8,380,961 research outputs found

    Guides for the Journey: Supporting High-Risk Youth with Paid Mentors and Counselors

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    Strategies to concentrate resources on high-risk youth have long been a goal in the youth field, but the practical means of doing so frequently have eluded practitioners. High-risk youth often are highly transient, and they may need sustained, costly services to address their needs effectively. Guides for the Journey explores a concrete, flexible approach to the problem: the use of paid counselors who stay with young people for extended periods of time. The report profiles three programs now using this strategy and discusses how public funding to support wider use of paid mentors and counselors may be mobilized

    Fall 1996

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    1996 Roster

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    1996 Men\u27s Soccer Roster, George Fox Universit

    1996 Program

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    1996 Women\u27s Basketball Program, George Fox Universit

    1996 Preview

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    Greenhouse Gas Stabilisation: Principles to Guide the Formulation of Possible Targets and Policies and Measures

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    The Ad Hoc Group on the Berlin Mandate at its fourth session requested the Secretariat to compile proposals relating to the treatment of quantified emission limitation and reduction objectives (QELROs) and policies and measures. This paper focuses on the principles for the development of new commitments. The paper does not attempt to cover all relevant issues and is not intended to be exclusive of other ideas.

    Education (Scotland) Act 1996 : Elizabeth II. 1996. Chapter 43

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    The Unforeseen Costs of Going to Trial: The Vitality of 212(C) Relief for Lawful Permanent Residents Convicted by Trial

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    Before 1996, a Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) who was made deportable by a criminal conviction could apply for discretionary relief from deportation under section 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. This relief, commonly known as 212(c) relief, was repealed in 1996. In 2001, the Supreme Court confronted the issue of whether an LPR with a pre-1996 deportable conviction could apply for 212(c) relief in his later post-repeal removal proceedings. The Court decided that an LPR who pleaded guilty to his pre-1996 conviction could still apply for 212(c) relief following the 1996 repeal. The status of those LPRs who were convicted of their pre-1996 offense after a trial remained unclear. Today, the courts of appeals are split on whether LPRs convicted at trial before the repeal of section 212(c) have access to this relief from deportation in their post-1996 removal proceedings stemming from that conviction. This Note examines and synthesizes the different approaches and resolutions of the courts of ap peals. This Note then undertakes an analysis of whether the repeal of 212(c) relief is impermissibly retroactive as to LPRs subject to post-1996 removal proceedings for pre-1996 convictions at trial. Finally, this Note argues that 212(c) relief should remain available to all LPRs in post-1996 removal proceedings stemming from their pre-1996 convictions, whether the conviction was by plea agreement or by trial

    Outlook: March 1996

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    Alumni publication of the Boston University School of Dental Medicine

    1996 Press Release

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    1996 Men\u27s Soccer Press Release. George Fox Universit
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