underexplored. We conceptualise an ideal‐type framework for the micro‐flow of crisis learning, an ordinarily epistemic and context‐specific process of individual‐level interactions, where lessons
Neil Mortimer, Nicholas Bromfield
wiley +1 more source
Pathological investigation and microbiological confirmation of <i>Bartonella quintana</i> endocarditis: A case of trench fever without the trench or fever. [PDF]
Grace N +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Surrogate Motherhood: Legal Issues Concerning \u27Vanity Children\u27 [PDF]
Thunder, James Michael
core +1 more source
Legal Strategies Countering Federal Public Health Data Purges. [PDF]
Hodge JG.
europepmc +1 more source
Regulated religion, fading belief: how Indonesians' religiosity has quietly changed, 2000-2020. [PDF]
Wardana A.
europepmc +1 more source
The Maturing Nature of State Constitution Jurisprudence [PDF]
Shepard, Randall T.
core +1 more source
Coding the future: digital technologists and the constitution of the next system. [PDF]
Deepak D, Manski B.
europepmc +1 more source
Atypical Targetoid Purpuric Varicella in Immunodeficiency 40 with DOCK2 Gene Mutation. [PDF]
Waghmare P +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Agreeing to disagree: When do superordinate identities facilitate competing opinion-based groups to work through intergroup conflict? [PDF]
Haines EA, Thomas EF, Wenzel M.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Scholarship on democratization often reduces social movements’ legal engagement to deliberative rationality, obscuring how transformation operates through distinct yet complementary procedural logics. This article argues that movements democratize law through dual‐track engagement: Political deliberation universalizes moral demands via ...
Diego Alonso Ramírez Pérez
wiley +1 more source

