58 research outputs found
Behavioral Therapy for Tourette Syndrome and Chronic Tic Disorders
Purpose of review: To summarize behavioral interventions for the treatment of primary tic disorders. Recent findings: Although tics were attributed to a disordered weak volition, the shift towards neurobiological models of tic disorders also transformed nonpharmacologic treatment practices. Current international guidelines recommend habit reversal training, comprehensive behavioral intervention, and exposure and response prevention as first-line therapies for tics. Appropriate patient selection, including age and presence of comorbidities, are salient clinical features that merit consideration. Evidence for further behavioral interventions is also presented. Summary: Currently recommended behavioral interventions view tics as habitual responses that may be further strengthened through negative reinforcement. Although availability and costs related to these interventions may limit their effect, Internet-based and telehealth approaches may facilitate wide accessibility. Novel nonpharmacologic treatments that take different approaches, such as autonomic modulation or attention-based interventions, may also hold therapeutic promise
Transnational labor regulation, reification and commodification: A critical review
Why does scholarship on transnational labor regulation
(TLR) consistently fails to search for improvements in
working conditions, and instead devotes itself to relentless
efforts for identifying administrative processes, semantics,
and amalgamations of stakeholders? This article critiques
TLR from a pro-worker perspective, through the philosophical
work of Georg Lukács, and the concepts of reification
and commodification. A set of theoretically grounded criteria
is developed and these are applied against selected
contemporary cases of TLR. In the totality that is capitalism,
reification of social relations of production conceals
completely the experiences of workers. In TLR, managerialist
and process-oriented scholarship is dominant, verifiable
outcomes and positive improvements in conditions of
employment are not sought, and worse, meaningless
procedures are celebrated as positive achievements
The Dynamics of the Regulation of Labor in Developing and Developed Countries since 1960
This paper examines both the determinants and the effects of changes in the rigidity of labor market legislation across countries over time. Recent research identifies the origin of the legal system as being a major determinant of the cross-country variation in the rigidity of employment protection legislation. However, the supporting evidence is largely confined to levels of regulation and is almost exclusively based on international cross-section data for the post-1995 period. This paper introduces a new index capturing the rigidity of employment protection legislation (LAMRIG) for an unbalanced panel of more than 140 countries over time starting in 1960. Although the importance of legal origins in explaining the level of rigidity of labor regulations across countries is replicated using LAMRIG, their explanatory power is much weakened for changes over time (1960-2004.) More important as determinants of such changes are the level of development and other reforms such as trade liberalization. With respect to the effects of changes in the rigidity of labor regulations on growth and inequality, which have been very controversial in the literature, results with LAMRIG support Freeman’s conjecture that changes in rigidity do not systematically affect economic growth but do lower income inequality.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/133054/1/wp1037.pd
PARENTAL ADJUSTMENT DURING EARLY INFANCY: A COMPARISON OF SINGLETON AND TWIN BIRTHS.
Abstract not availabl
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