126,478 research outputs found
Compelling Interests and Contraception
On the eve of Griswold v. Connecticut’s fiftieth anniversary, employers are bringing challenges under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) to federal laws requiring them to include contraception in the health insurance benefits that they offer their employees. In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, five Justices asserted that the government has compelling interests in ensuring employees access to contraception, but did not discuss those interests in any detail. In what follows, we clarify those interests by connecting discussion in the Hobby Lobby opinions and the federal government’s briefs to related cases on compelling interests and individual rights in the areas of race and sex equality.
The government’s compelling interests, we argue, are best understood from within two horizons: they encompass not only core concerns of the community in promoting public health and facilitating women’s integration in the workplace, but also crucial concerns of the employees who are the intended beneficiaries of federal law’s contraceptive coverage requirement—interests that sound in bodily integrity, personal autonomy, and equal citizenship. Further, as we show, a full accounting of the government’s compelling interests attends both to their material and expressive dimensions.
This more comprehensive account of the government’s compelling interests in providing employees access to contraception matters both in political debate and in RFRA litigation as courts determine whether the government has pursued its interests by the least restrictive means. The more comprehensive account offered here is less susceptible to compromise and tradeoffs than is an account focused only on material interests in public health and contraceptive cost
Contraception as a Sex Equality Right
Challenges to federal law requiring insurance coverage of contraception are occurring on the eve of the 50th Anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Griswold v. Connecticut. It is a good time to reflect on the values served by protecting women’s access to contraception.
In 1965, the Court ruled in Griswold that a law criminalizing the use of contraception violated the privacy of the marriage relationship. Griswold offered women the most significant constitutional protection since the Nineteenth Amendment gave women the right to vote, constitutional protection as important as the cases prohibiting sex discrimination that the Court would decide in the next decade—perhaps even more so. Griswold is conventionally understood to have secured liberty for women. But the right to contraception also secures equality for women, as Ruth Bader Ginsburg saw clearly in the 1970s and as the Court eventually would explain in Planned Parenthood v. Casey
Causality in Covariant String Field Theory
Causality is studied in the covariant formulation of free string field theory
(SFT). We find that, though the string field in the covariant formulation is a
functional of the ghost coordinates as well as the space-time coordinate and
the latter contains the time-like oscillators with negative norm, the condition
for the commutator of two open string fields to vanish is simply given by
, which is the same
condition as in the light-cone gauge SFT. For closed SFT, the corresponding
condition is given in a form which is manifestly invariant under the rigid
shifts of the parameters of the two string fields.Comment: 11 pages + 1 eps figure, LaTe
'The claims of Asia and the Far East’: India and the FAO in the age of ambivalent internationalism
If any nation were poised to actualize the developmental promises that the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) extended to the international community, it was India. India's independence came in the wake of devastating famine in Bengal and the fears of its recurrence, and the nationalists who had midwifed India's freedom staked their legitimacy to the promise of food for all. Yet from independence, the FAO played only a marginal role in India's agricultural development, its projects reflecting a winnowing scale of ambition. From early investigations into the improved cultivation of basic food grains, the FAO's projects grew increasingly modest by the time of the Green Revolution, revolving around modest improvements to capitalist agriculture, from wool shearing to timber and fishery development. Instead, India drew more substantively upon resources made available by the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations, the United States Technical Cooperation Mission and occasional Soviet largesse. Meanwhile, the Indian most associated with the FAO, B.R. Sen (Director-General, 1956–1967), struggled to align the Organization's capacities with India's scarcity crises, even as his own understanding of famine drew upon his experience as India's Director of Food during the Bengal Famine.Accepted manuscrip
Actions for QCD-like strings
We introduce a random lattice corresponding to ordinary Feynman diagrams,
with 1/p-squared propagators instead of the Gaussians used in the usual
strings. The continuum limit defines a new type of string action with two
worldsheet metrics, one Minkowskian and one Euclidean. The propagators
correspond to curved lightlike paths with respect to the Minkowskian worldsheet
metric. Spacetime dimensionality of four is implied not only as the usual
critical dimension of renormalizable quantum field theory, but also from
T-duality.Comment: 14 pg., plain tex, other formats available at
http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/~siegel/preprints or at
ftp://max.physics.sunysb.edu/preprints/siege
The Schottky problem in genus five
In this paper, we present a solution to the Schottky problem in the spirit of
Schottky and Jung for genus five curves. To do so, we exploit natural incidence
structures on the fibers of several maps to reduce all questions to statements
about the Prym map for genus six curves. This allows us to find all components
of the big Schottky locus and thus, to show that the small Schottky locus
introduced by Donagi is irreducible.Comment: 20 page
The syntactic processing of particles in Japanese spoken language
Particles fullfill several distinct central roles in the Japanese language.
They can mark arguments as well as adjuncts, can be functional or have semantic
funtions. There is, however, no straightforward matching from particles to
functions, as, e.g., GA can mark the subject, the object or an adjunct of a
sentence. Particles can cooccur. Verbal arguments that could be identified by
particles can be eliminated in the Japanese sentence. And finally, in spoken
language particles are often omitted. A proper treatment of particles is thus
necessary to make an analysis of Japanese sentences possible. Our treatment is
based on an empirical investigation of 800 dialogues. We set up a type
hierarchy of particles motivated by their subcategorizational and
modificational behaviour. This type hierarchy is part of the Japanese syntax in
VERBMOBIL.Comment: 8 page
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