1,753 research outputs found

    Contextualisation of humanitarian assistance and its shortcomings in International Human Rights Law

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    This article challenges the idea that contextualisation of humanitarian aid affects the principle of universality of human rights as well as the principles of neutrality and impartiality. It seeks to demonstrate that contextualisation will not only improve access, delivery and protection: contextualising a mission also enables aid workers to respect the local context without impacting negatively upon universal human rights. The author argues that affecting the societies in which aid is delivered is inevitable. The key then becomes to avoid endorsing indirect cultural relativism. This is why the article puts forward the idea of creating a yardstick or a test that would help in deciding which beliefs and values are to be included when considering the context, and which should be excluded. The process of selection of values and beliefs is to be operated by an empowered local population. The filter suggested in the case at hand is the Muslim legal instrument of maslaha, which protects the public interest. The use of this filter can be efficient only if Islamic authoritative sources are interpreted differently, in a reformist fashion, to try and match universal human rights law. This is possible through the Muslim theories advocating change. Muslim beneficiaries who are vulnerable as a result of a disaster or during a conflict provide an opportunity to test the filter of maslaha, looking at how an empowered community can change and influence the agendas of aid agencies

    What if? An experiment to include a religious narrative in the approach of the European Court of Human Rights

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    According to some interpretations of Islam supported by gender activists, the veil can be perceived as a passport that enables women to participate in public affairs. This argument has been overlooked by the courts, including the European Court of Human Rights. The latter has adopted a discourse that considers the veil to be a threat to public order and gender equality, and more recently, an obstacle to social cohesion. By doing so, the Court has excluded veiled European Muslim women from the public sphere. The Court has justified curbing freedom of religion by granting states a wide margin of appreciation on the basis of the concept of “living together.” I argue that the Court needs to take the “passport veil” into account to be consistent with its argument on living together. A shift of approach and discourse would constitute a new way of understanding integration through the veil

    Quantification of cytoskeletal deformation in living cells

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    In order to get a better insight in the mechanisms causing tissue damage there is an interest from within the biology community to quantify cellular deformations upon external loading. The cytoskeleton plays an important role in the transmission of forces throughout the cell. This study aims to quantify deformation by applying image matching algorithms on confocal microscopy images

    Children’s sensitivity to speaker accuracy and explanatory competence with biological concepts

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    This thesis investigated children’s selective trust in contexts that extend beyond a direct comparison of a distinctly accurate labeller with a distinctly inaccurate labeller in the domain of artifacts. First, it was examined whether children’s evaluations of informant trustworthiness is similar across the biological domain and the domain of artifacts. Second, it was investigated how children interpret novel labellers when compared to accurate and inaccurate labellers. Finally, children were presented with informants who provided functional or surface information for body parts to determine whether they prefer learning from informants who provided functional explanations. Across five experiments, children aged between 3 and 8 years of age (N = 379) were tested. The main findings were as follows: (a) 4- and 5-year-olds knew more about external body parts than internal organs; (b) 5-year-olds began to appreciate that speakers offering novel information were more trustworthy than those offering inaccurate information; (c) 4- to 8-year-olds had difficulty with distinguishing between informants who provided either functional explanations or obvious descriptions for highly unfamiliar organs; (d) however, when presented with informants who provided either functional or obvious information for highly familiar body parts, 8-year-olds (and to some extent, 5-year-olds) showed better recall of which informant provided a particular type of explanation, but they did not consider either informant to be a more trustworthy source. These findings indicate that children demonstrate selective trust in the biological domain, as well as in contexts that go beyond comparing accurate and inaccurate labellers. It is apparent that children are balanced in their evaluations of informants who provide new information, as well as those provide information that varies in explanatory depth. However, they are yet to fully consider functional explanations to be superior to superficial descriptions

    Study of odd-mass N=82 isotones with realistic effective interactions

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    The microscopic quasiparticle-phonon model, MQPM, is used to study the energy spectra of the odd Z=53−63Z=53 - 63, N=82 isotones. The results are compared with experimental data, with the extreme quasiparticle-phonon limit and with the results of an unrestricted 2s1d0g7/20h11/22s1d0g_{7/2}0h_{11/2} shell model (SM) calculation. The interaction used in these calculations is a realistic two-body G-matrix interaction derived from modern meson-exchange potential models for the nucleon-nucleon interaction. For the shell model all the two-body matrix elements are renormalized by the Q^\hat{Q}-box method whereas for the MQPM the effective interaction is defined by the G-matrix.Comment: Elsevier latex style espart, 26 pages, submitted to Nuclear Physics

    « Local Perceptions of Assistance to Afghanistan ». International Peacekeeping, Vol. 14, N° 1, 2007, pp. 158-172.

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    L’A. a effectuĂ© un travail de terrain afin de comprendre comment les Afghans perçoivent l’assistance qui leur est apportĂ©. La majoritĂ© des Afghans voient l’aide humanitaire comme une entreprise typiquement occidentale. Lorsque ce ne sont pas les valeurs proposĂ©es qui choquent les communautĂ©s, c’est le comportement des humanitaires ou les mĂ©thodes et les techniques employĂ©es qui choquent. L’A. analyse ce choc des cultures et le fossĂ© qui se creuse entre les locaux et les humanitaires

    « The Impact of Iran's Nuclearization on Israel ». Middle East Policy Council Journal, vol. 12, n° 2, été 2005, pp. 58-72.

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    Cet article identifie les sept menaces potentielles qui seraient inhĂ©rentes Ă  l’accession de l’Iran Ă  l’arme nuclĂ©aire. Ces sept points concernent le terrorisme et IsraĂ«l. Selon l’A., les requĂȘtes israĂ©liennes en matiĂšre de contrĂŽle de la nuclĂ©arisation de l’Iran sont comprĂ©hensibles. Cependant un Iran nuclĂ©aire reprĂ©sente peu de risques pour les intĂ©rĂȘts et l’existence d’IsraĂ«l : l’A. explique que l’Iran ne harcĂšlera pas IsraĂ«l de peur d’une escalade nuclĂ©aire. Dans un second temps, il exist..

    War and Migration: Social Networks and Economic Strategies of the Hazaras of Afghanistan. New York et Londres, Routledge, 2005, 328 p.

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    Cet ouvrage Ă©tudie les migrations du people afghan et le rĂŽle du transnationalisme et ce par le biais du cas des Hazaras, peuple du centre de l’Afghanistan. L’A. retravaille notamment les approches mĂ©thodologiques et thĂ©oriques qui animent le milieu de l’anthropologie au sujet des migrations. L’A. s’est rendu en Afghanistan, en Iran et au Pakistan afin d’étudier les motivations des migrants, leurs conditions de vie, la circulation des informations, la reproduction du tissu social et les strat..
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