17,797 research outputs found
Effects of Abuse on Female Offenders
Between 1995 and 2005, the number of female offenders increased significantly. However, studies show that most female offenders do not commit violent crimes. Researchers have established that women that have experienced some form of abuse causes them to offend. Although women do not commit violent crimes, they still receive severe punishments. Incarceration is not a solution for reform and courts should consider the effects of abuse on female offenders. This paper illustrates how the effects of abuse correlates with female offenders, describes the effects of abuse on male offenders and how it relates to female offenders, and provides additional risk factors that can lead to a woman’s pathway towards criminality. Additionally, this paper will provide policy implications for women offenders that have experienced abuse in their lifetime
Editor\u27s Note
The articles found in this issue of Explorations in Ethnic Studies focus on a wide variety of topics. The first article by E. San Juan, Jr. challenges Ethnic Studies scholars to reassess the principles and goals of the discipline. Utilizing the experience of Asians in U.S. history, San Juan, Jr. highlights flaws in the pluralistic focus of culture that is separate and apart from the economic and political contexts of minority/majority power relationships. He contends that ethnic studies scholars need to critically address the problem of power, the knowledge it produces and that legitimates the misuse and abuse of such power
Islamic inheritance law, son preference and fertility behavior of Muslim couples in Indonesia
This paper examines whether the son preference and fertility behavior of Muslim couples respond to the risk of inheritance expropriation by their extended family. According to traditional Islamic inheritance principles, only the son of a deceased man can exclude his male agnates from inheritance and preserve his estate within the nuclear household. The paper exploits cross-sectional and time variation in the application of the Islamic inheritance exclusion rule in Indonesia: between Muslim and non-Muslim populations affected by different legal systems, across men with different sibling sex composition, and before and after a change in Islamic law that allowed female children to exclude male relatives. The analysis finds that Muslim couples more affected by the exclusion rule exhibit stronger son preference, practice sex-differential fertility stopping, attain a higher proportion of sons, and have larger families than non-Muslims or Muslims for whom the exclusion rule is less binding.Population Policies,Gender and Law,Population&Development,Adolescent Health,Social Inclusion&Institutions
Soil endowments, production technologies and missing women in India
The female population deficit in India has been explained in a number of ways, but the great heterogeneity in the deficit across districts within India still remains an open question. This paper argues that across India, a largely agrarian economy, soil texture varies exogenously and determines the workability of the soil and the technology used in land preparation. Deep tillage, possible only in lighter and looser loamy soils, reduces the use of labor in cultivation tasks performed by women and has a negative impact on the relative value of girls to a household. The analysis finds that soil texture explains a large part of the variation in women's relative participation in agriculture and in infant sex ratios across districts in India.Labor Markets,Common Property Resource Development,Population Policies,Crops&Crop Management Systems,Labor Policies
Aquaculture in tropical Mexican lakes and dams: achievements and perspectives
Mexico, with highly diverse physiography, geology, soils and climate, is a country with a broad mosaic of aquatic ecosystems within 320 watersheds. This paper presents a brief picture of Mexican fresh waters, the distribution of rainfall and the potential for aquaculture. The main fish species and water bodies, dams and lakes, are highlighted. The country faces problems of surface water shortage which requires better management
Modified Newtonian Dynamics as an entropic force
Under natural assumptions on the thermodynamic properties of space and time
with the holographic principle we reproduce a MOND-like behaviour of gravity on
particular scales of mass and length, where Newtonian gravity requires a
modification or extension if no dark matter component is introduced in the
description of gravitational phenomena. The result is directly obtained with
the assumption that a fundamental constant of nature with dimensions of
acceleration needs to be introduced into gravitational interactions. This in
turn allows for modifications or extensions of the equipartion law and/or the
holographic principle. In other words, MOND-like phenomenology can be
reproduced when appropriate generalised concepts at the thermodynamical level
of space and/or at the holographic principle are introduced. Thermodynamical
modifications are reflected in extensions to the equipartition law which occur
when the temperature of the system drops below a critical value, equals to
Unruh's temperature evaluated at the acceleration constant scale introduced for
the description of the gravitational phenomena. Our calculations extend the
ones by Verlinde (2011) in which Newtonian gravity is shown to be an emergent
phenomenon, and together with it reinforces the idea that gravity at all scales
is emergent.Comment: 6 pages. Accepted for publication in Journal of Modern Physics (JMP
Design methodology for a school prototype: Jean Prouvé’s Jules Ferry School Group in Dieulouard, France, 1952–1953
The catastrophic destruction of buildings in France during World War II demanded that reconstruction become one of the primary objectives in the immediate post-war period. This favoured a culture of experimentation, and created a context for Jean Prouvé to develop designs for school buildings. He developed these designs with a research-based process focusing on technical solutions and their prototypes, and with models whose fundamental premises were rapid and easy assembly-disassembly, lightness and economy. The constant correlation between the projected object and the object created in the workshop shaped the basis for the precision of his designs. This article analyses the methodology followed by Prouvé in the Jules Ferry School Group in Dieulouard, France (1952–1953), in the singular context of the post-war period, illustrating the route followed in developing the model rather than the aesthetics of the building. The prototype used in his schools, and the models generated from this system, demonstrate his architectural methods
U.S.-Mexico Joint Statement on Ministerial Consultations Under the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation
U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao and Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare of Mexico, Carlos Carranza reaffirm their commitment to the effective enforcement of labor laws by their respective departments. The statement also discusses the responsibilities of both labor departments under the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation
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