655 research outputs found
Petroleum hydrocarbons in fresh waters: a preliminary desk study and bibliography
A literature survey was carried out into the effects of petroleum hydrocarbons in freshwater, from the toxicity, biodegradability and concentration aspects. It was supplemented by a selective search on hydrocarbons in the marine environment for comparison. The aim was to determine the major inputs of these hydrocarbons, their accumulation, effects and fate in freshwaters. The search was confined to the period 1965-1978. The bibliography contains 390 references, divided by subject
What Should Lawyers Know About Economics
To find out what law-and-economics scholars and economists think lawyers should know about economics, we conducted surveys of random samples of members of the American Law and Economics Association and the American Economic Association. We posed two questions to both groups: What do you think are the five most important economic concepts law students ought to learn in a law-and-economics course?
Law-and-economics courses sometimes include economics articles in their reading lists. If you could choose up to five articles for such a course, what would they be
Law and Economics and Tort Law: A Survey of Scholarly Opinion
Recent litigation brought against cigarette manufacturers, software companies over potential year 2000 computer problems, and a fast food restaurant for serving coffee that was allegedly too hot reminds us of the importance and dynamic nature of tort law in the United States. Judging from ongoing coverage by newspapers and television, tort law is newsworthy. Yet, as with other legal issues, it is within the covers of law reviews and specialty journals in economics that much of the debate over the social utility of various tort rules and their reform takes place. In that debate law and economics exercises great influence. Ever since the 1970s, the modem movement in economic analysis has been in full swing. That analysis has highlighted the deterrence function of tort law. Indeed, even in the works of mainstream scholars, deterrence has now assumed the role of a primary rationale for tort liability rules. One example of this influence is the impact of economic analysis of tort law on the revision of the Restatement of Torts (Second) sections on products liability.
In spite of the significance of tort law and the economic analysis of it, the general public, practicing attorneys, and legislators often know little about the findings and informed opinions of those scholars specializing in law and economics. The purpose of this Article is neither to review contemporary issues surrounding tort law, nor to gauge the extent of the influence of specialists in law and economics; our purpose is to address whether a consensus exists among these scholars about a few fundamental doctrines of tort law. Because efficiency is a major concern in the field of law and economics, each proposition raises an issue of efficiency about a tort rule. We thus framed ten propositions about how efficiently tort rules achieve their purposes.
In the following section we present our results as a whole. Next we discuss the results individually, offering brief resumes of the debates that inspired the particular questions. Finally, we offer some general conclusions based on the results taken together
What Should Lawyers Know About Economics
To find out what law-and-economics scholars and economists think lawyers should know about economics, we conducted surveys of random samples of members of the American Law and Economics Association and the American Economic Association. We posed two questions to both groups: What do you think are the five most important economic concepts law students ought to learn in a law-and-economics course?
Law-and-economics courses sometimes include economics articles in their reading lists. If you could choose up to five articles for such a course, what would they be
Infrared images of reflection nebulae and Orion's bar: Fluorescent molecular hydrogen and the 3.3 micron feature
Images were obtained of the (fluorescent) molecular hydrogen 1-0 S(1) line, and of the 3.3 micron emission feature, in Orion's Bar and three reflection nebulae. The emission from these species appears to come from the same spatial locations in all sources observed. This suggests that the 3.3 micron feature is excited by the same energetic UV-photons which cause the molecular hydrogen to fluoresce
Captive Housing during Water Vole (Arvicola terrestris) Reintroduction: Does Short-Term Social Stress Impact on Animal Welfare?
Background: Animals captive bred for reintroduction are often housed under conditions which are not representative of their preferred social structure for at least part of the reintroduction process. Specifically, this is most likely to occur during the final stages of the release programme, whilst being housed during transportation to the release site. The degree of social stress experienced by individuals during this time may negatively impact upon their immunocompetence. Methodology/Principal Findings: We examined two measure of stress - body weight and Leukocyte Coping Capacity (LCC) - to investigate the effects of group size upon captive-bred water voles destined for release within a reintroduction program. Water voles were housed in laboratory cages containing between one and eight individuals. LCC scores were negatively correlated with group size, suggesting that individuals in larger groups experienced a larger degree of immunosuppression than did individuals housed in smaller groups or individually. During the course of the study mean body weights increased, in contrast to expectations from a previous study. This was attributed to the individuals sampled being sub-adults and thus growing in length and weight during the course of the investigation. Conclusions/Significance: The reintroduction process will inevitably cause some stress to the release cohort. However, for water voles we conclude that the stress experienced may be reduced by decreasing group size within captive colony and/or transportation housing practises. The findings are of significance to other species' reintroductions, in highlighting the need to consider life-history strategies when choosing housing systems for animals being maintained in captivity prior to release to the wild. A reduction in stress experienced at the pre-release stage may improve immunocompetence and thus animal welfare and initial survival post-release
An Exact Calculation of the Energy Density of Cosmological Gravitational Waves
In this paper we calculate the Bogoliubov coefficients and the energy density
of the stochastic gravitational wave background for a universe that undergoes
inflation followed by radiation domination and matter domination, using a
formalism that gives the Bogoliubov coefficients as continous functions of
time. By making a reasonable assumption for the equation of state during
reheating, we obtain in a natural way the expected high frequency cutoff in the
spectral energy density.Comment: 12 pages+5 figures, uuencoded file,DF/IST-2.9
Detention under section 136 of the Mental Health Act: A multi-agency panel review of practice and communication between police officers and mental health professionals
A critical part of police involvement in incidents involving mental ill health in the UK, is the section 136 (S136) of the Mental Health Act 1983. This power allows police officers to detain an individual and take them to a place of safety in order for them to have a mental health assessment. The decision (or not) to use this power is a collaborative multi-agency process. It involves communication and information sharing between police officers, mental health professionals (MHPS), paramedics and the person in crisis. By working closely with people with lived experience we explore how detention under S136 is negotiated and decided between police officers, mental health professionals and paramedics.
