Academic literature on the topic 'Alibi'

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Journal articles on the topic "Alibi"

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Allison, Meredith, Kyla R. Mathews, and Stephen W. Michael. "Alibi Believability: The Impact of Salacious Alibi Activities." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 40, no. 4 (2012): 605–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.2012.40.4.605.

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We examined how alibi strength and a suspect's claim of engaging in salacious alibi activities impact alibi believability. Specifically, we investigated whether an alibi of watching an X-rated movie versus watching a regular movie caused differences in alibi believability, perceived likelihood of guilt, and ratings of various character traits. Undergraduates read a crime description and a mock transcript before completing a questionnaire (adapted from Olson & Wells, 2004). Alibis were rated as more believable when the suspect provided a salacious alibi. Suspects with salacious alibis were rated as more honest, open, and less likely to be guilty.
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Heath, Wendy, Joshua Stein, and Sabreen Afiouni. "“But I Wasn’t There!”." Wrongful Conviction Law Review 2, no. 3 (2021): 240–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/wclawr52.

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Using the exoneree summaries in the Innocence Project and the documentation in the Innocence Record, we analyze the content of the alibis of those who have been wrongly convicted and exonerated with the use of DNA. Sixty-five percent of the 377 DNA exonerees had an alibi. Fifty-one percent reported that their alibi corroborators were friends and/or family members, while only about 10% presented physical evidence to support their alibi. Those with an alibi were significantly less likely to falsely confess than those without an alibi. Eyewitnesses were significantly more likely to be a contributing cause of conviction for those with an alibi than for those without an alibi, and 27% of the exonerees with an alibi had only eyewitness evidence to implicate them. Those that had an alibi were also more likely to claim that they had an inadequate defense than those that did not have an alibi. We conclude this paper with recommendations for reforms and future research.
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Olson, Elizabeth A., and Gary L. Wells. "The alibi-generation effect: Alibi-generation experience influences alibi evaluation." Legal and Criminological Psychology 17, no. 1 (2011): 151–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8333.2010.02003.x.

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Adiatma Nugroho and Handar Subhandi Bakhtiar. "Pembuktian Ilmiah VS Alibi: Bagaimana Ilmu Forensik Mengatasi Tantangan Pembelaan pada Kasus Raden Adante." Jembatan Hukum : Kajian ilmu Hukum, Sosial dan Administrasi Negara 1, no. 4 (2024): 86–94. https://doi.org/10.62383/jembatan.v1i4.955.

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Scientific evidence has become an important element in modern criminal justice, especially in complex cases such as Raden Adante, where alibis are used as the main defense strategy to undermine forensic evidence. In this case, scientific methods such as DNA analysis, digital traces, and toxicology examination succeeded in breaking the defendant's alibi. This research examines how scientific evidence can overcome the challenges of alibi strategies which are often used to confuse the investigative process. This study shows that accurate and standardized forensic evidence is able to objectively confirm the presence of the defendant at the scene of the crime, thereby strengthening fair and effective law enforcement efforts. The research uses a juridical-normative approach with qualitative analysis, examining regulations, legal doctrine, and expert views to assess the role of scientific evidence in dealing with alibi defenses.
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McMillan, Katie. "Alibi evidence in the courtroom: Perceptions and experiences from the Bar." PsyPag Quarterly 1, no. 106 (2018): 21–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpspag.2018.1.106.21.

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In the United Kingdom there is little known about the way in which criminal barristers, those directly responsible for examining and cross-examining evidence in the courtroom, perceive alibi testimony. In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with four qualified criminal barristers and subject to thematic analysis. Preliminary analysis identifies a number of key themes central to barrister’s perceptions and experiences of alibi evidence, three of which will be discussed. Research in to this unchartered area aims to yield greater knowledge as to how criminal barristers understand, perceive and approach alibis in the courtroom, to ultimately inform real-life practice.
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Stepanenko, Diana. "Modeling in the Process of Verifying a Suspects and a Defendants Alibis." Siberian Criminal Process and Criminalistic Readings, no. 4 (December 22, 2021): 87–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/2411-6122.2021.4.87-94.

