Results 51 to 60 of about 55,935 (268)
Righting Past Wrongs Through Restorative Justice: Managerial Motivations for Collaboration
ABSTRACT Nonprofits are crucial to state collaborations as their embedded nature in communities allows them to gain the trust necessary to facilitate change and enhance strengths. As nonprofits collaborate with the public sector to tackle systemic challenges, understanding managerial motivations for collaboration and implications for social change is ...
Kara L. Lawrence +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Illegal gold mining has emerged as a major sustainability threat in the Amazon, eroding Indigenous rights, forest integrity, and climate mitigation efforts. This study examines how international market incentives relate to the expansion of illegal mining and associated deforestation within the Yanomami Indigenous Territory (YIT) from 2008 to ...
Shirléia Lago Santos +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Research Summary We study an important, but largely overlooked, non‐market strategy used by firms in the enforcement stage of policy: “snitching,” that is, providing intelligence about potential violations of their rivals in an attempt to persuade regulators to fine them.
Benjamin Barber IV +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The application of the 'ne bis in idem' related to financial offences in the jurisprudence of the European courts [PDF]
In the article, the authors analyze the fundamental challenges in the application of the ne bis in idem principle in the practice of the European Court for Human Rights and Court of Justice of the EU and their interpretation of the principle in relation ...
Matić-Bošković Marina, Kostić Jelena
doaj
The Prevent Counter‐Terrorism Strategy After Southport
Abstract The counter‐terrorism Prevent Strategy has recently undergone a significant government review by David Anderson KC following the 2024 murders in Southport. The attacker was referred three times to Prevent without being engaged because he was deemed not to be susceptible to terrorist ideologies.
Paul Thomas
wiley +1 more source
Public Inquiries and UK Press Regulation: A Case of ‘Fading into Forgetfulness’?
Abstract Why were the proposals for reform of UK press regulation made by Lord Leveson in 2012 not implemented in full, despite popular and parliamentary support for the report's recommendations, and despite the creation of the legal framework for the reformed system of regulation?
John Street +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Intersectoral problems of qualification of labor law violations as administrative offences in Russia
The subject. The article discusses certain problematic issues of bringing to administrative responsibility within the framework of the general staff under Article 5.27 of the Russian Code of Administrative Offences for violation of labor legislation. The
M. A. Drachuk, G. N. Obukhova
doaj +1 more source
Hong Kong – The new offence of fraud [PDF]
Letter from Hong Kong by John Reading SC (Senior Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions, Commercial Crime Unit, Department of Justice, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region) describing how Hong Kong’s legislature enacted a statutory offence of fraud
Reading, John
core
Dangerous Deference: What the British Public Think about Civil‐Military Relations
Abstract Accepted norms of democratic civil‐military relations aver, regarding the use of force, that military officers may not substitute civilians’ judgement with their own and that civilians should not follow their guidance blindly. These theories often rest on the presumption that three critical actors—government, armed forces, and the public ...
David Blagden +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Anti‐Protestantism was one of the reasons for the revival of missions during the interwar period. By the 1960s, however, Protestants were less and less often mentioned as a threat to missionary efforts, and the decline in inter‐confessional tensions was increasingly considered a relic of the past.
Giacomo Canepa
wiley +1 more source

