3,039 research outputs found

    The Tradition of Interpretavism In Constitutional Interpretation

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    NOSS altimeter algorithm specifications

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    A description of all algorithms required for altimeter processing is given. Each description includes title, description, inputs/outputs, general algebraic sequences and data volume. All required input/output data files are described and the computer resources required for the entire altimeter processing system were estimated. The majority of the data processing requirements for any radar altimeter of the Seasat-1 type are scoped. Additions and deletions could be made for the specific altimeter products required by other projects

    Human Cloning and the Constitution

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    The Incentives and Disincentives Created by Legalizing Physician-Assisted Suicide

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    Buried Dreams: Refitting and Ritual at the Mount Albert Site, Southern Ontario

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    Few intact Middle Archaic sites have been investigated in Southwestern Ontario and attention has focused on large, multicomponent sites, which are difficult to interpret. This thesis focuses on recent work that has been conducted on an undisturbed, single-component Brewerton site in Mount Albert south of Lake Simcoe, where the lithic assemblage presents an unprecedented view of lifeways in the Middle Archaic (ca. 5000-4500 B.P.). Notable is the presence of high numbers of fragmented formal flaked stone tools - moreso than is consistent with solely tool production activities. The thesis evaluates the possibility that the artifacts were intentionally destroyed as part of previously undocumented ceremonial practices in the region. Refitting of the pieces and experimental breakage of reproduction bifaces each offer insights into strategies for the purposeful breakage of stone artifacts

    The Transfer Problem under Uncertainty: The Existence of Pareto-Improving Transfers

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    This paper examines the effect of a unilateral transfer on the welfare of two countries under uncertainty. The traditional welfare effects are summarized and extended for a pure exchange economy with complete contingent claims markets. It is demonstrated that the effects of a transfer in such an economy is isomorphic to the effects in the traditional certainty case where a unilateral transfer always decreases the welfare of the transferor and increases that of the transferee. Further, in the absence of a complete set of markets, examples are exhibited in which a unilateral transfer increases the welfare of both countries
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