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The author examines the use of modeling in the verification of a suspect’s and a defendant’s alibis. In the conditions of digitization, there are wide prospects for the use of such a method. Alibi verification can be viewed as a special case of the criminalistic reconstruction of the event of the crime, and the modeling method is morphologically included in the process of reconstructing the investigated event or its part. Flowcharts are designed with the use of the working systems of alibi verification proposed by the author, they reflect forensically relevant features of the investigated object that should be selected from the flow of information as information blocks and properly organized. Information blocks are interconnected and correlate with each other. The more content each block contains, the more accurate the result produced by the constructed model will be. The author concludes that modeling should result in building an adequate model of an episode of the criminal event under investigation that will reflect data on the “history” of the alibi and will make it possible to predict its variants.
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Grison, Laurent. "Géographie alibi." Mappemonde 50, no. 2 (1998): 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/mappe.1998.1994.

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Levin, Dave, Youndo Lee, Luke Valenta, et al. "Alibi Routing." ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review 45, no. 4 (2015): 611–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2829988.2787509.

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Strange, Deryn, Jennifer Dysart, and Elizabeth F. Loftus. "Why Errors in Alibis Are Not Necessarily Evidence of Guilt." Zeitschrift für Psychologie 222, no. 2 (2014): 82–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/2151-2604/a000169.

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Laypeople, police, and prosecutors tend to believe that a suspect’s alibi, if truthful, should remain consistent over time (see Burke, Turtle, & Olson, 2007 ; Culhane & Hosch 2012 ; Dysart & Strange, 2012 ). However, there is no empirical evidence to support this assumption. We investigated (a) whether some features of an alibi – such as what was happening, who with, where, and for how long – are more likely to produce errors than others; and (b) whether consistency in alibi stories is correlated with particular phenomenological characteristics of the alibi such as a person’s confidence and sense of reliving the event. We asked participants to imagine they were suspected of a crime and to provide their truthful alibi for an afternoon 3 weeks prior and to complete questions regarding the phenomenological characteristics of their memory. We also asked participants to locate evidence of their actual whereabouts for the critical period. Participants returned a week later, presented their evidence, re-told their alibi, and re-rated the phenomenological characteristics of the alibi. Our results revealed that participants were largely inconsistent across all aspects of their alibi, but there was variability across the different features. In addition, those who were inconsistent were less confident, recollected the time period in less detail and less vividly, and were less likely to claim to remember the time period. We conclude that inconsistencies are a normal byproduct of an imperfect memory system and thus should not necessarily arouse suspicion that a suspect is lying.
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Hénocq, Marie. "La commission alibi." Plein droit 47-48, no. 1 (2001): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/pld.047.0030.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Alibi"

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Ryndak, Karen M. "Alibi Witnesses: Willingness to Provide False Alibis." UNF Digital Commons, 2014. http://digitalcommons.unf.edu/etd/501.

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Hamilton’s Rule (1964) involves the notion that the likelihood of an altruistic act being performed is predicted by the degree of relatedness between the recipient and the donor. Therefore, the extent to which people would be willing to lie for a defendant is a function of the degree of biological relationship between the defendant and the alibi witness. The researchers of the current study presented participants with one murder and one burglary packet containing a police report summary and a hypothetical scenario. The summary police report detailed case facts, evidence collected, and witness statements. Following their reading of the police report summary participants made judgments on witness’ credibility, defendant’s guilt and types of evidence. In the hypothetical scenarios, participants were asked to imagine their father or male friend is pleading with them to act as an alibi witness. Participants then agreed or disagreed to serve as an alibi witness. Overall, the researchers found participants were unwilling to provide false alibis, however, when they were, participants gave false alibis for their father more often than for their friend. Limitations may be a restricted sample, evidence certainty, and the yes or no decision to providing a false alibi. Future research should include an examination of individual differences and moral development.
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Arnqvist, Jonas. "Elektronisk ledningskommunikation : Nav eller alibi?" Thesis, Stockholm University, School of Business, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-6324.

