Academic literature on the topic 'Denial excuses'

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Journal articles on the topic "Denial excuses"

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Beaton, Blake, Heith Copes, Megan Webb, Andy Hochstetler, and Peter S. Hendricks. "Accounting for Microdosing Classic Psychedelics." Journal of Drug Issues 50, no. 1 (2019): 3–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022042619871008.

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Microdosing classic psychedelics (e.g., LSD [lysergic acid diethylamide] and psilocybin) is the practice of taking small amounts of these substances to bring about various positive life changes. Little is known about the subjective experiences and perceptions of those who engage in the practice. Accordingly, we use the sociology of accounts as a theoretical framework to explore the ways that those who microdose excuse or justify their practice. Using data from semistructured interviews with 30 people who had microdosed, we find that none provided excuses for their microdosing, but all offered
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Von Hippel, Karin. "The Non-Interventionary Norm Prevails: an Analysis of the Western Sahara." Journal of Modern African Studies 33, no. 1 (1995): 67–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022278x00020851.

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Fears that the supposedly sacred norm of non-intervention in the domestic affairs of other states has eroded in the last few years are not entirely groundless. Excuses to intervene, that now receive sanction by the Security Council of the United Nations, include humanitarian concerns, as in Somalia and Rwanda, international peace and security, as in Kuwait and Bosnia, and the denial of democracy, as in Haiti, all of which differ from the interventions of the cold war years. As Thomas Buergenthal has pointed out, ‘Once the rule of law, human rights and democratic pluralism are made the subject
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Malki, Ilham. "A Discursive Examination of White Americans’ Attitudes about White-Black Interracial Marriages in USA." European Journal of Social Sciences 4, no. 1 (2021): 88. http://dx.doi.org/10.26417/831kva96x.

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The primary objective of this article is to manifest by means of discourse analysis the attitudes of White Americans towards White-Black interracial marriages. The research draws on qualitative analysis of the discourse of some white Americans to find out the genuine convictions they bear about interracial unions, especially those incorporating Blacks and Whites. Regardless of the fact that White Americans have asserted their approval of White-Black marriages, the results of the study reveal that some White-Americans are still not in favour of their close relatives marrying outside their own r
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Barbara Stańdo-Kawecka. "Neutralization of the Rule „DO NOT STEAL” in the Origin of Juvenile Delinquency." Archives of Criminology, no. XX (August 1, 1994): 21–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.7420/ak1994b.

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The paper discusses the findings of a study aimed at an empirical verification of a well-known criminological concept: the Sykes and Matza concept of neutralization techniques from the classical trend of positivist criminology. What Sykes and Matza see as the factor of juvenile delinquency are mechanisms of justification of one’s own delinquent behavior. Reverting to functionalim, the authors assume a social consensus on the basic values and norms of behavior. Juvenile delinquents generally recognize the same values and norms as non-delinquent youth but, unlike that youth, they grow proficient
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Sadr, Meena. "Beyond Universalism or Culturalism: A Case Study of Claiming Human Rights in Afghanistan." Informal: South Asian Journal of Human Rights and Social Justice 1, no. 1 (2024): 39–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/informal.v1i1.69163.

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This paper explores the multifaceted humanitarian and human rights crises in Afghanistan following the Taliban's takeover. This event marked the establishment of a gender apartheid regime dedicated to the mass deprivation of women's rights, using culture and religion as primary excuses. The study reveals that the Taliban's edicts and directives impose gender segregation, systematically preventing women from participating in public life and usurping their decision-making power in both political and social spheres. Women who resisted these draconian policies through protests have been abducted a
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Chen, Pengyi. "The Study of Apology in Public Relation Crisis Management: how to Achieve the Mitigated Outcomes by Deploying Effective Apologies." BCP Business & Management 34 (December 14, 2022): 1095–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.54691/bcpbm.v34i.3145.

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Public Relations and crisis management, asnewly risen and rapidly growing domains, now serves as vital knowledge used to build healthy and robust two-way communication between customers and brands/organizations. Many methods are examined and tested to regulate organizational reputation and hold together customers’ trust and satisfaction as an unpredicted crisis that could damage positive brand image occurs. Recent studies reveal that to manage the crisis effectively, there are several strategies deemed effective; one example is the successful delivery of an apology. Two case studies: the 2022
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Hosseini, Akram Sadat, and Esmaeil Zohdi. "The Kite Runner and the Problem of Racism and Ethnicity." International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences 74 (November 2016): 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilshs.74.33.

