96 research outputs found

    Rape Messaging

    Get PDF
    When feminists began advocating for rape reform in the 1970s, the rape message was clear: rape was not a crime to be taken seriously because women lie. After decades of criminal law reform, the legal requirement that a woman vigorously resist a man’s sexual advances to prove that she was raped has largely disappeared from the statute books, and, in theory, rape shield laws make a woman’s prior sexual history irrelevant. Yet, despite what the law dictates, rape law reforms have not had a “trickle-down” effect, where changes in law lead to changes in attitude. Women are still believed to be vindictive shrews so police continue to code rape allegations as “unfounded,” and prosecutors continue to elect not to prosecute many rape cases. To many, “no” can sometimes still mean “yes.” In short, criminal law reforms have only marginally succeeded at deterring rape and increasing conviction rates for rape. At the same time, criminal law reforms have entrenched gender norms and endorsed the message that acquaintance rapes are less worthy of harsh punishment. This Article argues against further ex post criminal law reforms and posits that efforts should shift to ex ante public health interventions. This Article draws from recent successful experiences with public health interventions in destigmatizing AIDS and denormalizing tobacco and advocates for a robust public health campaign to denormalize rape. It presents a detailed proposal for changing rape messaging, denormalizing rape, and ensuring better outcomes for victims

    State Mandated Disability Insurance as Salve to the Consumer Bankruptcy Imbroglio

    Get PDF
    From Main Street to Wall Street, Americans are hurting. In 2009, over 1.4 million families filed for bankruptcy. Researchers examining the causes of bankruptcy discovered that as many as sixty-two percent of all bankruptcies were precipitated by a medical crisis. Because many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck and lack disability insurance, when a medical crisis strikes, bank accounts are quickly depleted by the amalgam of high medical bills and lost wages. Disability insurance provides needed wage replacement when a worker is unable to work due to an illness or injury. This Article presents the case for statemandated disability insurance as a solution for combating the rising number of consumer bankruptcies. It describes the prevalence of medical bankruptcies and the impact of disabilities on American families as well as the most commonly available substitutes for comprehensive disability insurance and explains why these substitutes do not provide workers with adequate wage protection. Then, this Article presents statemandated disability insurance as a solution to the medical bankruptcy imbroglio and provides statistical evidence demonstrating that states mandating disability insurance for most workers have on average a lower per capita bankruptcy rate than the national average. Finally, this Article argues that the best alternative for increasing access to disability insurance is for more states to mandate disability insurance, and provides a blueprint for designing state disability insurance programs

    State Mandated Disability Insurance as Salve to the Consumer Bankruptcy Imbroglio

    Get PDF
    From Main Street to Wall Street, Americans are hurting. In 2009, over 1.4 million families filed for bankruptcy. Researchers examining the causes of bankruptcy discovered that as many as sixty-two percent of all bankruptcies were precipitated by a medical crisis. Because many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck and lack disability insurance, when a medical crisis strikes, bank accounts are quickly depleted by the amalgam of high medical bills and lost wages. Disability insurance provides needed wage replacement when a worker is unable to work due to an illness or injury. This Article presents the case for statemandated disability insurance as a solution for combating the rising number of consumer bankruptcies. It describes the prevalence of medical bankruptcies and the impact of disabilities on American families as well as the most commonly available substitutes for comprehensive disability insurance and explains why these substitutes do not provide workers with adequate wage protection. Then, this Article presents statemandated disability insurance as a solution to the medical bankruptcy imbroglio and provides statistical evidence demonstrating that states mandating disability insurance for most workers have on average a lower per capita bankruptcy rate than the national average. Finally, this Article argues that the best alternative for increasing access to disability insurance is for more states to mandate disability insurance, and provides a blueprint for designing state disability insurance programs