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<p>Användningen och betydelsen av intranät, det vill säga en slags organisationsinterna webbplatser, ökar i många organisationer i takt med en ökad IT-användning när allt mer kommunikation sker via elektroniska kanaler. Fungerande intern kommunikation, inte minst ledningskommunikation, är samtidigt en förutsättning för organisering, ledning och styrning. Ju otydligare organisationens mål är ju större betydelse får en fungerande intern ledningskommunikation för att omsätta t.ex. visioner i konkreta åtgärder. Detta framstår som särskilt angeläget i offentlig förvaltning där politiska visioner, mål och prioriteringar ofta kan vara vaga eller motsägelsefulla. Förvaltningsledningen måste här tolka de politiska målen och formulera dessa i termer som kan kommuniceras till och förstås av medarbetarna. En del av del av denna kommunikation kan ske via intranät. En studie har genomförts bland ett urval av Stockholms stads fackförvaltningar för att undersöka om intranät används för ledningskommunikation, vem som i så fall tolkar och formulerar budskapen och hur de tas fram. Undersökningen visar att intranätet har förutsättningar att utgöra en rik källa till kunskap och ett viktigt kommunikationsnav i organisationen. Utan en genomtänkt informationsstrategi och med det ökade informationsbruset riskerar det dock att bli en ursäkt för att inte kommunicera på annat sätt. En slutsats som dras är att ledningar sannolikt underskattar intranätets påverkan på organisationskulturen och vikten av att vara synlig på intranätet. Samtidigt förefaller ledningar att överskatta intranätets förmåga att förmedla information. Skälet är bland annat att kommunikationen ses som ett överföringsproblem inte ett tolkningsproblem. Effektiv distribution är ingen garanti för effektiv kommunikation och förståelse.</p>
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Nyström, Emelie, and Adam Ekdal. "Revisionsutskott : ett alibi för styrelsen?" Thesis, Högskolan i Borås, Institutionen Handels- och IT-högskolan, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-17160.

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Under den senare delen av 1900-talet inträffade ett antal företagsskandaler, såsom Enron och Worldcom, vilket föranledde ett bristande förtroendet för såväl styrelsers som revisorers arbete. För att återfå förtroende på den svenska marknaden introducerades Koden och en uppdatering av Aktiebolagslagen gjordes. En av de förtroendehöjande åtgärderna innebar att revisionsutskotten introducerades. Revisionsutskottens införande innebar ett tydliggörande av styrelseledamöternas arbetsuppgifter, men medförde samtidigt att huvudmannaskapsproblematiken i styrelsen aktualiserades. Vilket leder till vår problemformulering: Hur har revisionsutskottens införande påverkat ansvarsfördelning i styrelsen?För att kunna besvara vår frågeställning har vi genomfört kvalitativa intervjuer utifrån ett expertperspektiv. Expertperspektivet har företrätts av institutionella ägare, revisorer och en advokat. Respondenternas olika relationer till fenomenet har bidragit till ett brett perspektiv.Empiriinsamlingen påvisar tydligt att införandet av revisionsutskott har aktualiserat huvudmannaskapsproblematiken. Empirin påvisar att en dualism, i styrelsen, kan ha uppstått utifrån vem som agerar i vems uppdrag. Dock åberopar respondenterna likt lagrum och rekommendationer att styrelsens huvudansvar i helhet kvarstår.Vår slutsats är att styrelsen inte har skapat sig ett alibi genom införandet av revisionsutskott, och att styrelsens ansvar i helhet kvarstår. Därmed kan vi konstatera att införandet av revisionsutskott har belyst ansvarsfrågan, men att ansvaret kvarstår hos styrelsen i sin helhet. Vi har även konstaterat att forskning om huvudmannaskapsproblematiken inom styrelsen är bristfällig och att mer forskning skulle berika området.<br>Program: Civilekonomprogrammet
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Fawcett, Hannah Elizabeth. "An investigation into deceptive alibi witness testimony." Thesis, Sheffield Hallam University, 2012. http://shura.shu.ac.uk/20199/.

