65 research outputs found

    Politicized armies, militarized politics : civil-military relations in Turkey and Greece

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2007.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 55-60).Despite their common Ottoman heritage, Greece and Turkey have diverged widely in their modem history of civil-military relations. The armed forces have a long record of intervention in both countries, but there is a crucial difference: the military emerged as a roughly unitary, independent political actor in Turkey, whereas in Greece it remained divided into factions aligned with civilian political parties through patronage relationships. This empirical observation is then used as a basis for an attempt at theory building. Several countries exhibit a pattern of military interventions more similar to Turkey and others to those found in Greece. Societies which developed a strong parliamentary tradition early in the modernization process also acquired organized civilian political groups with clientelist networks extending into the armed forces. On the contrary, in countries with limited or weak parliamentary development and strong security pressures, political activism was often channeled through the military, which emerged as a hotbed of political thinking, predating and pre-empting any civilian party tradition. The former type of civil-military relations was more commonly found in Southern European and Latin American countries while the latter was predominant in non-Western societies that resisted Western colonization.by Evangelos Liaras.S.M

    Can electoral engineering save multiethnic democracy?

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, February 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. [219]-244).The objective of this dissertation is to systematize the existing hypotheses in the electoral engineering literature and to test them in a set of selected case studies in order to answer a central question: does the electoral system affect the structure of political parties in ethnically divided societies and if so how? The academic debate on electoral design for divided societies has focused on the impact of institutional choices on ultimate conflict outcomes. The findings of previous studies have been generally inconclusive, while the lack of sub-national data on ethnic composition and voting patterns has made it difficult to examine mechanisms regarding the role of demographics. To approach the problem from a different angle, I propose a research design focusing on the intermediate link from electoral institutions to the ethnic structure of the party system. For the empirical portion of my work, I chose to conduct a structured historical comparison of four societies which implemented major electoral reforms: Turkey, Northern Ireland, Guyana, and Sri Lanka. Based on the study of these cases, I am arguing that politicians and voters have not responded to electoral incentives in the ways predicted by existent theories, and that no clear relationship can be observed between the electoral system's proportionality, the heterogeneity of electoral constituencies, and the number of parties or the types of ethnic appeals they make to voters. These findings indicate that the hopes placed in electoral system design for divided societies are unwarranted and that attention among political scientists and policymakers should shift to other peace-building approaches.by Evangelos Liaras.Ph.D

    Liquid-based cytology for primary cervical cancer screening: a multi-centre study

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    The aim of this six-centre, split-sample study was to compare ThinPrep fluid-based cytology to the conventional Papanicolaou smear. Six cytopathology laboratories and 35 gynaecologists participated. 5428 patients met the inclusion criteria (age > 18 years old, intact cervix, informed consent). Each cervical sample was used first to prepare a conventional Pap smear, then the sampling device was rinsed into a PreservCyt vial, and a ThinPrep slide was made. Screening of slide pairs was blinded (n = 5428). All non-negative concordant cases (n = 101), all non-concordant cases (n = 206), and a 5% random sample of concordant negative cases (n = 272) underwent review by one independent pathologist then by the panel of 6 investigators. Initial (blinded) screening results for ThinPrep and conventional smears were correlated. Initial diagnoses were correlated with consensus cytological diagnoses. Differences in disease detection were evaluated using McNemar's test. On initial screening, 29% more ASCUS cases and 39% more low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (LSIL) and more severe lesions (LSIL+) were detected on the ThinPrep slides than on the conventional smears (P = 0.001), including 50% more LSIL and 18% more high-grade SIL (HSIL). The ASCUS:SIL ratio was lower for the ThinPrep method (115:132 = 0.87:1) than for the conventional smear method (89:94 = 0.95:1). The same trend was observed for the ASCUS/AGUS:LSIL ratio. Independent and consensus review confirmed 145 LSIL+ diagnoses; of these, 18% more had been detected initially on the ThinPrep slides than on the conventional smears (P = 0.041). The ThinPrep Pap Test is more accurate than the conventional Pap test and has the potential to optimize the effectiveness of primary cervical cancer screening. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co

