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1

Silva, Raquel Baracat Tosi Rodrigues da, Solimar Garcia, and Irenilza de Alencar Nääs. "Brazil, USA, and Germany: A comparison of legislation in the fight against COVID-19." Research, Society and Development 10, no. 1 (2021): e44810111942. http://dx.doi.org/10.33448/rsd-v10i1.11942.

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This article compares Brazil, the United States, and Germany's laws in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, describing the scenario of these laws, comparing them to evaluate which country had the best performance, in their laws concerning the COVID-19, in the face of the international requirements. The primary laws of Brazil, the USA, and Germany were used, comparing WHO requirements and international requirements, analyzing: speed in the isolation decision; assembly of hospitals and equipment; economic measures for the population; organization of states and international negotiation. The compar
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2

Panchaud, Catherine. "Enhancing Ethical Thinking: the Role of a National Nurses' Association." Nursing Ethics 2, no. 3 (1995): 243–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/096973309500200307.

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In democratic Switzerland, each of its 26 cantons (states) has its own government and its own laws. Thus there are 26 ministries of health and as many different laws regulating medical and health care practice. The Swiss Nurses' Association likewise has 13 regional chapters and a central organization that works on the national level. Medicine is private and practically all of the Swiss population is privately insured. High technology has led to high specialization with, among other results, a reduced number of premature deaths, longer life span but also rising costs of health. Health professio
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Kostal, R. W. "The Alchemy of Occupation: Karl Loewenstein and the Legal Reconstruction of Nazi Germany, 1945–1946." Law and History Review 29, no. 1 (2011): 1–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0738248010001215.

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In August 1945, Karl Loewenstein began work as senior expert advisor to the Legal Division of American Military Government (AMG) in Berlin. An eminent German-born and educated political scientist and jurisprudent, Loewenstein had come to assist in the “democratization” of his homeland's Nazified law and legal institutions. It was soon obvious, however, that in its crucial first phase the American legal mission in Germany was in disarray. The development and implementation of American law reform policy was being undercut by ill-prepared leadership, poor planning, and the scarcity of learning ab
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4

Katzir, Shaul. "Hermann Aron's Electricity Meters: Physics and Invention in Late Nineteenth-Century Germany." Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 39, no. 4 (2009): 444–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2009.39.4.444.

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This paper examines how Hermann Aron, a well-trained physicist, exploited his multilayered knowledge of science for technological innovations, innovations upon which he built a successful industrial company with more than 1,000 employees. In his academic training, research, and teaching, Aron gained expertise in electromagnetic theory and experimentation, which he later put to use to invent a new electricity meter for the emerging electric power industry of the 1880s. While Aron employed established physical laws and data, particular methods and techniques were central to his development of te
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5

Ratti, Luca. "The fight against in-work poverty: between national laws and EU law." Revue de droit comparé du travail et de la sécurité sociale 4 (2024): 46–57. https://doi.org/10.4000/12z6p.

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In-work poverty is a challenge for the European Union (EU) and, more generally, for the stability and well-being of societies in EU Member States. The quality of employment and the fight against poverty are interdependent issues that feature prominently in the Europe 2020 strategy, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations 2030 Agenda and the social commitments announced by the EU at the Porto Summit in 2021 and 2023. This study proposes to analyse from a legal point of view the many issues raised by the emerging phenomenon of in-work poverty and to open up avenues of rese
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Sumbai, Gasiano G. N. "Book Review: Giacomo Corneo. Is Capitalism Obsolete? A Journey through Alternative Economic Systems (translated by Daniel Steuer)." Tanzania Zamani: A Journal of Historical Research and Writing 11, no. 2 (2019): 142–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.56279/tza20211126.

