Results 281 to 290 of about 61,991 (349)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
‘Sobriety, human dignity and public morality’: ethical standards in Kazakhstan
Public Money & Management, 2021Kazakhstan, like other post-Soviet countries, is struggling to address residual issues of corruption and weak ethical standards within a wider initiative to promote good governance.
Riccardo Pelizzo, Colin Knox
semanticscholar +1 more source
CRIMINAL DETERRENCE: EVIDENCE FROM AN INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF 24/7 SOBRIETY.
Journal of policy analysis and management, 2020Decisionmakers continue to search for new ways to deter criminal behavior that do not rely on increasing the severity of punishment. This paper evaluates South Dakota's 24/7 Sobriety Program-a novel, large-scale intervention requiring those arrested for ...
B. Kilmer, Gregory Midgette
semanticscholar +1 more source
International Conference on Networking in Education and Research
Driving under the influence (DUI) is one of the main factors that contribute to accidents and fatalities, when it comes to road safety. This paper addresses the limitations of traditional road monitoring techniques and presents a real-time, non-invasive ...
Delia-Elena Bărbuță +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Driving under the influence (DUI) is one of the main factors that contribute to accidents and fatalities, when it comes to road safety. This paper addresses the limitations of traditional road monitoring techniques and presents a real-time, non-invasive ...
Delia-Elena Bărbuță +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
2023
This chapter discusses the revolution that erupted on the streets of Petrograd in early 1917 while “Brother Ioann” Churikov was living on the sober colony in Vyritsa. The chapter highlights the small, secret groups in Petrograd that were formed by lay preachers from the community and gathered in private apartments for prayer, Scripture readings, and ...
openaire +1 more source
This chapter discusses the revolution that erupted on the streets of Petrograd in early 1917 while “Brother Ioann” Churikov was living on the sober colony in Vyritsa. The chapter highlights the small, secret groups in Petrograd that were formed by lay preachers from the community and gathered in private apartments for prayer, Scripture readings, and ...
openaire +1 more source
Sobriety versus abstinence. How 12-stepper negotiate long-term recovery across groups
Addiction Research and Theory, 2019Background: Most research on recovery focuses on abstinence. Also, the term sobriety tends to be equated with staying abstinent. This understanding is being questioned by people in long-term recovery who despite being abstinent have not been satisfied ...
Paula Helm
exaly +2 more sources
SOBRIETY AND SEMI-SOBRIETY OF L-TOPOLOGICAL SPACES
Quaestiones Mathematicae, 2001This is a sequel to a paper "Fuzzy sobriety and fuzzy Hausdorff" which appeared in this journal vol. 20, 1997. The relationships between sobriety and fuzzy Hausdorff concepts are more subtle than was envisaged there and a concept of semi-sobriety is appropriate. Mathematics Subject Classification (2000): 54A40, 54D15 Keywords: L-Topological space,
openaire +2 more sources
Information Sciences, 1998
A \(T_0\) topological space \(X\) is called sober iff every irreducible non-empty closed set of \(X\) is of the form \(\overline x\) for a (unique) \(x\in X\). It is known that the category of sober spaces is the epireflective hull of the Sierpinski space 2 in the category of \(T_0\) spaces. \textit{S. E. Rodabaugh} [Fuzzy Sets Syst. 40, No. 2, 297-345
Srivastava, Arun K. +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
A \(T_0\) topological space \(X\) is called sober iff every irreducible non-empty closed set of \(X\) is of the form \(\overline x\) for a (unique) \(x\in X\). It is known that the category of sober spaces is the epireflective hull of the Sierpinski space 2 in the category of \(T_0\) spaces. \textit{S. E. Rodabaugh} [Fuzzy Sets Syst. 40, No. 2, 297-345
Srivastava, Arun K. +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Maintaining Sobriety and Recovery
Nursing Clinics of North America, 2013Recovery is a continuous, progressive process of improvement whereby a person with a substance use disorder first becomes sober and then begins a lifelong commitment to improve his or her health, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach full potential.
openaire +2 more sources

