157 research outputs found
Negotiating the Maze: Tracing Historical Title Claims in Spanish Land Grants and Swamp and Overflowed Lands Act
This article discusses the treatment of submerged sovereignty lands transferred to the United States through quitclaim transactions; states acquiring such lands were instructed that they be used to benefit the public interest and, as such, transfer was prohibited unless it would advance such interests. For comparison, the article also traces the acquisition and treatment of those lands which Florida took title to upon statehood as swamp and overflowed lands to be used, conversely, for purposes of internal improvement. To distinguish between the treatment of the lands acquired through the different methods, the article traces the various state and federal legislative acts enacted to deal with both. The ultimate goal of the authors in this article is to address the difficultly in properly evaluating the validity of public and private claims to submerged sovereignty lands and swamp and overflowed lands that arise as a result of the differing treatments
Stop the Beach Renourishment Stops Private Beachowners\u27 Right to Exclude the Public
In this article, the authors examine the various measures implemented by state and local governments to enhance public access to and use of government-owned tidelands, streambeds, and lake shores and how, although not necessarily titled as such, many of these measures result, without payment of compensation, in an easement allowing public access to and use of private waterfront property.
Section I describes the rights of riparian property owners and the right of the public to use government-owned shores and tidelands, followed by a general overview of various state legislative and judicial responses designed to address the conflicts that arise when these competing interests collide. The section then focuses on the legislative and judicial developments in two geographically and culturally distinct jurisdictions.
Section II discusses the laws of Florida. Section III discusses the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
Section IV analyzes the laws of Montana, which strongly protect the public\u27s right to recreate on all waters located within its boundaries and the effect of those laws on private property rights.
Section V addresses the creative public access laws of Hawaii and Texas. Finally, in Section VI, the authors conclude with an assessment of the impact of the Stop the Beach Renourishment case on state efforts to provide access to government-owned waters, tidelands, and shores
Stop the Beach Renourishment Stops Private Beachowners\u27 Right to Exclude the Public
In this article, the authors examine the various measures implemented by state and local governments to enhance public access to and use of government-owned tidelands, streambeds, and lake shores and how, although not necessarily titled as such, many of these measures result, without payment of compensation, in an easement allowing public access to and use of private waterfront property.
Section I describes the rights of riparian property owners and the right of the public to use government-owned shores and tidelands, followed by a general overview of various state legislative and judicial responses designed to address the conflicts that arise when these competing interests collide. The section then focuses on the legislative and judicial developments in two geographically and culturally distinct jurisdictions.
Section II discusses the laws of Florida. Section III discusses the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
Section IV analyzes the laws of Montana, which strongly protect the public\u27s right to recreate on all waters located within its boundaries and the effect of those laws on private property rights.
Section V addresses the creative public access laws of Hawaii and Texas. Finally, in Section VI, the authors conclude with an assessment of the impact of the Stop the Beach Renourishment case on state efforts to provide access to government-owned waters, tidelands, and shores
High-order harmonic generation from polyatomic molecules including nuclear motion and a nuclear modes analysis
We present a generic approach for treating the effect of nuclear motion in
the high-order harmonic generation from polyatomic molecules. Our procedure
relies on a separation of nuclear and electron dynamics where we account for
the electronic part using the Lewenstein model and nuclear motion enters as a
nuclear correlation function. We express the nuclear correlation function in
terms of Franck-Condon factors which allows us to decompose nuclear motion into
modes and identify the modes that are dominant in the high-order harmonic
generation process. We show results for the isotopes CH and CD and
thereby provide direct theoretical support for a recent experiment [Baker {\it
et al.}, Science {\bf 312}, 424 (2006)] that uses high-order harmonic
generation to probe the ultra-fast structural nuclear rearrangement of ionized
methane.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
The five-item Brief-Symptom Rating Scale as a suicide ideation screening instrument for psychiatric inpatients and community residents
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>An efficient screening instrument which can be used in diverse settings to predict suicide in different populations is vital. The aim of this study was to use the five-item Brief Symptom Rating Scale (BSRS-5) as a screening instrument for the prediction of suicide ideation in psychiatric, community and general medical settings.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Five hundred and one psychiatric, 1,040 community and 969 general medical participants were recruited. The community participants completed a structured telephone interview, and the other two groups completed the self-report BSRS-5 questionnaire.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The logistic regression analysis showed that the predictors of suicide ideation for the psychiatric group were depression, hostility and inferiority (<it>p </it>< 0.001, <it>p </it>= 0.016, <it>p </it>= 0.011), for the community group, inferiority, hostility and insomnia (<it>p </it>< 0.001, <it>p </it>< 0.001, <it>p </it>= 0.003), and for the general medical group, inferiority, hostility, depression and insomnia (<it>p </it>< 0.001, <it>p </it>= 0.001, <it>p </it>= 0.020, <it>p </it>= 0.008). The structural equation model showed the same symptom domains that predicted suicide ideation for all three groups. The receiver operating characteristic curve using the significant symptom domains from logistic regression showed that for the psychiatric group, the optimal cut-off point was 4/5 for the total of the significant dimensions (positive predictive value [PPV] = 78.01%, negative predictive value [NPV] = 79.05%), for the community group, 7/8 (PPV = 68.75%, NPV = 96.09%), and for the general medical group, 12/13 (PPV = 92.86%, NPV = 88.48%).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The BSRS-5 is an efficient tool for the screening of suicide ideation-prone psychiatric inpatients, general medical patients, and community residents. Understanding the discriminative symptom domains for different groups and the relationship between them can help health care professionals in their preventative programs and clinical treatment.</p
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