718 research outputs found

    When Jail & Prison Sentences Become Death Sentences: How Willfully Exposing Incarcerated Persons to COVID-19 Amounts to Cruel & Unusual Punishment

    Get PDF
    Eric Warner called his older brother Hank from San Quentin State Prison almost every Sunday. Though the prison only allowed the brothers to speak for fifteen minutes each week, the two spoke about their lives. In June 2021, Eric stopped calling, and Hank became worried. Hank tried to get in touch with the prison. However, his calls were met with a dead-end voicemail each time. He recalls that he “knew, by not hearing anything, that something was not good.” The following month, prison personnel returned Hank’s calls and told him that his brother Eric had been hospitalized. Later that month, the prison called Hank again to tell him that his brother Eric had died after contracting coronavirus while incarcerated at San Quentin. Eric Warner was fifty-seven years old

    Pushing RBST: How the Law and the Political Process Were Used to Sell Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin to America

    Get PDF
    This Article examines the controversy surrounding the use of rBST, a genetically altered growth hormone, in cows so that they produce more milk. Biotechnology holds tremendous benefits for society. However, this Article examines the inadequacy of the current regulatory scheme in addressing rBST. This Article contends that the inadequate nature of the regulatory scheme is due to the fact that lawmakers are overly concerned with the protection and development of the biotechnology industry. The law, as it stands, does not take into consideration the unknown health risks of rBST

    Washington, D.C.: the Capital of Fair Housing Act Violations

    Get PDF

    Law Professors Read Habermas

    Get PDF

    Who Ya Gonna Call? An Analysis of Paradigm Shifts and Social Harms As a Result of Hyper-Viral Police Violence

    Get PDF

    The Oncogenicity of Human Cytomegalovirus

    Get PDF

    AIDS-Related Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma in the Era of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy

    Get PDF
    In economically developed countries, AIDS-related lymphoma (ARL) accounts for a large proportion of malignances in HIV-infected individuals. Since the introduction of highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) in 1996, epidemiology and prognosis of ARL have changed. While there is a slight increase in the incidence of Hodgkin's lymphoma in HIV-infected individuals, use of HAART has contributed to a decline in the incidence of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and also a decrease in the overall incidence of ARL. Strategies that employ HAART, improved supportive care, and the use of Rituximab with multi-agent chemotherapy have contributed to improved rates of complete remission and survival of patients with ARL that rival those seen in stage and histology matched HIV negative NHL patients. Most recent clinical trials demonstrate better outcomes with the use of rituximab in ARL. Tumor histogenesis (germinal center vs. non-germinal center origin) is associated with lymphoma-specific outcomes in the setting of AIDS-related diffuse-large B cell lymphoma. High-dose chemotherapy (HDCT) and autologous stem cell rescue (ASCT) can be effective for a subset of patients with relapsed ARL. HIV sero-status alone should not preclude consideration of ASCT in the setting of ARL relapse. Clinical trials investigating the role of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant in ARL are currently underway

    Emotion regulation after traumatic brain injury: distinct patterns of sympathetic activity during anger expression and recognition

    Get PDF
    Abstract OBJECTIVE: To assess psychological and psychophysiological correlates of emotion recognition and anger experience in participants with traumatic brain injury (TBI). PARTICIPANTS: Twenty participants with TBI presenting with anger problems and 22 healthy controls. PROCEDURES: Participants were administered tasks assessing emotion recognition (The French Evaluation Task) and anger expression (Anger regulation task). The latter, designed to elicit and modulate anger feelings through verbal recall of a self-experienced event, involved 4 recall conditions that followed a resting period: neutral, uninstructed anger recall, anger rumination, and anger reappraisal. MEASURES: Skin conductance levels during recall and a self-report anger questionnaire between each condition. RESULTS: In the TBI and control groups, self-reported anger was similarly modulated across emotion regulation conditions. However, only in the TBI group did skin conductance levels significantly increase between neutral and uninstructed anger recall conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Impaired emotion regulation in TBI participants could be related to increased levels of autonomic system activity during emotional experience. However, anger feelings in these participants can also be modulated with the use of emotion regulation strategies, including adaptive strategies such as reappraisal. Thus, promoting awareness and management of physiological activation and encouraging cognitive restructuring can be recommended as a component of interventions targeting emotion regulation in TBI patients

    Through the Eyes of Mad Men

    Get PDF
    Traditionally pragmatists have been favorably disposed to improving our understanding of agency and ethics through the use of empirical research. In the last two decades simulation theory has been championed in certain cognitive science circles as a way of explaining how we attribute mental states and predict human behavior. Drawing on research in psychology and neuroscience, Alvin I. Goldman and Robert M. Gordon have not only used simulation theory to discuss how we “mindread,” but have suggested that the theory has implications for ethics. The limitations of simulation theory for “mindreading” and ethics are addressed in this article from an interactionist or neo-Meadian pragmatic perspective. To demonstrate the limitations of simulation theory scenes from the television show Mad Men are used as “thought-experiments.
    corecore