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Giacomo Corneo is a professor of Social Policy and Public Finance at the Free University of Berlin, Germany. He starts his analysis by arguing that capitalism is increasingly becoming unpopular in Europe due to its being wasteful as demonstrated in widespread unemployment, injustice and alienation. He points out that high level of inequality in wealth possession is a real threat to both shared prosperity and democracy in Western Europe. His main problem is how to make the world a better place where people share wealth and prosperity. This ideal world could be achieved through adoption of an al
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Djordjevic, Marija. "Corporate management: Genesis, models and problems." Privredna izgradnja 47, no. 3-4 (2004): 191–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/priz0404191d.

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Corporate governance refers to the way a company is run and includes laws, rules and principles on which it is based. Corporate governance has poor history. Models of corporate governance have been developed from different cultural, historical and legal environments in which corporations do their business. There are two basic types of corporate governance in developed economies: the one-tier system, which is practiced in the United Kingdom and the United States and the two-tier system, which evolved in Germany and Japan. On the other hand, the transitional countries started developing their co
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SEONG, HYUN JEONG. "Role and Task of Public Defender of Crime Victim: Focused on sex crimes and child abuse crimes." Korean Association Of Victimology 31, no. 2 (2023): 265–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.36220/kjv.2023.31.2.265.

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Article 12 Clause 4 of the Constitution of the Republic of Korea provides for the assistance of lawyers. “Anyone who is arrested shall have the right to be assisted immediately by a lawyer.” When a criminal defendant is unable to seek an attorney for himself/herself, the State shall assign a lawyer as prescribed by law.」 Criminals may, of course, be protected by the appointment of a lawyer when they are investigated by an investigative agency on the basis of the Constitution. Article 33 Clause 1 of the Criminal Procedure Act also specifies the assistance of counsel. The spirit of the constitut
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Hong, Seung-Hee. "The necessity of transition to no fault divorce and legal reform measures: Based on a comparative legal review." Korean Society Of Family Law 37, no. 3 (2023): 259–333. http://dx.doi.org/10.31998/ksfl.2023.37.3.259.

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In Korea, the Japanese Civil Code was used during the Japanese colonial period, and the Civil Code, a translation of the Japanese Civil Code, was applied until the Korean Civil Code enacted in 1958 was enforced in 1960. The Korean Civil Code is very similar to the Japanese civil law, and the number of articles is significantly smaller and lacks specificity compared to the civil laws of many Western countries. In the case of the divorce law, the deficiencies of such legislation are being supplemented by the interpretation of the courts. Divorce laws in the West, such as Germany, England, France
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10

Jobodwana, Zingisile Ntozintle. "OIL IN THE GULF OF GUINEA STATES AND SOUTH AFRICA IN THE MATRIX OF OVERLAPPING MEMBERSHIP OF AFRICAN REGIONAL COMMUNITIES: AN IMPEDIMENT TO REGIONAL INTEGRATION?" Journal of Law, Society and Development 3, no. 1 (2016): 6–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/2520-9515/273.

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The Gulf of Guinea states (GOGs) discussed in this article comprise a diverse group of more than 20 African states bordering on the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea. They are former colonies of Belgium, France, Great Britain and Germany. These states are of strategic importance to the United States, the European Union, India and China because of their tremendous natural resources that include biodiversity, oil, gas and other strategic minerals. But to what extent are they also of strategic importance not only to South Africa but to SADC member states? After all, the GOGs boast of their sea routes being
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Barwick-Gross, Christine. "Racialization through (un-)deservingness: political discourse on poverty migration and access to social rights in Germany." Journal of European Social Policy, September 28, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09589287241282912.

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Based on the political debate preceding the introduction of two laws that restricted access to social rights for EU citizens, the article examines the construction of deservingness regarding access to the welfare system for EU citizens in German political discourse. Connecting theories of racial capitalism, whiteness, and deservingness, I show how a racist and classist discourse categorized poor Romanian and Bulgarian nationals, including Roma, as poverty migrants and as disposable labour. The debate on poverty migration foregrounds the permanence of once established categories and the immutab
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Kljajic, Marija, Nabil Saymé, Thomas Krebs, et al. "Zygote Diameter and Total Cytoplasmic Volume as Useful Predictive Tools of Blastocyst Quality." Geburtshilfe und Frauenheilkunde, July 21, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1876-2231.