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Racism is a worldwide matter that is based on the physical characteristics of people's division into different categories on which some people become superior and some inferior. Racism and ethnicity are usually considered as the same concepts while in fact ethnicity is a sub-class of racism. In every nation, there are some ethnic groups with the same origin and similar customs that may or may not be judged equally by the power-handler ethnic groups. An example of such country is Afghanistan which is severely an ethnic country. This study explores the social, cultural, and scientific investigat
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Daly, Joseph Patrick, Richard W. Pouder, and Chris R. McNeil. "Effects of explanations communicated in announcements of alleged labor abuses on valuation of a firm’s stock." Corporate Communications: An International Journal 22, no. 1 (2017): 93–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ccij-11-2015-0070.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to gauge the impact of the following on the share price of a firm that has allegedly committed labor abuses: the allegation itself, explanations (justifications and excuses) offered by the company spokesperson, and denials of responsibility for the alleged abuse. Design/methodology/approach The study uses archival data and an event study methodology. Findings Labor abuse allegations have a negative impact on the firm’s share price. Allegations that are accompanied by an explanation (a justification or excuse) have a less negative impact than those that are
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Kerghitageen. "CHUKOTKA AND THE RUSSIAN INVASION OF UKRAINE." Ethnologia Polona 45 (December 17, 2024): 193–214. https://doi.org/10.23858/ethp.2024.45.3731.

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It seems that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine came as a surprise to the Indigenous people of Chukotka. Indeed, at first, there was confusion among them, then ignorance and even denial of the war. Militarist state propaganda and exceptional cash payments to soldiers and their families, on the one hand, and the threat of imprisonment to protesters, on the other hand, convinced most Chukotkans to accept the war and even find excuses for it. Dozens of residents from every village in Chukotka signed up as “volunteers”, leaving their homeland to kill or be killed. Those who stayed at home have adapted
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Dunn, Deborah, and Michael J. Cody. "Account credibility and public image: Excuses, justifications, denials, and sexual harassment." Communication Monographs 67, no. 4 (2000): 372–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03637750009376518.

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Books on the topic "Denial excuses"

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Wilkinson, Angela, and Betty Sue Flowers, eds. Realistic Hope. Amsterdam University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462987241.

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We are running out of water, robots will take our jobs, we are eating ourselves to an early death, old age pension and health systems are bankrupting governments, and an immigration crisis is unravelling the European integration project. A growing number of nightmares, perfect storms, and global catastrophes create fear of the future. One response is technocratic optimism — we’ll invent our way out of these impending crises. Or we’ll simply ignore them as politically too hot to handle, too uncomfortable for experts — denied until crisis hits. History is littered with late lessons from early wa
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No Excuse, No Denial. Writer's Showcase Press, 2000.

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Excuses, excuses: A compendium of rationalizations, alibis, denials, extenuating curcumstances, and outright lies. Plume, 1992.

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Alvarez, Maria, and Clayton Littlejohn, eds. When Ignorance is No Excuse. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198779667.003.0003.

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The chapter argues that the best non-skeptical accounts of moral responsibility acknowledge that factual ignorance and mistake will diminish moral responsibility in a way that moral ignorance and mistake will not. That is because factual ignorance is often non-culpable so long as it meets certain merely procedural epistemic standards but the same is not true of moral ignorance. The chapter’s argument is that the assumption that it is gets the standards of culpability for moral ignorance wrong, and that the mistake is encouraged by the thought that culpability in general requires an instance of
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Book chapters on the topic "Denial excuses"

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Millar, Jeremy. "Emily Dickinson." In The Bodies That Remain. punctum books, 2018. https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0212.1.07.

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About her eyes, and her face, we know the most. It is what we look upon first, look upon most, when we meet someone, it is true, yet such a meeting is for us forever, already, denied. Too late we have come, too early she has left. About her face I know more than almost anyone else’s. At the age of sixteen the length of her mouth crease was 8.5mm; the distance from the edge of her iris to her lower lid was 0.2mm. Is this what we mean by ‘know’? Fragments of things, gathered. The distance from her lateral lid crease to upper lid margin was 0.7mm at 3.8mm, in her right eye, and 0.8mm at 3.7mm in
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Simester, A. P. "Unpacking Excuses." In Fundamentals of Criminal Law. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198853145.003.0019.

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This chapter focuses on excuses, which can be usefully subdivided into three categories: rationale-based excuses; hybrid and partial irresponsibility defences; and defensive mistakes. What unites these categories is that each involves some form of excusatory explanation. Broadly speaking, the domain of excusatory explanations ranges over all unjustified acts for which blame is defrayed rather than exempted. Whereas the rationale-based excuses were discussed in chapter 17, it is the second and third categories that are explored here. The chapter sketches various ways in which certain excuses ca
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Rowe, Neil C. "The Ethics of Deception in Cyberspace." In Handbook of Research on Technoethics. IGI Global, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-022-6.ch034.

