394,818 research outputs found

    Cap a una gran base de dades per a l'estudi de l'ètica periodística

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    El present article, en el qual es dóna a conèixer una gran base de dades per a l'estudi de l'ètica periodística, s'ha desenvolupat en el marc de la investigació «Ètica i excel ·lència informativa: la deontologia periodística davant les expectatives dels ciutadans », que ha estat duta a terme de manera coordinada per equips de les universitats Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona), Carlos III (Madrid), Universitat del País Basc i Universitat de Sevilla. El text és una adaptació i actualització d'una ponència marc presentada per l'autor en el sisè CIEDI (Congrés Internacional d'Ètica i Dret de la Informació), organitzat per la fundació COSO. Aquesta ponència va ser publicada en llengua espanyola al llibre que recull les aportacions a aquest congrés.1 D'altra part, el marc teòric, així com el tesaurus de l'ètica periodística, prové de la tesi doctoral de l'autor.Towards an extensive database for the study of media ethics This article, which discloses details of an extensive database for the study of media ethics, has been developed within the frame of the research project titled «Ethics and informative excellence: media deontology and citizens expectations» that has been a coordinated effort between teams from several universities (Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, Carlos III University in Madrid, the University of the Basque Country and Seville University). The text is an adapted and updated version of a framework paper presented by the author at the 6th International Conference on Information Law and Ethics organised by the COSO Foundation. This presentation was published in Spanish in the book that compiles all the contributions made at the conference. Moreover, the theoretical framework and the thesaurus on media ethics are from the authors own doctoral thesis

    Guest Editorial on Museum Ethics

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    Museum ethics refer to the values on which museums found their operations. Therefore, they constitute a key issue in the museum world. In the last decade, there have been books, papers, institutions and individuals that solely discuss museum ethics. This collection of papers aims to contribute to this discussion. It is the published outcome of a session hosted at the 'Fourth International Conference on Information Law' (ICIL, 20th – 21st May 2011, Thessaloniki, Greece).1 This guest editorial explains the overall conception of this collection and provides an insider’s view of the papers

    The Public's health and the law in the 21st century: second annual partnership conference on public health law