    Turkey's Party System and the Paucity of Minority Policy Reform

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    An earlier version of this paper was presented in Workshop 9: ‘Changing Party Political Constellations and Public Policy Reform in Southern Europe’ at the Tenth Mediterranean Research Meeting, Florence & Montecatini Terme, 25-28 March 2009, organised by the Mediterranean Programme of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute.The purpose of this paper is to explore the question of small and incremental reform in Turkish minority policies over the last two decades, contrasting with the dramatic economic, social, and political changes that the country has experienced over the same period. The main focus will be on two partly overlapping groups living in Turkey (Alevis and Kurds); comparison with other Southern European countries will be made as background reference. The reason for this focus is analytical: these two groups are structurally different from minorities found in Italy or Greece in that they are both large enough to carry great electoral weight and politically salient enough to affect Turkey's EU accession prospects. Minority policy is an often overlooked realm of public policy, either because it is considered too sensitive or too case-specific, as opposed to fiscal, labor, family, and immigration policy, which, at least in the European context, are now typically examined and compared by scholars on a more transnational framework. However, minority policy broadly defined (as the recognition and treatment of sections of the population identified as belonging to a special cultural heritage) touches upon a number of diverse policy areas including civil rights, education, regional development, relations between religion and state, language, culture, and national security. In Turkey minority policy in official discourse has historically been linked to the non-Muslim minorities protected by the Treaty of Lausanne, whereas Alevis and Kurds were traditionally accorded no special recognition under the Kemalist Republic. The first part of the paper attempts to theoretically situate minority policy in the context of competitive party politics. What is puzzling about Turkey is why given a climate of increased democratization and confidence after the suppression of the PKK insurgency, the Turkish party system has not been more responsive to the long-standing grievances of Kurds and Alevis. Partly based on existing literature, the author posits that a constellation of factors is necessary for policy reform on minority issues to proceed in a democratic system: the mobilization of the minority group(s) in question and either high external pressure on the state to satisfy minority demands or significant electoral competition for the minority's votes or participation in government of a party that monopolizes the minority vote and is ideologically committed to its agenda. The second part of the paper briefly discusses the history of state attitudes towards Kurds and Alevis in Turkey, as well as more recent developments including the reforms on Kurdish language rights, the abortive Çamuroğlu recommendations regarding Alevi pious foundations, DTP’s entry in parliament, and the constitutional amendment process launched by AKP. The third and final part of the paper explains why Turkey's party system for a long time lacked the necessary preconditions for more groundbreaking policy changes, underlining the importance of external pressure from the EU as an engine for reform.(Product of workshop No. 9 at the 10th MRM 2009)

    The consumer and the insurance : legal aspects

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    Le lien existant entre un sujet de droit (le consommateur) et un domaine du droit aussi technique que l’assurance n’est pas facile Ă  apprĂ©hender. Son Ă©tude est pourtant nĂ©cessaire en Ă©gard Ă  l’importance pratique de la question – les contrats d’assurance se comptent pas millions et les procĂšs par milliers – et Ă  son actualitĂ© fortement marquĂ©e par la « loi Hamon » du 17 mars 2014. Par-delĂ  ces considĂ©rations, il est courant de souligner que, confrontĂ© Ă  l’assurance, le consommateur est dans une situation de faiblesse et qu’il doit ĂȘtre protĂ©gĂ©. Mais quelle branche du droit, du droit de la consommation ou du droit des assurances est la mieux Ă  mĂȘme de le faire ? Et des conflits de normes peuvent-ils survenir ? A cet Ă©gard, la protection offerte par le droit de la consommation est indĂ©niable, notamment en matiĂšre d’information du consommateur ou de lutte contre les clauses abusives. Mais le droit des assurances n’a pas attendu l’avĂšnement du courant consumĂ©riste pour protĂ©ger tout assurĂ© et pas seulement les consommateurs. De ce point de vue, les deux droits n’ont pas la mĂȘme conception ni du consommateur d’assurance, ni de ma maniĂšre dont l’assurance du consommateur doit ĂȘtre rĂ©glementĂ©e. Ce sont deux axes autour desquels la thĂšse s’articule. Celle-ci traite aussi bien des personnes Ă  protĂ©ger que de l’étendue de la protection, en insistant pour chaque thĂšme sur les conflits de normes rĂ©els ou potentiels.Analysing the link between a subject of law (the consumer) and a technical law area as technical as insurance law is not an easy task. Yet, such a study is necessary in view of the pratical importance of the issue – there are millions of insurance contracts underwritten and thousands of lawsuits – and given the highly topical « loi Hamon » adopted on March 17, 2014. Moreover it is a well-known fact that consumer is in a weak position xhen facing insurance and therefore requires protection. But wich area of law is best placed to protect him : consumer law or insurance law ? And may conflicts of laws arise ? Indeed consumer law offers an undoubted protection, in particular with regards to consumer information and fight against unfair contracts termes. However, insurance law dit not wait for the advent of consumerism to protect every policy holder and not only consumers. Both laws do not share the same view of insurance consumer nor of the way consumer insurance must be regulated. This thesis hangs on those two majors hinges. It defines not only who are the individuals to be protected but also what is the scope of that protection. In each case, actual and potential conflict of laws are specifically highlighted

