7 research outputs found

    Land Law, Property Ideologies and the British-Irish relationship

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    English and Irish land law are deeply influenced by the historical context of the British-Irish relationship, yet property scholarship comparing the two jurisdictions is surprisingly rare. The current Brexit negotiations provide a timely reminder of the strategic importance of property and trade relations between the two countries; and of their related-but-different legal cultures. In this article we examine how the property cultures of England and Ireland were shaped by the politics and practices of land tenure, by competing economic and property ideologies, and by the influence of both on national identity and statehood in both jurisdictions. The article reveals the role of local contexts and events in shaping land reform, and demonstrates the fertile potential of the comparative frame to contextualise each jurisdiction’s doctrines and practices. As domestic land law systems are drawn together in the context of emerging EU jurisdiction over areas like mortgage credit, each jurisdiction’s underpinning ideological commitments have important implications for the ease – or not – of attempts to harmonize member state practices. We explain the alignments and divergences between domestic underpinnings of Irish and English law, and reflect on the implications of our findings for contemporary property problems in the context of evolving economic and political relationships between the UK and Ireland

    NERVE REGENERATION THROUGH A 2-PLY BIODEGRADABLE NERVE GUIDE IN THE RAT AND THE INFLUENCE OF ACTH4-9 NERVE GROWTH-FACTOR

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    Biodegradable polyurethane-based (PU) nerve guides, instilled with or without ACTH4-9 analog (a melanocortin) were used for bridging an 8 mm gap in the rat sciatic nerve and were evaluated for function and histological appearance after 16 weeks of implantation. Autologous nerve grafts functioned as controls. The guides successfully enabled the sciatic nerve to regenerate across the 8 mm gap, thus effectively reestablishing the contact between the proximal and distal nerve ends. The mean conduction velocity, motor latency, and muscle action potentials of all the nerve guides did not diff er significantly from the autografts. The histological quality of the regeneration in the nerve guides was significantly better than in the autografts; in the nerve guides, a well-defined nerve cable of normal architecture had regenerated without extensive endoneural scarring as seen in the autografts. ACTH4-9 instilled in the nerve guides showed a slight, but significant, increase in the number of myelinated axons. It is concluded that biodegradable PU nerve guides result in similar functional recovery when compared with autografts, but their histological quality is significantly better. ACTH4-9 showed only slight, but significant, improved nerve growth promoting activity. Therefore biodegradable PU nerve guides with ACTH4-9 would appear to be promising alternatives to autografts for bridging nerve defects
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