1,705 research outputs found
Protection of Domestic Violence Victims Under the New York City Human Rights Law\u27s Provisions Prohibiting Discrimination on the Basis of Disability
This Article analyzes the need to create a new protected class of domestic violence victims to shield them from discrimination in employment. The Article examines arguments for and against proposed legislation to revise the human rights law governing disability, section 8-107 of the New York City Administration Code. The Article concludes that this legislation is unnecessary because the law already provides sufficient protection to domestic violence victims without requiring that victims disclose their domestic violence status to their employers
Federal Taxation: Barter-Equation Technique Employed to Value Transferred Securities Despite Presence of Active Market
Federal Taxation: Section 7421(a) of Internal Revenue Code Literally Construed to Ban All Suits to Enjoin Assessment or Collection of Taxes
Federal Estate Tax: Joint Wills and the Marital Deduction
The framework of network equivalence theory developed by Koetter et al. introduces a notion of channel emulation to construct noiseless networks as upper/lower bounding models for the original noisy network. This paper presents scalable upper bounding models for wireless networks, by firstly extending the ``one-shot'' bounding models developed by Calmon et al. and then integrating them with network equivalence tools. A channel decoupling method is proposed to decompose wireless networks into decoupled multiple-access channels (MACs) and broadcast channels (BCs). The main advantages of the proposed method is its simplicity and the fact that it can be extended easily to large networks with a complexity that grows linearly with the number of nodes. It is demonstrated that the resulting upper bounds can approach the capacity in some setups.QC 20140619VR International Postdo
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