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'Weak' alibi evidence is the second leading cause of false convictions although psychological research on this issue is scarce. Understanding the factors contributing to the provision of false alibi witness testimony will highlight whether judicial instructions about alibi witness evidence are required to ensure fair investigations and trials. Utilising experimental and quasi-experimental research this thesis represents the first systematic investigation into the influences upon alibi witness deception. Study 1 set out to explore the factors influencing perceptions of deceptive alibi witness evidence in order to highlight the variables requiring further analysis later in the thesis. The study found that perceptions of false alibi evidence acceptability were influenced by an interaction between the type of deceptive evidence provided by the alibi witness (lie, false confession, evasion, omission) and the alibi witness' perceptions of the defendant's guilt (guilty, innocent, unsure of guilt). A qualitative content analysis supported these quantitative findings and also suggested that perceptions of the criminal justice system, knowledge of legal sanctions and the relationship between defendant and alibi witness were important in alibi evaluations. These factors were investigated further in the subsequent studies. Although study 1 highlighted the importance of deception type in alibi witness deception, the alibi research to date has examined solely alibi witness lies meaning there is no existing measure of alibi witness deception types that could be utilised in the thesis. Thus study 2 details the development of the False Evidence Questionnaire (FEQ) which found that alibi witness deception to consists of two factors; Omissions and Commissions. This supported the significant effect of deception type found in study 1. To further explore the role of attitudes to the criminal justice system in alibi witness deception study 2 also developed a multifaceted questionnaire; the Attitudes towards the Police and Courts Questionnaire (APCQ), to improve on previous one-dimensional measures of attitudes to the criminal justice system. The APCQ had five factors; Police Institution, Court Functioning, Punishment, Treatment of the Accused, Personal Safety. The structures of the FEQ and APCQ were demonstrated to be reliable and have a strong theoretical underpinning. Study 3 revealed that the APCQ Police Institution factor and participant age significantly predicted both the Commissions factor of the FEQ. Moreover, the APCQ Police Institution factor, participant age and the APCQ Court Functioning factor also predicted FEQ Omissions. These findings suggest that by improving perceptions of the police, false alibi witness evidence may be discouraged. Study 4 explored whether the significant effect of age could be attributed to increased awareness of legal sanctions amongst older adults. However, the study found that FEQ Omissions and Commissions are not influenced by punishment awareness illustrating that educating the public about the sanctions for false alibi evidence is unlikely to deter this behaviour. Study 5 used a mock police interview to gain a more ecological valid measure of the relationship between alibi witness and defendant upon alibi witness honesty. This revealed a significant association between unmotivated alibi witnesses (individuals with no/limited prior relationship to the defendant) and honesty inmock police interviews. Surprisingly, motivated alibi witnesses (individuals with an existing relationship with the defendant) were not found to have a significant association with either honesty or deception in the interviews. These findings support the conceptualisation of alibi witness deception as an altruistic act influenced by estimations of reciprocation likelihood. The study also found alibi witness intended honesty and actual honesty in the police interview were correlated, therefore validating the use of prospective questionnaire methods as utilised in studies 3 and 4. The final study demonstrated that although alibi witness motivation had a significant effect on mock juror perceptions of alibi witness honesty, this bias did not affect perceptions of defendant reliability or case verdicts. Nonetheless, judicial directions may be necessary to counteract juror scepticism towards motivated alibi witnesses. The thesis represents a unique development in the understanding of deceptive alibi witness evidence, the findings of which direct implications for criminal justice practice as well as future alibi research.
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Meland, Øystein H. "Prosjekteringsledelse i byggeprosessen: Suksesspåvirker eller andres alibi for fiasko." Doctoral thesis, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Engineering Science and Technology, 2000. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-536.

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Ochoa, Claudia. "The effect of facial resemblance on alibi credibility and final verdicts." To access this resource online via ProQuest Dissertations and Theses @ UTEP, 2009. http://0-proquest.umi.com.lib.utep.edu/login?COPT=REJTPTU0YmImSU5UPTAmVkVSPTI=&clientId=2515.

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Jolly, Kevin Weston. "I'd be helping if we weren't so committed the application of the investment model to the study of alibis /." To access this resource online via ProQuest Dissertations and Theses @ UTEP, 2008. http://0-proquest.umi.com.lib.utep.edu/login?COPT=REJTPTU0YmImSU5UPTAmVkVSPTI=&clientId=2515.

