Results 171 to 180 of about 107,960 (305)
O’odham Niok? In Indigenous Languages, U.S. “Jurisprudence” Means Nothing [PDF]
Gentry, Blake
core
ABSTRACT This article considers how victim‐blaming and stereotypical attitudes about appropriate victim behaviour can impact upon the operation of rape trials, particularly by prejudicing a complainant's testimony where s/he can be portrayed as having departed from the stereotypical norm of a ‘real victim’.
Susan Leahy
wiley +1 more source
JINet: easy and secure private data analysis for everyone. [PDF]
Lalli G +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Relevance theory and the social realities of communication. [PDF]
Johnson M.
europepmc +1 more source
America\u27s Transformation: The Arc of Justice Bends Toward the Deaf Community [PDF]
Schwartz, Michael A.
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study examines the potential associations between anxiety and aggressive behaviors in college students with high‐risk adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and explores how this relationship may be influenced by bullying perpetration, applying general strain theory. A sample of 282 college students aged 19 to 29 (Mage = 21.59, SDage = 2.48;
Jeoung Min Lee +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Five Decades of Research on Rape Myths and Victim Interpretation
ABSTRACT Over the past 5 decades of social science research, scholars have examined false narratives and beliefs associated with rape and sexual assault (often called “rape myths”). This scoping review employs an innovative technique to sample and describe a large cohort of scholarly articles that investigate sexual assault victim interpretation and ...
Elizabeth Trudeau, Ruth Carmi
wiley +1 more source
Voluntary assisted dying: challenges in Northern Territory remote Aboriginal communities. [PDF]
Lamba G +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Communication Access Funds: Achieving the Unrealized Aims of the Americans with Disabilities Act [PDF]
Rosenblum, Howard A.
core +1 more source
Pulmonalis or Pulmonaris? It's Elementarius, My Dear Watson
ABSTRACT The adjectival suffix ‐alis and its allomorph ‐aris are very common in the anatomical nomenclature; however, rules governing differential usage, such as ‐aris substituting for ‐alis following an ‐l‐, leave many exceptions. Here, we report an empirical study of 985 adjectives with ‐alis and ‐aris suffixes used in Terminologia Anatomica (2nd ed.)
Paul E. Neumann +3 more
wiley +1 more source

