213 research outputs found
Hvorfor vokser trafikken pĂĄ vores veje?
Fra 2000 - 2015 voksede vejtrafikken i gennemsnit med 1,2 pct. om året, men det er gået langt hurtigere i de sidste par år, hvor der er kommet større afstand til finanskrisen. Det er forventningen, at trafikken også vil vedblive med at stige fremover. Landstrafikmodellens basisprognose lyder på en vækst på 14 pct. i vejtrafikken fra 2015 til 2030.
For biltrafikken peges der på økonomi (ofte målt som BNP), befolkningens størrelse og sammensætning, priser på biler og kørselsomkostninger, rejsetider og vejkapacitet, erhvervs- og bystruktur, konkurrerende transportformer, såvel som sociale normer og nye teknologier – som de væsentligste drivkræfter. Mange af disse er dækket af de prognosemodeller der anvendes, mens andre falder uden for.
Et overblik over trafikkens drivkræfter er med til at give et udgangspunkt for at forstå og foregribe udviklingen, samt overveje indikatorer, der kan understøtte arbejdet med at planlægge fremtidens infrastruktur og trafik
Stat og civilsamfund i nye relationer. FN's Børnekonventions historie i Danmark
State and civil society in new relationships – the history of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in Denmark The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child has had a remarkable influence in Denmark over the last 25 years. This was not the case from the start. The government as well as the administration were generally favourable to children’s rights, but perceived them as somewhat irrelevant in a Danish context, where children were thriving. However, gradually it became clear that the Convention had unexpected potential. With the change in family structures during the 1970s and 1980s, greater expectations were vested in the state, in relation to its responsibility to protect vulnerable children. This, moreover, increasingly implied a greater willingness to restrict the rights of parents who were not capable of caring for their offspring. This was the socio-political backdrop against which children’s organizations saw new opportunities to claim certain initiatives from the state. Eventually, politicians, and parts of the administration too, realized that the Convention on the Rights of the Child might be a platform for forming new alliances that could serve their interests as well
Parallelle retsordener. En retspluralistisk tolkning af jura og retskultur i Danmark fra slutningen af det 17. til begyndelsen af det 20. ĂĄrhundrede
Parallel Legal Systems: A Legal Pluralist Interpretation of Law and Legal Culture in Denmark from the End of the Seventeenth to the Beginning of the Twentieth CenturyDenmark has a long tradition of parallel and simultaneously functioning legal systems. This pluralist phenomenon has, however, drawn little attention from scholars doing research on the history of law. For one thing, modern legal thinking is founded on monism, which conceives law as a single coherent system established by the state. For another, the parallel legal order described in the present article rests on unwritten custom, the validity of which has gradually been marginalized. A legal pluralist analysis of Danish Law (1683) reveals, however, a picture of two legal orders, each operating on its own set of legal principles. The one was universally valid for all the subjects of the realm and regulated by royal power and the courts. The other was a legal order valid within the domestic domain; it was hierarchical and encompassed all the members of a household with regard to their mutual relationships; it was regulated by custom and coercion proper to the domestic relationships of dominance and submission.Both legal orders were conceived as inherent in natural law, which was the prevailing legal philosophy in the eighteenth century. According to this concept there existed two co-ordinate legal areas. “Assembly lawv” (Tingsret) functioned in an egalitarian manner between equal parties in the area of property and contract. “Personal law” dealt with the unequal domestic relations within the household. At the time of Danish Law and well into the eighteenth century manorial economy was predominantly regulated in accordance with the custom-sanctioned relationships of submission embedded in “personal law.” But at the end of the eighteenth century a change took place in legal dogma allowing copyholders to be transferred from “personal law” to “assembly law.” In the legal literature of the time the peasant is increasingly treated as a “contracting party.” This new legal thinking contributed in no small measure to the arguments behind the extensive agricultural reforms at the turn of the eighteenth century.Among the peasants, however, the reforms left both crofters and servants in their traditional relation of submission to the head of the household: the crofter subordinate to the landowner, the servant principally to the copyholder. The fact that crofters, as late as 1848, were still subjected to the landowner’s right to inflict corporal punishment can be explained by rules based on household law.The political reform movements of 1848-49, implementing a broad suffrage with the enactment of the Constitution of 1849, emancipated the crofter politically and socio-economically from legal subjection to the landowner.Servants, however, remained subject to household law. There was, indeed, a certain element of contractual law in the many new ways of terminating servant status in the 1854 Act Regarding Domestic Servants, but the head of household still held the right to demand submission; and although he no longer held the right to punish disobedient servants, he had recourse to state authorities to do it for him. The law had but few traits in common with otherwise prevailing contractual law. In this instance the traditional legal order persisted.It took decades of negotiation to put through a reform to the benefit of servants. To some extent this was because the Social Democrats has difficulty in arriving at a balanced position. For it was no simple task to construct legal measures that both protected servants against exploitation and at the same time upheld their status as independent individuals entering freely into contract. The Constitution of 1915 and the Domestic Assistant Act of 1921 at last released servants from the authoritarian rights of the head of household, finally burying the remains of the old household legal order.Translated by Michael Wolf
Bruk av transaksjonsavtaler ved selskapsovertakelser : Utvalgte problemstillinger tilknyttet styrets rolle i en oppkjøpssituasjon
Avhandlingen tar for seg styrets rolle ved (forsøk på)selskapsovertakelser. Hovedtemaet er hvordan styret best mulig ivaretar hensynet til selskapet og aksjonærenes interesser ved utforming av transaksjonsavtale med tilbyder. Sentralt står om og i hvilken grad styret plikter å legge til rette for at konkurrerende bud skal kunne fremmes på selskapet
EBNA1 IgM-Based Discrimination Between Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Patients and Healthy Controls
Epstein–Barr Virus (EBV) has been associated with development of rheumatic connective tissue diseases like rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in genetically susceptible individuals. Diagnosis of RA and SLE relies on clinical criteria in combination with the presence of characteristic autoantibodies. In addition, antibodies to several EBV antigens have been shown to be elevated in patients with these diseases compared to healthy controls (HC). Here, we elaborated improved enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for antibodies (IgM, IgA, IgG) to the EBV proteins Epstein-Barr Virus nuclear antigen (EBNA)1 and early antigen diffuse (EAD) in order to determine their potential diagnostic role. We showed that especially EBNA1 IgM distinguished RA from SLE and HCs and also distinguished SLE from HCs. EBNA1 IgA was almost as effective in differentiating RA from SLE and HC, while EAD IgG and IgA were able to discern SLE patients from RA patients and HCs. Collectively, these findings illustrate the potential diagnostic use of antibodies to EBV proteins to diagnose RA and to differentiate SLE from RA
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