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Kriz, Kay Dian. "Genius as an alibi ; the production of the artistic subject and english landscape painting, 1795-1820." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/41450.

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Nineteenth-century writers and modern scholars have agreed that there was a major shift in the practice of landscape painting in England around the turn of the nineteenth century. Paintings by up-and-coming artists such as J. M. W. Turner, Thomas Girtin, and A. W. Callcott were seen to exhibit a concern for atmospheric effects and an "expressivity" lacking in earlier works. This shift has often been explained by invoking artistic genius: the keen intellect and sensibility of the artistic producer has served as a self-evident explanation of the rise to prominence of this form of landscape painting. This study endorses the centrality of the artistic subject to the enterprise of landscape painting, but disputes the notion that genius is a natural and self-evident phenomenon. It is argued here that the native landscape genius was a category of the creative individual which was socially produced at this historical moment in conjunction with or in opposition to other contemporaneous formulations of the artist. This examination of artistic subjectivity as determined by gender, social status, education, wealth, and so forth, is organized around three interrelated subject positions: the "man of letters" derived from the notion of the academic history painter, the "market slave," a negative construction of the artist who was seen to pander to the demands of the market and the "imaginative man of genius." The inscription of these positionalities in landscape imagery i s contingent upon a range of historically specific social phenomena. The discussion focuses particularly upon the discourse of nationalism during and immediately after the Napoleonic wars, epistemoiogical debates concerning the type of knowledge appropriate for a commercial society, and the discourse on the market as it relates to the circulation of paintings as cultural commodities. Determining the relationship of the artistic subject to these various social phenomena involves an examination of the physical spaces in which paintings were displayed and exhibited, the discursive spaces in which they were discussed and evaluated—including art criticism, aesthetic treatises, illustrated county histories and social and political commentary—and the institutional practices which shaped their production and reception. The power and appeal of the landscape genius, I argue, lay in its ability to a serve broad range of social interests in negotiating successfully the seemingly contradictory demands of the market in luxury commodities and of a social ideal of Englishness marked by independence, intellectual power and sensibility. The genius's imaginative encounter with external nature provided it with an alibi which served to obscure it s activities as an economic producer in a highly competitive market society.<br>Arts, Faculty of<br>Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of<br>Graduate
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van, Bever Donker Maurits Michiel. "Re-articulating History: Historical Play, Nation, Text." University of Western Cape, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7494.

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Masters of Art<br>The writing of history in postapartheid South Africa constitutes a crisis for the discipline of history as, I argue, it requires the discipline to confront its role in contributing towards the constitution of the condition of possibility of the discourse of apartheid. Stated differently, the relationship between the discipline of history and nationalist or identity politics, a relationship that is characterized by history performing the role of alibi, is highlighted as problematic within the question of the postapartheid. It is in this context that I want to broach the concept of the historical playas an antidisciplinary object that works to unsettle the discipline of history and thereby its role as alibi. Such an engagement with the historical play would, I argue, enable a progressive politics of the sort that Michel Foucault calls for. In his essay 'History, Discourse and Discontinuity' (1972) which he wrote in response to a question posed to him of the possibility of resistance within the corpus of his work, Foucault argues that a progressive politics would be one that takes into account a discourse's conditions of possibility - one that limits the claims of discourses on life through defining their grammars, as it were." While this current study does not seek to, and also does not claim to, subject the discourse of history to such a critique (I am not proposing to investigate the emergence of the discipline), Foucault's understanding of a progressive politics is especially significant to it. Particularly, rather than reading for the grammar of history - this has been done by others such as (but not limited to) Gayatri Spivak, Hayden White and Friederich Nietzsche and will be discussed later - this dissertation starts from the position that the discipline of history played (and plays) a fundamental role in establishing the conditions of possibility of the discourse of apartheid." This is not to argue that apartheid can be reduced to an outworking of nationalist history (apartheid as a discursive field).
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Brengesjö, Emil. "Lis alibi pendens in international arbitration : reflections on the Swedish position in the context of international trends and approaches." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Juridiska institutionen, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-95865.

