14,525 research outputs found
Where’s the Consultation? The War Powers Resolution and Libya
[Excerpt] “President Barack Obama triggered a War Powers Resolution (WPR) controversy with his military response to the anti-government rebellion and civil war in Libya in 2011. Members of Congress seized upon the WPR, questioning whether the Obama administration had complied with the WPR’s requirements when the United States launched the initial Libyan Operation Odyssey Dawn (OOD) and subsequently participated in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Operation Unified Protector (OUP). Many legislators charged that President Obama had violated the WPR. Concerns centered on such issues as presidential reliance on the United Nations (U.N.) Security Council—rather than Congress—for authorization to act, the WPR’s relevance to what some perceived to be humanitarian missions, our nation’s role in a larger NATO operation, the Obama administration’s definition of “hostilities” under the WPR, and the expiration of the WPR’s sixty-day clock (requiring the termination of military involvement). As debate raged about these and other matters, the WPR’s consultation provisions failed to attract serious congressional scrutiny.
Consultation, however, is at the WPR’s core and the prerequisite for the law’s stated goal that military ventures be based on the “collective judgment” of both Congress and the President. Thus, this Article concentrates on the subject of consultation and its glaring absence from the congressional conversation during the Libya crisis. After providing background on the WPR generally, the consultation requirement more specifically, and the U.S. response to the violence in Libya during the Libyan Revolution, I examine President Obama’s disregard for the consultation mandate’s letter and spirit. I then explore Congress’s muted response to the administration’s consultation violations, analyzing why the administration’s non-compliance did not spark greater congressional outrage. The congressional reaction to President Obama’s initial failure to consult on U.S. policy in Syria in August 2013, I also show, conforms to the analysis here. Finally, I consider what this study suggests for the future of the WPR’s consultation obligation. This Article hence highlights a specific WPR topic—consultation—that heretofore has received neither dedicated nor significant scholarly attention.
Evaluation of the Costs and Benefits of Water and Sanitation Improvements at the Global Level
This study estimated the economic costs and benefits of a range of selected interventions to improve water and sanitation services. The entire analysis is based on changes in water and sanitation service levels. For developing countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) favors intervention options that are low cost, that are feasible, and do not require heavy maintenance. The costs of the interventions include the full investment and annual running costs. The benefits of the interventions include time savings associated with better access to water and sanitation facilities, the gain in productive time due to less time spent ill, health sector and patients costs saved due to less treatment of diarrheal diseases, and the value of prevented deaths. The results show that all water and sanitation improvements were found to be cost-beneficial, and this applied to all world regions
Joint Power Splitting and Secure Beamforming Design in the Wireless-powered Untrusted Relay Networks
In this work, we maximize the secrecy rate of the wireless-powered untrusted
relay network by jointly designing power splitting (PS) ratio and relay
beamforming with the proposed global optimal algorithm (GOA) and local optimal
algorithm (LOA). Different from the literature, artificial noise (AN) sent by
the destination not only degrades the channel condition of the eavesdropper to
improve the secrecy rate, but also becomes a new source of energy powering the
untrusted relay based on PS. Hence, it is of high economic benefits and
efficiency to take advantage of AN compared with the literature. Simulation
results show that LOA can achieve satisfactory secrecy rate performance
compared with that of GOA, but with less computation time.Comment: Submitted to GlobeCom201
Missing: Where Are the Migrants in Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Plans?
Influenza pandemics are perennial global health security threats, with novel and seasonal influenza affecting a large proportion of the world’s population, causing enormous economic and social destruction. Novel viruses such as influenza A(H7N9) continue to emerge, posing zoonotic and potential pandemic threats. Many countries have developed pandemic influenza preparedness plans (PIPPs) aimed at guiding actions and investments to respond to such outbreak events.
Migrant and mobile population groups—such as migrant workers, cross-border frontier workers, refugees, asylum seekers, and other non-citizen categories residing within national boundaries—may be disproportionately affected in the event of health emergencies, with irregular/undocumented migrants experiencing even greater vulnerabilities. Because of a combination of political, sociocultural, economic, and legal barriers, many migrants have limited access to and awareness of health and welfare services, as well as their legal rights. The conditions in which migrants travel, live, and work often carry exceptional risks to their physical and mental well-being. Even if certain migrant groups have access to health services, they tend to avoid them due to fear of deportation, xenophobic and discriminatory attitudes within society, and other linguistic, cultural, and economic barriers. Evidence indicates that social stigmatization and anxieties generated by restrictive immigration policies hinder undocumented immigrants’ access to health rights and minimizes immigrants’ sense of entitlement to such rights
Recursions of Symmetry Orbits and Reduction without Reduction
We consider a four-dimensional PDE possessing partner symmetries mainly on
the example of complex Monge-Amp\`ere equation (CMA). We use simultaneously two
pairs of symmetries related by a recursion relation, which are mutually complex
conjugate for CMA. For both pairs of partner symmetries, using Lie equations,
we introduce explicitly group parameters as additional variables, replacing
symmetry characteristics and their complex conjugates by derivatives of the
unknown with respect to group parameters. We study the resulting system of six
equations in the eight-dimensional space, that includes CMA, four equations of
the recursion between partner symmetries and one integrability condition of
this system. We use point symmetries of this extended system for performing its
symmetry reduction with respect to group parameters that facilitates solving
the extended system. This procedure does not imply a reduction in the number of
physical variables and hence we end up with orbits of non-invariant solutions
of CMA, generated by one partner symmetry, not used in the reduction. These
solutions are determined by six linear equations with constant coefficients in
the five-dimensional space which are obtained by a three-dimensional Legendre
transformation of the reduced extended system. We present algebraic and
exponential examples of such solutions that govern Legendre-transformed
Ricci-flat K\"ahler metrics with no Killing vectors. A similar procedure is
briefly outlined for Husain equation
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