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    Introduction / Benjamin J. Moulton -- Preface / Sherry Everett Jones -- Conference Welcoming Remarks / Ed Thompson -- -- PLENARY SESSIONS -- From Smallpox to SARS: Is the Past Prologue? / John J. Hamre, James G. Young, and Mark Shurtleff -- From Public Health to Population Health: How Law Can Redefine the Playing Field / Daniel M. Fox, Mary Kramer, and Marion Standish -- Public Health Law: The Values of Global Collaboration / Myongsei Sohn -- Are We Prepared for Tomorrow's Health Challenges? / Angela Z. Monson, George E. Hardy, Jr., and Ed Thompson -- -- PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS -- Workshop on Smallpox Legal Preparedness: What Have We Learned? / Gene W. Matthews, Anne M. Murphy, Wilfredo Lopez, and Walter A. Orenstein -- Symposium on Public Health Law Surveillance: The Nexus of Information Technology and Public Health Law / Angela McGowan, Michael Schooley, Helen Narvasa, Jocelyn Rankin, and Daniel M. Sosin -- -- CONCURRENT SESSIONS -- -- PUBLIC HEALTH LAW ON THE FRONT BURNER -- Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: TOPOFF 2 and Other Lessons / John A. Heaton, Anne M. Murphy, Susan Allan, and Harald -- Public Health Preparedness and the Law in Communities of Color / Vernellia R. Randall, Glen Safford, and Walter W. Williams -- Approaches to Implementing the Olmstead ADA (Americans With Disabilities Act) Ruling / Shelley R. Jackson, Gayle Hafner, Daniel O'Brien, and Georges Benjamin -- The Challenge of For-Profit Health Care Conversions / Marion R. Fremont-Smith, Mark Urban, and Sandy Praeger -- The Role of Law in Health Services Delivery: Diabetes and State-Mandated Benefits / DeKeely Hartsfiled and Frank Vinicor -- -- BUILDING PUBLIC HEALTH LAW PARTNERSHIPS -- New Pressures/New Partnerships: Public Health and Law Enforcement / Cliff Karchmer, Pam Tully, Leah Devlin, Frank Whitney, and Michael Sage -- When Public Health Meets the Judiciary / Michael J. Murphy, Anne M. Murphy, Maureen E. Conner, and Linda Chezem -- Health Care and Public Health Lawyers: Reclaiming the Historical Role / Maureen Mudron, Cynthia Honssinger, Rod G. Meadows, and Lori Spencer -- Should Your State Have a Public Health Law Center? / Jill Moore, Marice Ashe, Patricia Gray, and Doug Blanke -- -- FROM SCIENCE TO LAW TO IMPACT -- New Directions in Health Insurance Design: Implications for Public Policy and Practice / Karen Pollitz, Donna Imhoff, Charles Scott, and Sara Rosenbaum -- Quarantine in Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Other Emerging Infectious Diseases / Jane Speakman, Fernando Gonza\u301lez-Marti\u301n, and Tony Perez -- Using Science-Based Guidelines to Shape Public Health Law / Stephanie Zaza, John Clymer, Linda Upmeyer, and Stephen B. Thacker -- Applying the Regulatory Powers of Public Health / Angela Z. Monson, Jake Pauls, and Michelle Leverett -- The HIPAA Privacy Rule: Reviewing the Post-Compliance Impact on Public Health Practice and Research / Lora Kutkat, James G. Hodge, Jr., Thomas Jeffry, Jr., and Diana M. Bonta\u301 -- -- USING "OTHER" LAWS FOR BETTER PUBLIC HEALTH -- School-Based Policies: Nutrition and Physical Activity / Dexter Louie, Eduardo J. Sanchez, Sean Faircloth, and William A. Dietz, Jr. -- The Role of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) in Public Health Law / Suzi Ruhl, Mari Stephens, and Paul Locke -- Land Use and Zoning for the Public's Health / Bruce Bragg, Thomas Galloway, Doug B. Spohn, and Donne E. Trotter -- Who Will Keep the Public Healthy? Assuring a Legally Prepared Workforce / Mary Anne Viverette, Jennifer Leaning, Susan K. Steeg, Kristine M. Gebbie, and Maureen Litchveld -- -- CROSS CUTTING ISSUES -- Preemption in Public Health: The Dynamics of Clean Indoor Air Laws / Elva Yan\u303ez, Gary Cox, Mike Cooney, and Robert Eadie -- New Developments in Public Health Case Law / Karen Smith Thiel -- Using the Turning Point Model State Public Health Law / Lawrence O. Gostin, Glen Safford, and Deborah Erickson -- Workshop on Public Health Law and Ethics I & II: The Challenge of Public/Private Partnerships (PPPs) / Michael R. Reich, Jody Henry Hershey, George E. Hardy, Jr.,James F. Childress, and Ruth Gaare Bernheim -- -- FULL PAPERS ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION -- New Directions for Health Insurance Design: Implications for Public Policy and Practice / Sara Rosenbaum -- Public Health Ethics: The Voices of Practitioners / Ruth Gaare Bernheim -- -- APPENDICES -- Appendix A: Conference Planning Committee -- Appendix B: Collaborating Conference Organizations and Centers for -- Disease Control and Prevention Programs"Special supplement to Volume. 31:4 (Winter 2003), the Journal of law, medicine & ethics ." - coverConference convened in Atlanta, Georgia, by the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Department of Health and Human Services on June 16-18, 2003

    Advocate, Spring 1999, Vol. 33, No. 2

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    Law Day/Family Day \u2799: Justice in A Civil Action, Is civil justice an oxymoron? Law Day/Family Day \u2799 tackled the tough question in various forums and got some heartfelt, humorous answers from plaintiff\u27s attorney Jan Schlichtmann, who represented the families in the famous Massachusetts toxic torts case. Faculty Dialogue, Training Problem-Solvers: Lawyers and the Ethics of Dispute Resolution -Assistant Professor and Civil Clinics Director Alex Scherr Regulation by Litigation : Targeting Firearms & Tobacco -Q & A with Assistant Professor Richard Nagareda Reflections on Law School and the Profession: An Interview with Georgia Governor Roy Barnes, Governor Roy Barnes 0.0.\u2772) shares his thoughts on the profession and reminisces about the school that shaped the state\u27s leaders. Carter Professor Perry Sentell\u27s recollections of his former student, presented at a law school reception honoring the new governor, are reprinted. Learning By Doing: Hands-On Experience in Lawyering, Law students satisfy their hunger for experience through new clinical offerings, developing practical skills and whetting their appetite for public service. DEPARTMENTS Headlines 1L crowned Miss UGA. Commentary on Justice Harry Blackmun\u27s death. Young Alum Represents Marine in Italian Ski Gondola Accident. Creation of Cleveland Ethics Chair. Hirsch Hall Highlights, Site Inspection Summary. U.S. News Ranking. Honor Court Revised. Kudos for Rusk Center\u27s NPR Series. Admissions Recruiting Initiative. Intros. Carter Chair Clerkships. Faculty Accomplishments Kudos for Ed Larson, Laurie Fowler (J.D.\u2783) and Alex Scherr. Programs, Sibley Lectures and Red Clay Conference. Alumni Activities, Mid-Year Bar Meeting and Our-of-State Gatherings. Messages from LSAC and BOV Leaders. Development Update. Student Briefs, Profiles of Jason Green, Michael Sullivan and Dana Lennox. Student Honors and Activities. Moot Court/Mock Trial Season Summary. Class Notes, Updates From Your Classmates and Features on Rufe McCombs (LL.B.\u2742), Alan Shor (J.D.\u2783) and Kriste Richardson (J.D.\u2798). Homecoming and Reunion Weekend Information

