5,132 research outputs found

    Beyond sex allocation: the role of mating systems in sexual selection in parasitoid wasps

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    Despite the diverse array of mating systems and life histories which characterise the parasitic Hymenoptera,sexual selection and sexual conict in this taxon have been somewhat overlooked. For instance, parasitoidmating systems have typically been studied in terms of how mating structure affects sex allocation. In thepast decade, however, some studies have sought to address sexual selection in the parasitoid wasps moreexplicitly and found that, despite the lack of obvious secondary sexual traits, sexual selection has the potentialto shape a range of aspects of parasitoid reproductive behaviour and ecology. Moreover, various characteristicsfundamental to the parasitoid way of life may provide innovative new ways to investigate different processesof sexual selection. The overall aim of this review therefore is to re-examine parasitoid biology with sexualselection in mind, for both parasitoid biologists and also researchers interested in sexual selection and theevolution of mating systems more generally. We will consider aspects of particular relevance that have alreadybeen well studied including local mating structure, sex allocation and sperm depletion. We go on to review whatwe already know about sexual selection in the parasitoid wasps and highlight areas which may prove fruitfulfor further investigation. In particular, sperm depletion and the costs of inbreeding under chromosomal sexdetermination provide novel opportunities for testing the role of direct and indirect benets for the evolutionof mate choice

    Rowland v Divall: Logical Fallacy?

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    Default Notices: The De Minimus Test

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    Landlord liability for nuisance tenants: no change

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    Considers whether the Court of Appeal ruling in Cocking v Eacott has altered the scope of a landlord's liability for the anti-social conduct of tenants. Reviews the traditional position concerning a landlord's responsibilities in such circumstances, case law on the extent to which "control" is a requirement of liability, and whether alternative methods to having a public landlord adopt a nuisance are available, such as judicial review

    Part-Payment of Debt: A Variation on a Theme?

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    Discusses how the attitude of the English courts towards the validity of agreements to release a debt arising from a commercial contract by the payment of a smaller sum to that owing has developed over time, including: case law applying the ratio of Pinnell's Case and Foakes v Beer; and cases invoking the promissory estoppel doctrine to circumvent Foakes v Beer

    Security Bills Of Sale And Logbook Loans: A Tolerated Eccentricity

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    Security bills of sale are an antiquated means of securing a loan over an individual’s existing physical assets, and whilst they share certain features of other types of credit agreement, they offer none of the protections. A recent Law Commission Consultation proposes a range of sensible amendments. "The civility which money will purchase, is rarely extended to those who have none."1 Charles Dickens, The Broker’s Man The works of Dickens are replete with tales of moneylenders displaying a malevolence and implacability in their dealings with those individuals who, through sheer desperation, became their debtors. Indeed, the real-life versions of Scrooge, Quilp and Heep were freely able to exercise their rapacity at a time when poverty in Victorian England was rife—the Poor Law was the social security of its day and the workhouses were in full swing. Moreover, there was little by way of legislative protection for the debtor, and debtors’ prison was often the consequence of non-payment of debt.2 Whilst these institutions have long since disappeared, and a plethora of consumer credit legislation3 enacted to obviate the worst excesses of Victorian usury, there still exists a compendium of questionable lending practices. This was recognised by Lord Scott in Wilson 4; he commented that consumer credit controls: "[R]ecognise the vulnerability of those members of the public who resort to pawnbrokers and moneylenders when in dire need of funds to make ends meet … They need protection." 5 HH Judge Simon Brown QC made a similar observation in Rankine,6 when commenting on the need to "protect the individual unsophisticated in financial affairs in contracts with unscrupulous and sophisticated financial institutions".7 To this end, and following several revealing investigations into the payday loan sector,8 the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has recently shifted its attention to the evolving, yet equally contentious, logbook loan9 —a business model predicated upon individuals offering their vehicles as security for a loan

    Labour pains: eliminating HCV in women and children

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    Immediate antiretroviral therapy in young HIV-infected children: benefits and risks.

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    Recent WHO guidelines recommend immediate initiation of lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) in all children below 5 years, irrespective of immune/clinical status, to improve access to paediatric ART. Interim trial results provide strong evidence for immediate ART during infancy because of high short-term risk of mortality and disease progression, but there is wider debate regarding the potential risks and benefits of immediate ART in asymptomatic children aged above 1 year. Concerns include long-term toxicities and treatment failure, particularly in resource-constrained settings with limited paediatric treatment options
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