30 research outputs found

    Recent Decisions

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    Admiralty--Workmen\u27s Compensation--Receipt of Benefits under State Workmen\u27s Compensation Act containing Exclusive Remedy Provision does not Bar Subsequent Action against Employer for Unseaworthiness Patricia D. Owen ====================== Common Market--Council Regulations--Regulation Stake Precedence over Provisions of Member States\u27 Constitutions Jeffery R. Rush ===================== Discovery--Aid to Foreign or International Tribunals--United States Courts can Compel Testimony only on Behalf of Foreign or International Tribunals Empowered to make Binding Adjudications Frank R. Krok ===================== Extradition--Statute of Limitations--mere Absence is not Equivalent to Fleeing from Justice under 18 U.S.C. § 3290 Paul P. Sanford ===================== International Court of Justice--Procedure Temporary Relief in the Form of Interim Measures Granted on Prima Facie Evidence of Jurisdiction and Jurisdiction of the Merits Found on Basis of Prior Agreement to Compulsory I.C.J. Jurisdiction Edward N. Perry ==================== Jurisdiction--NATO--North Atlantic Treaty Organization status of Forces Agreement not an Exclusive Remedy for Member of United States Force or Civilian Component Edward A. Betancour

    'This is what democracy looks like' : New Labour's blind spot and peripheral vision

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    New Labour in government since 1997 has been roundly criticized for not possessing a clear, coherent and consistent democratic vision. The absence of such a grand vision has resulted, from this critical perspective, in an absence of 'joined-up' thinking about democracy in an evolving multi-level state. Tensions have been all too apparent between the government's desire to exert central direction - manifested in its most pathological form as 'control freakery' - and its democratising initiatives derived from 'third-way' obsessions with 'decentralising', 'empowering' and 'enabling'. The purpose of this article is to examine why New Labour displayed such apparently impaired democratic vision and why it appeared incapable of conceiving of democratic reform 'in the round'. This article seeks to explain these apparent paradoxes, however, through utilising the notion of 'macular degeneration'. In this analysis, the perceived democratic blind spot of New Labour at Westminster is connected to a democratic peripheral vision, which has envisaged innovative participatory and decentred initiatives in governance beyond Westminster

    Chronic allograft nephropathy

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    Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) is the leading cause of renal allograft loss in paediatric renal transplant recipients. CAN is the result of immunological and nonimmunological injury, including acute rejection episodes, hypoperfusion, ischaemia reperfusion, calcineurin toxicity, infection and recurrent disease. The development of CAN is often insidious and may be preceded by subclinical rejection in a well-functioning allograft. Classification of CAN is histological using the Banff classification of renal allograft pathology with classic findings of interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, glomerulosclerosis, fibrointimal hyperplasia and arteriolar hyalinosis. Although improvement in immunosuppression has led to greater 1-year graft survival rates, chronic graft loss remains relatively unchanged and opportunistic infectious complications remain a problem. Protocol biopsy monitoring is not current practice in paediatric transplantation for CAN monitoring but may have a place if new treatment options become available. Newer immunosuppression regimens, closer monitoring of the renal allograft and management of subclinical rejection may lead to reduced immune injury leading to CAN in the paediatric population but must be weighed against the risk of increased immunosuppression and calcineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity

    A Rapid Micro-Modification of the Quantitative Immunoprecipitation Assay

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    A micro-modification of the quantitative immunoprecipitin test is described which permits rapid and sensitive titering of antisera, or quantitation of antigen, within a few hours. The procedure requires less than a microgram of radiolabeled antigen and can be used to titer antisera containing less than 1 microgram/ml of precipitating antibody. Radiotiters obtained for commercial antisera agree closely with results obtained using the classical quantitative immunoprecipitation procedure. The radiotiter assay procedure has been adapted for quantitating albumin in human urine by radioimmunoassay. The analysis can be performed in approximately 1 h, is sensitive to less than 50 ng of albumin, and requires no special apparatus or separation techniques

    Using Pharmacological Manipulation and High-precision Radio Telemetry to Study the Spatial Cognition in Free-ranging Animals.

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    An animal\u27s ability to perceive and learn about its environment plays a key role in many behavioral processes, including navigation, migration, dispersal and foraging. However, the understanding of the role of cognition in the development of navigation strategies and the mechanisms underlying these strategies is limited by the methodological difficulties involved in monitoring, manipulating the cognition of, and tracking wild animals. This study describes a protocol for addressing the role of cognition in navigation that combines pharmacological manipulation of behavior with high-precision radio telemetry. The approach uses scopolamine, a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist, to manipulate cognitive spatial abilities. Treated animals are then monitored with high frequency and high spatial resolution via remote triangulation. This protocol was applied within a population of Eastern painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) that has inhabited seasonally ephemeral water sources for ~100 years, moving between far-off sources using precise (± 3.5 m), complex (i.e., non-linear with high tortuosity that traverse multiple habitats), and predictable routes learned before 4 years of age. This study showed that the processes used by these turtles are consistent with spatial memory formation and recall. Together, these results are consistent with a role of spatial cognition in complex navigation and highlight the integration of ecological and pharmacological techniques in the study of cognition and navigation
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