    CIPIT Conference data

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    The document is an agenda for conference proceedings of the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Technology Law (CIPIT). Topics range widely: Sub regional consultation on the draft text on the ethics of AI; Cyber Crime and Electronic Evidence Training for Judges; What You Need to Know About Your Digital Security; A Public Discussion on the ICT Practitioners Bill (2020); Virtual Meeting with the Data Commissioner and The Task Force of the Kenya Data Protection Regulations, and many others regarding digital rights, tech surveillance, Internet rights and inclusion

    An Ethical Framework for Engineering Faculty: Motivation, Examples & Discussion

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    Engineering faculty address ethics from two perspectives. The first is as required content related to the ABET outcome that engineering graduates will have an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility. The second is as practitioners who face a range of ethical dilemmas and challenges, from plagiarism to “passenger” team members to professional relationships with colleagues to responsible conduct of their own research. As faculty members and professionals, we have multiple guides, including the recently adopted ASEE Code of Ethics (http://www.asee.org/member-resources/resources/Code_of_Ethics.pdf), however, there is still a need to examine frameworks and develop skills in both practicing and teaching professional and ethical responsibility. This presentation and paper will present a framework used at multiple institutions and previously presented at the national conference by Bates & Loui (2013). The approach starts with identifying stakeholders, gathering information and considering alternative actions and consequences. These actions are then evaluated with a series of tests related to basic ethical values: Harm test: Do the benefits outweigh the harms, short term and long term? Reversibility test: Would this choice still look good if I traded places? Common practice test: What if everyone behaved in this way? Legality test: Would this choice violate a law or a policy of my employer? Colleague test: What would professional colleagues say? Wise relative test: What would my wise old aunt or uncle do? Mirror test: Would I feel proud of myself when I look into the mirror? Publicity test: How would this choice look on the front page of a newspaper? Interactive discussion will include ways this approach has been used in multidisciplinary STEM classes and ways it can be used by faculty to support reflection on their own practice. The paper and presentation will also include links to supporting resources such as NAE’s growing Online Ethics Center and the Ethics CORE (Collaborative Online Resource Environment) portal

    On the Eve of Web-Harvesting and Web- Archiving for Libraries in Greece

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    This conference paper submitted on the occasion of the 8th International Conference on Information Law and Ethics (University of Antwerp, December 13-14, 2018) that focused on modern intellectual property governance and openness in Europe elaborates upon the Text and Data Mining (TDM) issue in the field of scientific research, which is still-by the time of composition of this paper-in the process of discussion and forthcoming voting before the European Parliament in the form of provision(s) included in a new Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. TDM is included in the proposal for a Directive of the European parliament and of the Council on copyright in the Digital Single Market-Proposal COM(2016)593 final 2016/0280(COD) that was submitted to the European Parliament

    Evolving Roles and Responsibilities of Public Health

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    Since 2008, over 10,000 public health professionals have become Certified in Public Health (CPH). Periodically, the NBPHE conducts a Job Task Analysis survey to gain an understanding of the roles and responsibilities of the public health workforce. With that information, the main areas of focus on the CPH exam are updated. In the summer of 2022, the National Board of Public Health Examiners launched a newJob Task Analysis process. The comprehensive set of responses will demonstrate the scope of public health responsibilities on a region-by-region basis. Current domains of the CPH exam are: Communications, Leadership, Law and Ethics, Public Health Biology and Human Disease Risk, Collaboration and Partnership, Program Planning and Evaluation, Program Management, Policy in Public Health, Health Equity and Social Justice, and Evidence-based Approaches to Public Health. As the public health workforce evolves to meet contemporary challenges, so must the public health certification process. This session will include a discussion about how the areas of responsibility for the public health workforce have changed over the last six years and the impact of COVID19. Conference attendees are invited to engage in a discussion about the findings of the Job Task Analysis process, possible changes to the CPH exam domains and early analysis of public health roles and responsibilities around the globe

    Foreword Special Issue: Ethical Issues in Representing Older Clients

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