Results 71 to 80 of about 79,343 (307)
ABSTRACT Indigenous wellbeing theories offer potential to better measure social and cultural determinants. This scoping review aimed to identify the types of metrics used by the Australian government to assess wellbeing and evaluate the alignment of current frameworks against Indigenous and non‐Indigenous conceptualisations of wellbeing.
Sophie Wright‐Pedersen +5 more
wiley +1 more source
The article is dedicated to the analysis of the crime of legalization of criminal proceeds as international conventional crime. Within the scope of the study the author has made a legal analysis of universal and regional conventions of international law ...
A V Vodyanov
doaj
Quantifying the Sites of Government, Commercial, and Personal Systems‐Perpetrated Financial Abuse
ABSTRACT This study explores the institutional systems through which post‐separation financial abuse is perpetrated. While existing measures seek to quantify the harms experienced by women post‐separation, this study draws on financial, welfare and legal service casefiles to identify where such harms occur. Drawing on 76 de‐identified Victorian service
Kay Cook +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Criminalization of Use of Nuclear Weapons in Context of EmergingHuman Rights - Based of International Law [PDF]
Nowadays, various subjects of international law, includingcriminalization of use of nuclear weapons, can be studied from twodifferent aspects. In the classic paradigm of international law based onWestphalian order and sovereignty–oriented approach and in
Hojjat Salimi Turkaman
doaj
Beyond the grave: Do the dead have rights?
Abstract Anatomists who work with the Dead often see themselves as custodians of the Dead. To those who opine that the Dead no longer have Rights (legal or moral) or privileges and have nothing more to contribute to the development of Society or to human endeavor, the Dead's custodians might respond that there is ample evidence that some Rights and ...
Beverley Kramer, Bernard Moxham
wiley +1 more source
Evolution of reparations for victims of international crimes provisions and their gradual implementation in the Republic of Moldova [PDF]
The evolution of the international criminal justice system demonstrates that the issue of reparations for victims of international crimes only began to concern the international community in the early 1990s, with the establishment of the first ...
Dorul Olga, Andrei NASTAS
doaj +1 more source
The International Crime Victims Surveys
The International Crime Victims Survey (ICVS) has been carried out six times over the period 1989–2010. Although national and city samples are relatively small, the ICVS is a unique survey of the experience of being victimized in that it is standardized and far-reaching: it has been conducted in more than 80 countries in different regions of the world,
van Dijk, J.J.M. +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Charlotte Pommer: Resistance fighter and female pioneer of German anatomy
Abstract This article examines the biography and unique case of Charlotte Pommer (1914–2004), the only anatomist documented to have left the field during the Nazi period after encountering the regime's victims on the dissection table. While she is known for her resistance activities, newly presented documentation reveals her role as the provisional ...
Tim S. Goldmann
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Body procurement at The University of Sydney has a long history. Anatomy legislation (1881 Anatomy Act) modeled on the British Anatomy Act 1832 legalized procurement of unclaimed bodies from public institutions for anatomical dissection at licensed Schools of Anatomy, effectively conferring the University of Sydney an exclusive license until ...
Rebekah A. Jenkin, Kevin A. Keay
wiley +1 more source