    Contribution à l'étude de l'infection tuberculeuse par la voie nasale (recherches bactériologiques et cliniques)

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    ThÚse : Médecine : Université de Bordeaux : 1899N° d'ordre :

    Design, synthesis and evaluation of biological activity of thiazole derivatives

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    This thesis presents and discusses the design, synthesis and evaluation ofbiological activity of twenty-two (22) novel thiazole derivatives, twelve (12) of whichare chalcones, two (2) aminopyrimidines and eight (8), N-phenylpyrazolines.Prediction of biological activity spectra for all compounds was performed bythe program PASS.The aim was to design compounds that would combine antimicrobial and antiinflammatoryactivity, taking into account the wide spectrum of biological activitiesof thiazole derivatives, as well as, the interesting pharmacological properties ofchalcones, aminopyrimidines and N-phenylpyrazolines.The final compounds were identified by elemental analysis and spectroscopicmethods.ÎŁheoritical calculations of several physicochemical parameters, includinglipophilicity, were performed for all final compounds.The evaluation of antimicrobial activity of the compounds against selected Gram(+) and Gram (-) bacteria and fungi was carried out in vitro using microdilution method.For a number of selected compounds, DNA gyrase inhibition assay was alsoperformed, in order to explain the possible mechanism of their antibacterial activity.The in vivo evaluation of anti-inflammatory activity of compounds was carriedout by use of carrageenin induced mouse paw edema model, while selected compoundswere also tested in vitro for their ability to inhibit cycloxygenase (COX 1 and 2)

    La Diagnosi Citologica nella Malattia di Paget del Capezzolo

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    Apport de l'imagerie par résonnance magnétique (IRM) dans le diagnostic de l'endométriose de la cloison recto-vaginale

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    PARIS5-BU MĂ©d.Cochin (751142101) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocCentre Technique Livre Ens. Sup. (774682301) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Thiazoles and Thiazolidinones as COX/LOX Inhibitors

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    Inflammation is a natural process that is connected to various conditions and disorders such as arthritis, psoriasis, cancer, infections, asthma, etc. Based on the fact that cyclooxygenase isoenzymes (COX-1, COX-2) are responsible for the production of prostaglandins that play an important role in inflammation, traditional treatment approaches include administration of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which act as selective or non-selective COX inhibitors. Almost all of them present a number of unwanted, often serious, side effects as a consequence of interference with the arachidonic acid cascade. In search for new drugs to avoid side effects, while maintaining high potency over inflammation, scientists turned their interest to the synthesis of dual COX/LOX inhibitors, which could provide numerous therapeutic advantages in terms of anti-inflammatory activity, improved gastric protection and safer cardiovascular profile compared to conventional NSAIDs. ΀hiazole and thiazolidinone moieties can be found in numerous biologically active compounds of natural origin, as well as synthetic molecules that possess a wide range of pharmacological activities. This review focuses on the biological activity of several thiazole and thiazolidinone derivatives as COX-1/COX-2 and LOX inhibitors
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