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Books on the topic "Alibi"

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Samson, Pierre. Alibi. Leméac, 2001.

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Sandra, Brown. Alibi. Świat Książki Wydawnictwo, 2015.

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Walter, Sorrells, and Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), eds. Alibi. Jove, 2005.

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Morante, Elsa. Alibi. Garzanti, 1990.

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Ayvazyan, Aghasi. Alibi. Nor-dar, 2000.

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Morante, Elsa. Alibi. Garzanti, 1988.

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Woods, Teri. Alibi. Grand Central Pub., 2010.

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Kanon, Joseph. Alibi. Thorndike Press, 2005.

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Butcher, Kristin. Alibi. Orca Book Publishers, 2014.

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Annoesjka, Oostindiër, ed. Alibi. Luitingh, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Alibi"

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Swildens, Hans. "Alibi." In Wörterbuch der Psychotherapie. Springer Vienna, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-211-99131-2_39.

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Burke, Tara M., and Stéphanie B. Marion. "Alibi witnesses." In Conviction of the innocent: Lessons from psychological research. American Psychological Association, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/13085-011.

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Carr, Mary Ann. "Second Alibi." In The Great Chocolate Caper. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003238805-28.

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Allison, Meredith. "Alibi Believability." In Alibis and Corroborators. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-95663-9_4.

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Geras, Norman. "Alibi Antisemitism." In Mapping the New Left Antisemitism. Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003322320-9.

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Smith, Andrew. "Weapon and Alibi." In Racism and Everyday Life: Social Theory, History and ‘Race’. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137493569_1.

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Blue, Levon E., and Laura E. Pinto. "Disrupting the alibi." In Financialization, Financial Literacy, and Social Education. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003020264-2.

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Carr, Mary Ann. "Corroborating an Alibi." In The Great Chocolate Caper. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003238805-9.

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Moore, Alexandra S. "Exception as alibi." In Liberal Disorder, States of Exception, and Populist Politics. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367853280-5.

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Culhane, Scott E. "Generating Alibi Statements." In Alibis and Corroborators. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-95663-9_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Alibi"

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Levin, Dave, Youndo Lee, Luke Valenta, et al. "Alibi Routing." In SIGCOMM '15: ACM SIGCOMM 2015 Conference. ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2785956.2787509.

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Davis, Benjamin, Hao Chen, and Matthew Franklin. "Privacy-preserving alibi systems." In the 7th ACM Symposium. ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2414456.2414475.

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Flater, David W., and Yelena Yesha. "Properties of networked information retrieval with ALIBI." In the second international conference. ACM Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/170088.170098.

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Castiglione, Aniello, Giuseppe Cattaneo, Giancarlo De Maio, Alfredo De Santis, Gerardo Costabile, and Mattia Epifani. "The Forensic Analysis of a False Digital Alibi." In 2012 Sixth International Conference on Innovative Mobile and Internet Services in Ubiquitous Computing (IMIS). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/imis.2012.127.

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Kwon, Jeong-woo, Se-jin Ji, and Jong-hee Park. "Knowledge Structure of Virtual Inhabitant for an Alibi Reasoning." In 2006 International Conference on Computational Inteligence for Modelling Control and Automation and International Conference on Intelligent Agents Web Technologies and International Commerce (CIMCA'06). IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cimca.2006.139.

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Hermoni, Ofer, Niv Gilboa, Eyal Felstaine, and Sharon Shitrit. "Deniability — an alibi for users in P2P networks." In Middleware and Workshops (COMSWARE '08). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/comswa.2008.4554432.

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Hoang Nguyen, T. Pongthawornkamol, and K. Nahrstedt. "Alibi Framework for Identifying Reactive Jamming Nodes in Wireless LAN." In 2011 IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/glocom.2011.6134240.

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Liu, Tianyuan, Avesta Hojjati, Adam Bates, and Klara Nahrstedt. "AliDrone: Enabling Trustworthy Proof-of-Alibi for Commercial Drone Compliance." In 2018 IEEE 38th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icdcs.2018.00086.

