3,745 research outputs found
Tourism for Sustainable Mountains Development:A Comparative Law Perspective
This contribution aims to assess whether existing mountain laws at the regional and national levels are equipped to ensure environmental protection in regulating and promoting mountain tourism, in the light of relevant guidance provided by the Convention on Biological Diversity. Two major challenges are identified: ensuring the full and effective participation of mountain communities in decision-making related to mountain tourism development, and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from sustainable mountain tourism
From Corporate Social Responsibility to Accountability Mechanisms:The Role of the Convention on Biological Diversity
This paper traces the progressive shift at the international level from purely voluntary approaches (corporate social responsibility or CSR) towards accountability mechanisms to ensure the environmentally sound conduct of private entities. It examines whether the most recent international discussion on human rights and corporate accountability have adequately considered environmental protection concerns. It then concentrates on the growing number of international oversight mechanisms that provide a readily-available and impartial avenue for addressing complaints against private companies..
Upsilon production in pp and pA collisions: from RHIC to the LHC
I discuss Upsilon production in pp collisions at RHIC, Tevatron and LHC
energies, in particular the behaviour of the differential cross section in
rapidity and the impact of QCD corrections on the P_T differential cross
section. I also emphasise the very good agreement between the parameter-free
predictions of the Colour-Singlet Model (CSM) and the first LHC data,
especially in the region of low transverse momenta, which is the most relevant
one for heavy-ion studies. I also show that the CSM predicts Upsilon
cross-section ratios in agreement with the most recent LHC data. I then briefly
discuss the nuclear-matter effects on Upsilon production at RHIC and the LHC in
p(d)A collisions and, by extension, in AA collisions. I argue that a) the
Upsilon break-up probability can be neglected, at RHIC and the LHC, b) gluon
shadowing --although non-negligible-- is not strong enough to describe forward
RHIC data, c) backward RHIC data hints at a gluon EMC effect, possibly stronger
than the quark one. Outlooks for the LHC pPb run are also presented.Comment: Contribution to the 5th International Conference On Hard And
Electromagnetic Probes Of High-Energy Nuclear Collisions (HP2012), 27 May - 1
June 2012, Cagliari, Italy. 4 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX, uses ecrc.sty
(included). v2: version to appear in Nucl. Phys. A (A few typos corrected, 2
refs. added and fig. 1(a) updated with the new STAR point
Polarization of the Microwave Background in Defect Models
We compute the polarization power spectra for global strings, monopoles,
textures and nontopological textures, and compare them to inflationary models.
We find that topological defect models predict a significant (1 microK)
contribution to magnetic type polarization on degree angular scales, which is
produced by the large vector component of the defect source. We also
investigate the effect of decoherence on polarization. It leads to a smoothing
of acoustic oscillations both in temperature and polarization power spectra and
strongly suppresses the cross-correlation between temperature and polarization
relative to inflationary models. Presence or absence of magnetic polarization
or cross-correlation would be a strong discriminator between the two theories
of structure formation and will be testable with the next generation of CMB
satellites.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX fil
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Closed Data: Defamation and Privacy Disputes in England and Wales
The Coalition Government has prioritised 'open data' as a 'powerful tool' to 'empower citizens', with a 'transparency commitment' to publish more crime and anonymised sentencing data and the Ministry of Justice has set out an open data strategy covering both civil and criminal courts. However, legal researchers frequently encounter inaccessible or 'closed' data, when they attempt to access basic information concerning civil cases. Better-organised and more open information would help inform public debates relating to procedural and substantive civil law - the discussion around libel reform and privacy-related interim injunctions, for example. This paper will argue that a lack of public data about defamation and privacy litigation, indicated by the Impact Assessment for the Defamation Bill 2012 and the report by the Master of the Rolls' Committee on Super-Injunctions in 2011, hampers the policy-making process, public debate and academic research around these issues of public interest
Signature of Quantum Hall Effect Skyrmions in Tunneling: A Theoretical Study
We present a theoretical study of the tunneling characteristic between
two parallel two-dimensional electron gases in a perpendicular magnetic field
when both are near filling factor . Finite-size calculations of the
single-layer spectral functions in the spherical geometry and analytical
expressions for the disk geometry in the thermodynamic limit show that the
current in the presence of skyrmions reflects in a direct way their underlying
structure. It is also shown that fingerprints of the electron-electron
interaction pseudopotentials are present in such a current.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Principles of Fairness for International Economic Treaties: Constructivism and Contractualism
Protection of Fundamental Rights Post-Lisbon:The Interaction between the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and National Constitutions (FIDE National Report for the United Kingdom)
This is the United Kingdom national report for the FIDE XXV Congress on the 'Protection of Fundamental Rights Post-Lisbon'. The national report consist of answers from a UK perspective to questions posed by the general rapporteur on the following general topics: Nature and scope of fundamental rights protected; Horizontal Effect and Collision of rights; Consequences of the entry into force of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights; Consequences of the accession of the EU to the ECHR; The future of fundamental rights protection, national and European, in the EU as an ‘area of fundamental rights’
Does Anyone Get Stopped at the Gate? An Empirical Assessment of the Daubert Trilogy in the States
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