Results 71 to 80 of about 196,073 (275)
Public perceptions of feminicide and the feminist movement in Mexico
Abstract The misclassification of murders results in the invisibilization and impunity of gender‐based violence. According to Observatorio Cuidadano Nacional del Feminicidio figures in 2024, of the 3408 cases of murdered women in Mexico in 2023, only 827 were classified as feminicides.
Sara J. Chaparro Rucobo +1 more
wiley +1 more source
El delito de "piratería aérea" por el derecho internacional. Análisis, evolución e implicaciones con el terrorismo internacional [PDF]
Treballs finals del Màster "Estudios Internacionales: organizaciones internacionales y cooperación – Colección Memorias MEI", Facultat de Dret, Universitat de Barcelona, Curs:2015-2016.
Lijoi, Lisa
core
Knowing Gender in Kim de l'Horizon's Blutbuch
Abstract This article reads Kim de l'Horizon's award‐winning novel Blutbuch (2022) as a contribution to the epistemology of gender. Amid philosophical debates about internality and externality in the construction of gender, about the feasibility of gender identity as a coherent concept, about gender feels and gender as process, de l'Horizon's novel ...
Sophie Salvo
wiley +1 more source
Empathy and attitudes toward protecting migrants from criminal violence
Abstract Migrants in Latin America are increasingly vulnerable to organized crime violence while en route to their destination. Public opinion regarding how to address this problem varies. While many residents of countries along migration routes support policies protecting migrants from organized crime, others oppose them. What explains this variation?
Rebecca Bell‐Martin +1 more
wiley +1 more source
A safe asset in early modern Castile, 1543–1714
Abstract This article shows how public offices in the early modern period became investment assets in Castile (Spain). Moreover, it demonstrates that offices fulfilled all the conditions for being viewed as safe assets. In particular, through the combination of qualitative sources with a novel hand‐collected database, it shows that offices did not ...
Víctor M. Gómez‐Blanco
wiley +1 more source
The Carolingian cocio: on the vocabulary of the early medieval petty merchant
The word cocio (i.e. petty merchant or broker in classical Latin) was a rare term that after a long absence in written Latin reappeared in several Carolingian texts. Scholars have posited a medieval semantic shift from ‘merchant’ to ‘vagabond’. But this article argues that this consensus is erroneous.
Shane Bobrycki
wiley +1 more source
La motivación aparente en la autoría y la participación en el delito de crimen organizado, Corte Superior de Ica, 2021-2022 [PDF]
Shirley Kimberly Velásquez De La Cruz
openalex +1 more source
The law of treason has been criticised for being based on ‘outdated’ statutes which are inflexible and unsuitable for modern needs. However, a historical examination of the evolution of treason in Britain and its empire suggests that the law was often adaptable.
Michael Lobban
wiley +1 more source
<p>Reseña al libro <em>“The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One: How Corporate Executives and Politicians Looted the S&L Industry”</em>. William Black. University of Texas Press, 2005.</p>
openaire +2 more sources