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We examine the main ethical issues concerning deception in cyberspace. We first discuss the concept of deception and survey ethical theories applicable to cyberspace. We then examine deception for commercial gain such as spam, phishing, spyware, deceptive commercial software, and dishonest games. We next examine deception used in attacks on computer systems, including identity deception, Trojan horses, denial of service, eavesdropping, record manipulation, and social engineering. We then consider several types of deception for defensive purposes, less well known, including honeypots, honeytoke
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Snow, Ned. "Free Speech." In Intellectual Property and Immorality. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197614402.003.0010.

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This chapter considers whether denying patent or copyright protection on moral grounds is inconsistent with doctrines of free speech. The chapter first examines whether moral denials of patent or copyright protection constitute a government restriction of private speech. For patent, it concludes that moral denials would not be such a restriction. The denial of patent protection likely reflects the government’s choice to selectively adopt private speech as its own, and even if not, the denials should be viewed as permissible regulations of conduct that only incidentally affect speech. By contra
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Coco, Antonio. "A General Definition of the Defence of Mistake of Law." In The Defence of Mistake of Law in International Criminal Law. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192895745.003.0002.

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Abstract Many national jurisdictions have moved away from the old adage ‘ignorantia legis non excusat’. This chapter explains that the defence of mistake of law can be construed in two different ways. On one side, mistake of law as a ‘denial of mens rea’ defence excludes criminal responsibility whenever a defendant erroneously assessed a legal element of the offence, and hence the related requirement of ‘knowledge’ was not met. On the other side, mistake of law as an ‘excuse’ excludes criminal responsibility for defendants who, despite having technically fulfilled all the required material and
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Burney, Frances. "Letter XII Evelina in continuation." In Evelina. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199536931.003.0048.

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June 10th. This morning, Mr. Smith called, on purpose, he said, to offer me a ticket for the next Hampstead assembly.<sup>*</sup> I thanked him, but desired to be excused accepting it; he would not, however, be denied, nor answered, and,...
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Ormerod, David, and Karl Laird. "9. Mental conditions, intoxication and mistake." In Smith, Hogan, & Ormerod's Criminal Law. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198807094.003.0009.

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This chapter considers the most commonly occurring ‘mental condition defences’, focusing on the pleas of insanity, intoxication, and mistake. The common law historically made a distinction between justification and excuse, at least in relation to homicide. It is said that justification relates to the rightness of the act but excuse to the circumstances of the individual actor. The chapter examines the relationship between mental condition defences, insanity, and unfitness to be tried, and explains the Law Commission’s most recent recommendations for reforming unfitness and other mental conditi
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Ormerod, David, and Karl Laird. "9. Mental conditions, intoxication and mistake." In Smith, Hogan, and Ormerod's Criminal Law. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198849704.003.0009.

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This chapter considers the most commonly occurring ‘mental condition defences’, focusing on the pleas of insanity, intoxication and mistake. The common law historically made a distinction between justification and excuse, at least in relation to homicide. It is said that justification relates to the rightness of the act but to excuse as to the circumstances of the individual actor. The chapter examines the relationship between mental condition defences, insanity and unfitness to be tried, and explains the Law Commission’s most recent recommendations for reforming unfitness and other mental con
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Zimmermann, Reinhard, and Nils Jansen. "Quieta Movere Interpretative Change in a Codified System." In The Law of Obligations. Oxford University PressOxford, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198264842.003.0011.

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Abstract The present essay has been prompted by the recent renunciation of the maxim error iuris non excusat in the law of restitution of a number of common-law jurisdictions and mixed legal systems. Ever since Lord Ellenborough’s ill-considered decision in Bilbie v Lumley a plaintiff has been denied recovery of a transfer which he had made as a result of a mistake of law.
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Coco, Antonio. "Mistake of Law at the International Criminal Court and Other International Criminal Tribunals." In The Defence of Mistake of Law in International Criminal Law. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192895745.003.0004.

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Abstract The version of mistake of law adopted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) Statute is the ‘denial of mens rea’ one, due to a precise drafting choice. The concept of mistake of law as an excuse was deliberately excluded from the Statute. The language adopted in the ICC Elements of Crimes restricts resort to mistake of law even further. Thus, the ICC Statute allows punishment of defendants who did not know—and sometimes could not have known—the relevant law. However, the ICC approach towards mistake of law is more lenient than the approach of other international criminal tribunals.
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