62 research outputs found

    Collateral consequences of criminal records from the other side of the pond: How exceptional is American penal exceptionalism?

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    In this article, we highlight the existence and expansion of so-called “collateral consequences”(CCs) of criminal records in Europe to challenge the prevalent view that these are features of the claimed “American exceptionalism” within the penal field. Firstly, we consider how CCs have been widely presented as a quintessential example of American penal exceptionalism within extant scholarship before problematising the adoption of such a framework from a European perspective. Secondly, we demystify the issue of CCs within Europe by highlighting the deleterious effects which CCs have on the lives of European people with a criminal record. Thirdly, we consider precisely what can be regarded as “exceptional” about CCs in the US as compared to Europe by analysing key areas of possible differentiation. We conclude by cautioning against the view that European penality is necessarily‒and always homogeneously and consistently‒“progressive” in relation to its treatment of criminal records and criminal record subjects. We also suggest that far greater attention and vigilance is required from criminologists and criminal justice scholars regarding the expansion and operation of CCs in Europe

    Epigenetic Regulation of Virulence Gene Expression in Parasitic Protozoa

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    Protozoan parasites colonize numerous metazoan hosts and insect vectors through their life cycles, with the need to respond quickly and reversibly while encountering diverse and often hostile ecological niches. To succeed, parasites must also persist within individuals until transmission between hosts is achieved. Several parasitic protozoa cause a huge burden of disease in humans and livestock, and here we focus on the parasites that cause malaria and African trypanosomiasis. Efforts to understand how these pathogens adapt to survive in varied host environments, cause disease, and transmit between hosts have revealed a wealth of epigenetic phenomena. Epigenetic switching mechanisms appear to be ideally suited for the regulation of clonal antigenic variation underlying successful parasitism. We review the molecular players and complex mechanistic layers that mediate the epigenetic regulation of virulence gene expression. Understanding epigenetic processes will aid the development of antiparasitic therapeutics

    Short-course versus long-course therapy of the same antibiotic for community-acquired pneumonia in adolescent and adult outpatients

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    BACKGROUND: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a lung infection that can be acquired during day-to-day activities in the community (not while receiving care in a hospital). Community-acquired pneumonia poses a significant public health burden in terms of mortality, morbidity, and costs. Shorter antibiotic courses for CAP may limit treatment costs and adverse effects, but the optimal duration of antibiotic treatment is uncertain. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of short-course versus longer-course treatment with the same antibiotic at the same daily dosage for CAP in non-hospitalised adolescents and adults (outpatients). We planned to investigate non-inferiority of short-course versus longer-term course treatment for efficacy outcomes, and superiority of short-course treatment for safety outcomes. SEARCH METHODS: We searched CENTRAL, which contains the Cochrane Acute Respiratory Infections Group Specialised Register, MEDLINE, Embase, five other databases, and three trials registers on 28 September 2017 together with conference proceedings, reference checking, and contact with experts and pharmaceutical companies. SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing short- and long-courses of the same antibiotic for CAP in adolescent and adult outpatients. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: We planned to use standard Cochrane methods. MAIN RESULTS: Our searches identified 5260 records. We did not identify any RCTs that compared short- and longer-courses of the same antibiotic for the treatment of adolescents and adult outpatients with CAP.We excluded two RCTs that compared short courses (five compared to seven days) of the same antibiotic at the same daily dose because they evaluated antibiotics (gemifloxacin and telithromycin) not commonly used in practice for the treatment of CAP. In particular, gemifloxacin is no longer approved for the treatment of mild-to-moderate CAP due to its questionable risk-benefit balance, and reported adverse effects. Moreover, the safety profile of telithromycin is also cause for concern.We found one ongoing study that we will assess for inclusion in future updates of the review. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found no eligible RCTs that studied a short-course of antibiotic compared to a longer-course (with the same antibiotic at the same daily dosage) for CAP in adolescent and adult outpatients. The effects of antibiotic therapy duration for CAP in adolescent and adult outpatients remains unclear.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    The global rise of criminal background checks

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    An audit experiment to investigate the "War on Cops": a research note

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    Objectives: This study examines whether former police officers are stigmatized in the labor market, particularly following social unrest from lethal police violence. Methods: We conduct an experimental audit study, both before and after heightened unrest from police violence. For service-related job openings, we compare the likelihood of getting an affirmative response from a prospective employer to a job application from a fictitious former police officer (the treatment condition) to the response to one of two control conditions: a former firefighter or a former code enforcement officer. Results: We do not find evidence that former police officers are discriminated against in the labor market. This finding holds in periods characterized by relatively little social unrest due police violence as well as periods of heightened protest activity. Conclusions: At least with respect to the labor market for certain service-related professions, former police officers do not appear tainted by any stigma associated with their prior profession

    Do black lives matter to employers? A combined field and natural experiment of racially disparate hiring practices in the wake of protests against police violence and racial oppression.

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    This study uses an experimental audit design, implemented both before and during the heightened unrest following the murder of George Floyd, to gauge the impact of Black Lives Matter and associated protests against police brutality and anti-Black racism on racially disparate hiring practices. We contrast treatment of fictitious Black and White job applicants in the labor market for service-related job openings, specifically applicants with prior experience as a police officer, firefighter, or code enforcement officer. Results reveal that the White advantage in employer call-backs and requests for an interview receded during the protests and unrest following the killing of George Floyd, even to the point of producing a Black advantage

    Theoretical density functional theory studies on interactions of small biologically active molecules with isolated heme group

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    We present ab-initio density functional theory studies on the interactions of small biologically active molecules, namely NO, CO, O2, H2O, and NOmath image with the full-size heme group. Our results show that the small molecule–iron bond is the strongest in carbonyl and the weakest in nitrite system. Trans influence induced by NO binding to the five-coordinate heme complex is shown. Nitric oxide in the resulting complex might be described as NO−. The differences among the small ligands of XO type (CO, NO, O2), and their distant chemical behavior from H2O and NOmath image ligands in binding to the Fe(II) ion, are shown. Moreover, the role of the heme ring as a reservoir of electrons in the studied complexes is invoked. The analysis of the parameters defining the iron–histidine bond indicates that this bond is longer and weaker in nitrosyl and carbonyl complexes than in the other systems. Our findings support the proposed mechanism of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) activation and suggest that the first step of sGC activation by CO may be the same as during the activation by NO. Obtained results are then compared with the data concerning smaller model of the heme, the porphyrin complexes, available in the literature
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