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Hale, Mary E. "The Circular Installation." In 2021 ACSA Teachers Conference. ACSA Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.teach.2021.7.

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Ubiquitous in our studios and environmentally corrosive: Rigid Foam, FoamCor, Acrylic, and PVC to name a few examples, are energy intensive, toxic to produce and persistent. These persistent materials may try to find an alibi for use in the longer life of a building, but in an architectural model or installation, that alibi falls apart. A model’s serviceable lifespan may be a mere twenty minute presentation followed by twenty minutes to photograph, and then into overflowing waste bins whose contents flow to a landfill where they will last through millen¬nia (Figure 1). The Circular Installation Studio confronts the disconnect between the nearly eternal lifespan of our materials and the exceedingly short lifespan of the physical artifacts of our design process. We confront this issue through materials research and experimentation, materials analysis, design of temporary physical artifacts, and disposal of these artifacts. Thereby the studio provides a window into material flows, from whence they come and to where they go, giving students a greater appreciation for how their choices impact the environment.
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Albano, Pietro, Aniello Castiglione, Giuseppe Cattaneo, Giancarlo De Maio, and Alfredo De Santis. "On the Construction of a False Digital Alibi on the Android OS." In 2011 Third International Conference on Intelligent Networking and Collaborative Systems (INCoS). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/incos.2011.129.

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Reports on the topic "Alibi"

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Cevherli, Feyza. HAVAYI KİRLETME HAKKININ MÜLKİYETİ VE SATIN ALIMI: İSLAM HUKUKU’NDA ÇEVRENİN KORUNMASI PERSPEKTİFİNDEN KYOTO PROTOKOLÜ. İLKE İlim Kültür Eğitim Vakfı, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26414/ikm005.

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19 ve 20 yüzyılın dünyasında birçok düşünce akımı ortaya çıkmıştır. Bu akımlardan biri sosyalizmdir. Sosyalizm, İslâm dünyasında dergi gibi yayın organları vasıtası ile tanınmıştır. Daha sonraları Müslümanların yaşadığı coğrafyada sosyalizm kavramına karşılık olarak “iştirâkiyye” kelimesi kullanılmaya başlanmıştır. Bu coğrafyada “İştirâkiyyetü’l-İslâm” kavramı İslâm Sosyalizmi olarak karşılık bulmuştur. Sosyalizm akımı ile alakalı olan önemli bir kavram mülkiyettir. Mülkiyet, sahibine eşya üzerinde en kapsamlı yetkileri sağlayan haktır. Klasik fıkıh kitaplarında mülkiyet ile alakalı birçok mesele bulunmaktadır. Geçtiğimiz yüzyılın değişen dünyasında mülkiyet kavramına bakış açısı da değişmiştir. Sosyalizm akımı bu dönemde mülkiyete bakış açısını etkileyen faktörlerden biridir. 20 yüzyılda Suriye bölgesinde yaşamış ve aynı zamanda bir dönem Şam Üniversitesi Hukuk Fakültesi’nde öğretim görevlisi olan Mustafa es-Sibai, Batı’da ortaya çıkan sosyalizm kavramından faydalanarak Batılı yaklaşımdan farklı şekilde İslam sosyalizmi teorisini oluşturmuş ve bu konuda “İştirâkiyyetü’l- İslâm” adında bir eser kaleme almıştır. Adı geçen eserde İslam sosyalizminin temellerinin İslam’da zaten var olduğunu belirten Mustafa es-Sibai kitabında eşitlik, adalet, işçi hakları ve mülkiyet gibi konular üzerinde değerlendirmelerde bulunmuştur. İslam sosyalizmi teorisini oluşturma iddiası ve mülkiyet kavramına yaklaşımı Mustafa es-Sibai’yi ayırıcı kılan unsurlardandır. Bu çalışmada önce sosyalizm ve İslam sosyalizminin gelişim süreci hakkında bilgiler verilecektir. Daha sonra da klasik fıkıh kitaplarında mülkiyet kavramının konumu ve tasnifine yer verilecek ve Mustafa es-Sibai’nin bu kavrama yaklaşımı incelenmeye çalışılacaktır.
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