Methods: A multi-agency panel that examines selected S136 cases (police video footage), has been in place since 2021 and convenes quarterly. It is chaired by a senior police officer and attended by professionals from the Devon and Cornwall Police and Devon and Cornwall Mental Health NHS Trust, e.g., Psychiatry Liaison, Quality Lead, Crisis Team service manager, and Manager of the Mental Health helpline.
This pilot study involves the analysis of S136 panel meetings, including meeting minutes and observations of police video footage.
Results: Initial findings show disagreements between police and MHPs arise from the confusion over what constitutes a mental-health crisis; instances where MHPs think police may be too quick to exercise S136, disagreements between different professionals sometimes in front of the person in crisis; and lack of ambulance support. Further analysis on verbal and non-verbal communication techniques that are associated with critical actions (e.g., reasoning for detention, de-escalation) that can be targeted in training, will be presented.
Conclusions: Understanding what is really happening during multi-agency decision-making we can improve the response, so that it is empathetic yet safe and effective, without resulting to detention unless the risk of harm is substantial.Wellcome Trus
Analytic Perturbation Theory: A New Approach to the Analytic Continuation of the Strong Coupling Constant into the Timelike Region
The renormalization group applied to perturbation theory is ordinarily used
to define the running coupling constant in the spacelike region. However, to
describe processes with timelike momenta transfers, it is important to have a
self-consistent determination of the running coupling constant in the timelike
region. The technique called analytic perturbation theory (APT) allows a
consistent determination of this running coupling constant. The results are
found to disagree significantly with those obtained in the standard
perturbative approach. Comparison between the standard approach and APT is
carried out to two loops, and threshold matching in APT is applied in the
timelike region.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX, 7 postscript figure
Survey measurements of community norms on adolescent girls and young women's (AGYW) sexual behaviour and use of condoms for HIV prevention in Manicaland, East Zimbabwe
Background: Qualitative data suggest pre-marital sex stigma presents a major obstacle to AGYW's use of HIV prevention methods. Lack of social acceptability therefore is included as a barrier to motivation to use condoms in HIV prevention cascades. Representative survey data on community norms are rare but necessary to test the validity of this assumption and measure their contributions to gaps in prevention cascades. Methods: General-population survey participants in Manicaland (ages≥15,N = 9803) were asked if they agreed/disagreed with statements on social norms. AGYW were asked whether community views are an obstacle to their using condoms. Proportions agreeing/disagreeing with these statements were calculated, variations in community members’ views were investigated in multivariable logistic-regression models, and the association between AGYW's perceiving negative community norms and condom use was measured. Results: 93.5%(95%CI,93%-94%) of respondents agreed that ‘Many young women have sex before marriage these days’. 57%(56%-59%) of men and 70%(69%-71%) of women disagreed that ‘If I have a teenage daughter and she has sex before marriage, I would be ok with this’; and 41%(40%-43%) of men and 57%(56%-59%) of women disagreed that ‘If I have a teenage daughter, I would tell her about condoms’. Fathers but not mothers were more likely to disagree with their daughters having sex before marriage (Figure). Similar proportions of parents and other community members were against telling daughters about condoms. 68%(61%-75%) of sexually-active unmarried AGYW said negative community views were unimportant in decisions to use condoms. Condom use didn't differ between those who agreed/disagreed that negative community views are important (46.9% vs. 50.0%; AOR = 0.88, 95%CI, 0.48–1.62; N = 202). Conclusions: Community resistance to condom promotion based on pre-marital sex stigma may be weakening as a barrier to AGYW's motivation to use condoms in Manicaland. Community-led interventions to accelerate this dynamic in social norms and support AGYW's agency could reduce HIV incidence
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