639 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Biomedical Community and the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention
YesNegotiations to find a legally binding way to strengthen
the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC)
of 1972 [1]are in danger of failing. The crisis was precipitated
during the current round of talks, now in its final
week in Geneva, when the US, alone amongst the negotiating
States, rejected the text of a protocol that has taken
six and a half years to negotiate
Rapport building and witness memory: Actions may ‘speak’ louder than words
Building rapport during police interviews is argued as important for improving on the completeness and accuracy of information provided by witnesses and victims. However, little experimental research has clearly operationalised rapport and investigated the impact of rapport behaviours on episodic memory. Eighty adults watched a video of a mock crime event and 24-hours later were randomly allocated to an interview condition where verbal and/or behavioural (non-verbal) rapport techniques were manipulated. Memorial performance measures revealed significantly more correct information, without a concomitant increase in errors, was elicited when behavioural rapport was present, a superiority effect found in both the free and probed recall phase of interviews. The presence of verbal rapport was found to reduce recall accuracy in the free recall phase of interviews. Post-interview feedback revealed significant multivariate effects for the presence of behavioural (only) rapport and combined (behavioural + verbal) rapport. Participants rated their interview experience far more positively when these types of rapport were present compared to when verbal (only) rapport or no rapport was present. These findings add weight to the importance of rapport in supporting eyewitness cognition, highlighting the potential consequences of impoverished social behaviours for building rapport during dyadic interactions, suggesting ‘doing’ rather than simply ‘saying’ may be more beneficial
Health inequalities and health equity challenges for victims of modern slavery
AbstractBackgroundModern slavery is a serious organized crime, with severe consequences for the physical and mental health of victims, and so has public health implications. Anecdotally many victims of sex slavery experience difficulties accessing healthcare. Public Health England recently articulated the importance of health engagement to address modern slavery but little is known about the experiences of the survivors.MethodsWe conducted in depth interviews with Albanian female survivors of sex slavery who all displayed significant and complex health needs. Interviews were conducted between July 2017 and January 2018. Thematic analysis identified four primary themes: (i) barriers to access, (ii) negotiating access, (iii) health needs and care received and (iv) overall experience of primary care.ResultsSurvivors experienced repeated challenges accessing healthcare, for themselves and their children, and initially could not access GP services. When accompanied by an advocate they reported qualitatively and quantitatively improved experiences resulting in improved permeability. Confusion surrounding eligibility criteria and a lack of understanding of modern slavery emerged as the primary barriers, fueling biased adjudications.ConclusionsThe importance of advocates, enabling rights-based approaches, improving understanding about access to health services for vulnerable groups, and a need for education across health service settings are discussed
Rapport building with offenders in probation supervision: The views of English probation practitioners
Rapport-based supervision in probation is linked to positive behavioural change and reduced reoffending for probation service users. However, the process of rapport building is not well documented in probation practice. This study conducted focus groups and interviews with London-based probation practitioners to understand their views of rapport when supervising service users. Thematic analysis generated five themes related to how practitioners facilitated rapport building and maintenance, as well as several barriers that exist towards building and maintaining rapport – these were conceptualised as a rapport-building process. We provide recommendations to help alleviate barriers and further facilitate the rapport-building process
Recommended from our members
Preventing Biological Threats: What You Can Do.
yesThe outbreak of Ebola in West Africa in 2014 has underlined the risks posed by
outbreaks of highly virulent and deadly diseases, whether caused naturally,
accidentally or deliberately. It also emphasised the responsibility of all those engaged
in the life sciences, whether in government, industry or academia, to ensure that
research is done safely and securely.
This book, Preventing Biological Threats, is intended to raise awareness and
knowledge of biological security of everyone active in the life sciences, ranging from
those engaged in research to those engaged in management and policy-making, both
nationally and internationally. The advances in biotechnology over the past decades
and in the future have brought and will bring significant benefits to humankind,
animals and plants -- however, these advances also bring risks that we need to be
aware of and ensure that they cause no harm.
The continuing debate about the potential danger of carrying out ‘Gain-of-Function’
experiments with highly pathogenic viruses such as avian influenza has brought the
problem of biological security to the attention of many within but also beyond the life
science community. It also has left some of them wondering what biological security
is and how it can be incorporated into the life sciences. What steps should be taken to
ensure that these and other dual use research activities are not misused?
It is being increasingly recognised that biosecurity and biosafety are not only relevant
to activities within a laboratory, but also extend to the effects that these activities can
have outside the laboratory if they result in accidental outbreaks of diseases in
humans, animals or plants.
The international basis for the prevention of the hostile misuse of life sciences is the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention which this year, on 26 March 2015, has
been in force for forty years. The Convention was the first treaty to prohibit the
development and possession of an entire category of weapons. At this moment 173
States Parties have ratified the Convention (and the Convention has a further 9
Signatories). At the Seventh Review Conference of the Biological and Toxin
Weapons Convention in 2011, of which I was President, the States Parties agreed on
the need for all those engaged in the life sciences to be involved as key stakeholders
in the protection of their work from hostile misuse, and therefore on the importance of
broad biosecurity education.
This book with its 21 chapters addresses the need for biosecurity education, in six
sections on the history of threats and responses; scientists, organisations and
biosecurity; biosecurity and law enforcement; states and biosecurity; and biosecurity
and active learning. It is a significant and welcome step forward both in its integrated
content and the active learning focus in the associated Team Based Learning
exercises. I am convinced that this approach will help all those engaged in the life
sciences - in government, industry or academia – to become more aware of
biosecurity and of their responsibilities for it.
It is therefore a great pleasure to commend the authors and editors for their work and
the Governments of Canada, Jordan and the United Kingdom for their funding and
involvement in the production of this book under the Global Partnership.
Ambassador Paul van den IJsse
Recommended from our members
Response to 'No Evidence Against Sketch Reinstatement of Context, Verbal Labels or Registered Intermediaries'
Recommended from our members
Strengthening the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention: The vital importance of a web of prevention for effective biosafety and biosecurity in the 21st Century
N
Looming struggles over technology for border control
New technologies under development, capable of inflicting pain on masses of people, could be used for border control against asylum seekers. Implementation might be rationalized by the threat of mass migration due to climate change, nuclear disaster or exaggerated fears of refugees created by governments. We focus on taser anti-personnel mines, suggesting both technological countermeasures and ways of making the use of such technology politically counterproductive. We also outline several other types of ‘non-lethal’ technology that could be used for border control and raise human rights concerns: high-powered microwaves, armed robots, wireless tasers, acoustic devices/vortex rings, ionizing and pulsed energy lasers, chemical calmatives, convulsants, bioregulators and malodurants. Whether all these possible border technologies will be implemented is a matter for speculation, but their serious human rights implications warrant advance scrutiny
- …