64 research outputs found
Australian Food Exporters and the European Legal Environment
The European Union (EU) is Australia's largest trading partner, and largest outside investor. With around 370 million consumers, trading rules that have been harmonised and greatly simplified, and mostly low tariff rates, the market is very attractive to exporters from all over the world. Given the rapid and on-going changes in the EU as integration proceeds, a knowledge of its governing and internal law, and the international trade law which relates to it appears to be a prerequisite for successful exporting by Australian firms. Most textbooks suggest that export strategies (e.g., pricing, distribution) should be based on a well-planned legal strategy, and the primary instrument of legal strategy is the contract (e.g., Fox, 1992). As food exporters are especially vulnerable to risk, given the perishable nature of their products, one would expect that Australian food exporters would be particularly sensitive to the legal environment of the EU. The aim of this paper is to examine the place of the legal environment in Australia-EU business relationships, focussing particularly on an empirical study of food exporters
Health and health care utilisation among asylum seekers and refugees in the Netherlands: design of a study
BACKGROUND: This article discusses the design of a study on the prevalence of health problems (both physical and mental) and the utilisation of health care services among asylum seekers and refugees in the Netherlands, including factors that may be related to their health and their utilisation of these services. METHODS/DESIGN: The study will include random samples of adult asylum seekers and refugees from Afghanistan, Iran and Somali (total planned sample of 600), as these are among the largest groups within the reception centres and municipalities in the Netherlands. The questionnaire that will be used will include questions on physical health (chronic and acute diseases and somatization), mental health (Hopkins Symptoms Checklist-25 and Harvard Trauma Questionnaire), utilisation of health care services, pre- and post-migratory traumatic experiences, life-style, acculturation, social support and socio-demographic background. The questionnaire has gone through a translation process (translation and back-translation, several checks and a pilot-study) and cross-cultural adaptation. Respondents will be interviewed by bilingual and bicultural interviewers who will be specifically trained for this purpose. This article discusses the selection of the study population, the chosen outcome measures, the translation and cross-cultural adaptation of the measurement instrument, the training of the interviewers and the practical execution of the study. The information provided may be useful for other researchers in this relatively new field of epidemiological research among various groups of asylum seekers and refugees
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