    The rise and progress of printing

    Get PDF
    Citation: Allen, Amy Alena. The rise and progress of printing. Senior thesis, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1904.Morse Department of Special CollectionsIntroduction: 1. Definition: Printing is the art of taking an impression from an inked form, plate, block or stone. 2. Branches: There are several distinct branches of this important art, and each branch is, practically, a separate art, distinct from its rivals in its theory, its processes, and its applications. These methods are: (a) Steel-plate and Copper-plate Printing, in which the subject is printed from an etching or engraving below the surface of a plate of steel or copper. (b) Lithography, in which the subject is printed from a transferred engraving on the surface of a prepared stone.(c) Xylography, in which the subject is printed from a design engraved on a block of wood in high relief. (d) Typography, in which the subject is printed from a combination of movable metal types cast in high relief. The arts of lithography and copper-plate are useful and beautiful methods of printing, but they do not make books and newspapers. The necessity which compels the making of a new engraving for every new subject restricts them almost exclusively to the field of art and ornament. If no other method of printing were known, encyclopedias and newspapers would be impossibilities. "The art preservative of all arts" is not the art of lithography nor of copper-plate. This distinction rightfully belongs to typography only

    The Emotional Woman

    Get PDF

    Existence as a Threat

    Get PDF
    There is an ongoing debate in the legal academy about how and whether to integrate race into curricula. For people of color, race impacts their day-to-day lives in ways large and small. In the law school setting, the experience of students of color is often a fraught one. For many students of color, navigating law school is akin to walking a tight rope. This Essay attempts to highlight the myriad challenges facing students of color, and it offers some thoughts about how to create a more inclusive environmen

    A 3D Finite-Difference BiCG Iterative Solver with the Fourier-Jacobi Preconditioner for the Anisotropic EIT/EEG Forward Problem

    Get PDF
    The Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) and electroencephalography (EEG) forward problems in anisotropic inhomogeneous media like the human head belongs to the class of the three-dimensional boundary value problems for elliptic equations with mixed derivatives. We introduce and explore the performance of several new promising numerical techniques, which seem to be more suitable for solving these problems. The proposed numerical schemes combine the fictitious domain approach together with the finite-difference method and the optimally preconditioned Conjugate Gradient- (CG-) type iterative method for treatment of the discrete model. The numerical scheme includes the standard operations of summation and multiplication of sparse matrices and vector, as well as FFT, making it easy to implement and eligible for the effective parallel implementation. Some typical use cases for the EIT/EEG problems are considered demonstrating high efficiency of the proposed numerical technique

    Chromatin and oxygen sensing in the context of JmjC histone demethylases

    Get PDF
    Responding appropriately to changes in oxygen availability is essential for multicellular organism survival. Molecularly, cells have evolved intricate gene expression programmes to handle this stressful condition. Although it is appreciated that gene expression is co-ordinated by changes in transcription and translation in hypoxia, much less is known about how chromatin changes allow for transcription to take place. The missing link between co-ordinating chromatin structure and the hypoxia-induced transcriptional programme could be in the form of a class of dioxygenases called JmjC (Jumonji C) enzymes, the majority of which are histone demethylases. In the present review, we will focus on the function of JmjC histone demethylases, and how these could act as oxygen sensors for chromatin in hypoxia. The current knowledge concerning the role of JmjC histone demethylases in the process of organism development and human disease will also be reviewed

    Expanding the MicroRNA Targeting Code: Functional Sites with Centered Pairing

    Get PDF
    Most metazoan microRNA (miRNA) target sites have perfect pairing to the seed region, located near the miRNA 5′ end. Although pairing to the 3′ region sometimes supplements seed matches or compensates for mismatches, pairing to the central region has been known to function only at rare sites that impart Argonaute-catalyzed mRNA cleavage. Here, we present “centered sites,” a class of miRNA target sites that lack both perfect seed pairing and 3′-compensatory pairing and instead have 11–12 contiguous Watson-Crick pairs to the center of the miRNA. Although centered sites can impart mRNA cleavage in vitro (in elevated Mg[superscript 2+]), in cells they repress protein output without consequential Argonaute-catalyzed cleavage. Our study also identified extensively paired sites that are cleavage substrates in cultured cells and human brain. This expanded repertoire of cleavage targets and the identification of the centered site type help explain why central regions of many miRNAs are evolutionarily conserved.National Institutes of Health (U.S.)Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. Fellowship Awar
    corecore