Results 121 to 130 of about 37,914 (263)
Ethical Issues Conducting Research During War and Violent Conflict: A Review
ABSTRACT Global health engagement increasingly occurs in the context of war and violent conflict. Many health‐related decisions are made which should be guided by evidence. Health research is needed to provide evidence, yet conducting research in conflict settings raises multiple ethical issues.
Dónal O'Mathúna, Emily E. Anderson
wiley +1 more source
How GPs can help forcibly displaced young migrants. [PDF]
Aspray NJ, Goodall VR, Matsiko J.
europepmc +1 more source
Nonhuman Pedagogical Relations: Towards Conceptual Limits
Abstract This article considers the pedagogical relation as a relation to a nonhuman educator, wherein the educatee is a member of the Homo sapiens species. My aim is to clarify the extent to which a nonhuman‐human relation can be understood as pedagogical.
Silas C. Krabbe
wiley +1 more source
Hypervigilance and resistance among palestinian former prisoners. [PDF]
Hamamra B +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Freedom from Torture is a UK-based human rights organisation dedicated to the treatment and rehabilitation of torture survivors. The organisation has been working towards the development of a clinical outcome tool for a number of years, and the purpose ...
Horn, Rebecca, Keefe, Andy
core
Chasing the perfida Albione: Anglo‐Italian productivity gap in the late 1930s
Abstract This paper presents new estimates of Anglo‐Italian labour productivity levels in manufacturing in the late 1930s, derived using the standard single‐deflation approach. The findings confirm a substantial productivity gap between Italy and the United Kingdom at the aggregate level, alongside pronounced intersectoral heterogeneity.
Tancredi Salamone
wiley +1 more source
The pathogenicity of immigration detention: a systemic conflict between medical ethics and harmful migration policies. [PDF]
Cocco N +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract An oft‐overlooked aspect of Sartre’s concept of selfhood is his rejection of good faith and sincerity as normative ideals. We argue that Sartre’s paradoxical treatment of good faith – claiming both that it is a manifestation of bad faith and the antithesis of it – holds a key to understanding Sartre’s account of selfhood.
Mark A. Wrathall, Wanda von Knobelsdorff
wiley +1 more source

