219 research outputs found

    Chapter XIII of the Bankruptcy Act: As Maine Goes, So Should the Nation

    Get PDF
    There is a staggering number of consumer bankruptcies being filed in the United States today. It is generally believed that this is an unavoidable corollary to the upsurge in consumer credit, and that consumer credit, in turn, is the bulwark of our modern economy. Assuming the validity of these conclusions, the best method of dealing with the consumer who is unable to pay his debts remains unsettled. Unknown to many attorneys, two statutory remedies exist under federal bankruptcy law. The first, straight bankruptcy, is widely used; the other, Chapter XIII Wage Earner Plans, is essentially ignored. It is the position of this Note that a substantial percentage of straight bankruptcies could and, from the standpoint of the debtor’s best interest, should be filed as Wage Earner Plans. Furthermore, by filing straight bankruptcies where Wage Earner Plans should be utilized, numerous attorneys are being derelict in their duty to safeguard their clients’ interest. This dereliction is a result of several factors–lack of knowledge in the legal community about Wage Earner Plans, fallacious conclusions as to the advantages of straight bankruptcy, and administrative hindrances in the operation of Wage Earner Plans. A survey of possible alternatives will demonstrate that the Wage Earner Plan, if improved, would be the best solution to the problem of consumer bankruptcy

    Specialized foster care and group home care: Similarities and differences in the characteristics of children in care

    Full text link
    Until recently, foster children who presented special medical or behavioral problems were largely served in group care environments. Specialized (or "treatment") foster care has recently been developed to serve some of these challenging children. Although growing evidence points to the special needs of children in foster care, much is still unknown about how children placed in various out-of-home care settings differ from one another. The growth of specialized foster care as an alternative placement to group care, calls for examination of how children in these settings compare on demographic, educational, health, and behavioral characteristics. A cross-sectional mailed survey was distributed to all group care and specialized foster care agencies in a large state to address topics related to children's characteristics. Comparisons point to two groups of very difficult children, with unique mental health and health needs. © 1993

    Integrating new approaches to atrial fibrillation management: the 6th AFNET/EHRA Consensus Conference.

    Get PDF
    There are major challenges ahead for clinicians treating patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). The population with AF is expected to expand considerably and yet, apart from anticoagulation, therapies used in AF have not been shown to consistently impact on mortality or reduce adverse cardiovascular events. New approaches to AF management, including the use of novel technologies and structured, integrated care, have the potential to enhance clinical phenotyping or result in better treatment selection and stratified therapy. Here, we report the outcomes of the 6th Consensus Conference of the Atrial Fibrillation Network (AFNET) and the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA), held at the European Society of Cardiology Heart House in Sophia Antipolis, France, 17-19 January 2017. Sixty-two global specialists in AF and 13 industry partners met to develop innovative solutions based on new approaches to screening and diagnosis, enhancing integration of AF care, developing clinical pathways for treating complex patients, improving stroke prevention strategies, and better patient selection for heart rate and rhythm control. Ultimately, these approaches can lead to better outcomes for patients with AF

    2017 HRS/EHRA/ECAS/APHRS/SOLAECE expert consensus statement on catheter and surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation: executive summary.

    Get PDF
    S

    2017 HRS/EHRA/ECAS/APHRS/SOLAECE expert consensus statement on catheter and surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation: executive summary.

    Get PDF
    S

    withdrawn 2017 hrs ehra ecas aphrs solaece expert consensus statement on catheter and surgical ablation of atrial fibrillation

    Get PDF
    n/

    The Transitional Justice and Foreign Policy Nexus: The Inefficient Causation of State Ontological Security-Seeking

    Get PDF
    How does an approach towards transitional justice produce preconditions for a country’s international action, enabling certain policies and practices in the immediate neighborhood and international society at large? This article unpacks ontological security-seeking as a generic social mechanism in international politics which allows to productively conceptualize the connection between a state’s transitional justice and foreign policies. Going beyond the dichotomy of transitional justice compliance and non-compliance by gauging the role of states’ subjective sense of self in driving their behavior, I develop an analytical framework to explain how state ontological security-seeking relates to major transitions and consequent state identity disjuncture, the ensuing politics of truth and justice-seeking, and its international resonance in framing and executing particular foreign policies. I offer a typology of the international consequences of states’ transitional justice politics, distinguishing between reflective and mnemonical security-oriented approaches, spawning cooperative and conflictual foreign policy behavior, respectively. The empirical purchase of the purported nexus is illustrated with the example of post-Soviet Russia’s limited politics of accountability towards the repressions of its antecedent regime and its increasingly self-assertive and confrontational stance in contemporary international politics

    Where do spontaneous first impressions of faces come from?

    Get PDF
    Humans spontaneously attribute a wide range of traits to strangers based solely on their facial features. These first impressions are known to exert striking effects on our choices and behaviours. In this paper, we provide a theoretical account of the origins of these spontaneous trait inferences. We describe a novel framework (‘Trait Inference Mapping’) in which trait inferences are products of mappings between locations in ‘face space’ and ‘trait space’. These mappings are acquired during ontogeny and allow excitation of face representations to propagate automatically to associated trait representations. This conceptualization provides a framework within which the relative contribution of ontogenetic experience and genetic inheritance can be considered. Contrary to many existing ideas about the origins of trait inferences, we propose only a limited role for innate mechanisms and natural selection. Instead, our model explains inter-observer consistency by appealing to cultural learning and physiological responses that facilitate or ‘canalise’ particular face-trait mappings. Our TIM framework has both theoretical and substantive implications, and can be extended to trait inferences from non-facial cues to provide a unified account of first impressions
    • 

    corecore