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Abstract Introduction According to the Embryo Protection Act, the selection of embryos with the greatest potential for successful implantation in Germany must be performed in the pronucleus stage. The main aim of this study was to identify morphokinetic parameters that could serve as noninvasive biomarkers of blastocyst quality in countries with restrictive reproductive medicine laws. Materials and Methods The sample comprised 191 embryos from 40 patients undergoing antagonist cycles for intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Blastocysts were cultured in an EmbryoScope chamber and video records wer
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13

Petrakou, Kyriaki. "Outwards and inwards: Picturing of immigration in modern Greek theatre." Cahiers balkaniques Hors-série (2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/12l9p.

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After the Second World War and the 3-year civil war that followed, Greece was devastated, while extreme political polarization made life even more difficult for the people who had sided with the Left, especially poor and working-class people, as might be expected. As communications and transportation technologies had advanced, many thought that the only solution for them would be immigration to USA and Australia, but also to Germany after about 1960. It was not an easy business, due to both political reasons and immigration laws of the reception countries. The first to notice this tendency and
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Heikonen, Juhana. "Influence of German Siedlungen and Bauhaus on Helsinki’s Prewar Housing Companies." Tahiti 11, no. 1 (2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.23995/tht.111926.

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The greatest achievement of the Bauhaus movement in terms of volume was the new approach to affordable housing, even though the movement itself contributed little in the way of building. Many of the Bauhaus teachers and students were involved during the 1920s and 1930s in new large-scale housing projects in Frankfurt, Berlin, and elsewhere in Germany, as originally required by the new Weimar constitution of 1919, which attempted to tackle the housing crisis via laws and new financing models. These new Siedlungen (subsidized housing estates) were made possible with earlier models of Baugenossen
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15

Leith, David. "Who Owns Your Sickness in the New Corporate Wellness?" M/C Journal 4, no. 3 (2001). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1917.

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Workplace wellness programs raise the question: Who owns the health and sickness of the employee? Once, they belonged to the person and his/her doctor, in a kind of binary health relationship. Now companies have made it a triangular relationship. But actually, it's rectangular - the government is also shaping this relationship by occupying a fourth corner. As Nikolas Rose (1989) points out in his exploration of the place of individual in the corporate state, history suggests that it might be the government whose corner is dominant. Rose notes that "Taylorism", the scientific pursuit of maximum
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16

Zimmerman, Anne. "Forced Organ Harvesting." Voices in Bioethics 9 (March 21, 2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.52214/vib.v9i.11007.

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Photo by 187929822 © Victor Moussa | Dreamstime.com INTRODUCTION The nonconsensual taking of a human organ to use in transplantation medicine violates ethical principles, including autonomy, informed consent, and human rights, as well as criminal laws. When such an organ harvesting is not just nonconsensual, but performed in a way that causes a death or uses the pretense of brain death without meeting the criteria, it also violates the dead donor[1] rule.[2] The dead donor rule is both ethical and legal. It prevents organ retrieval that would predictably cause the death of the organ donor.[3]
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Gíslason, Kári. "Independent People." M/C Journal 13, no. 1 (2010). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.231.

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There is an old Danish fable that says that the Devil was watching when God created the earth, and that, as the creation progressed, he became increasingly agitated over the wondrous achievements he was made to witness. At the end of it all, the Devil turned to God, and said, ‘Now, watch this.’ He created Iceland. It’s a vision of the country that resembles my own. I have always thought of Iceland as the island apart. The place that came last in the earth’s construction, whoever the engineer, and so remains forever distant. Perhaps that’s because, for me, Iceland is a home far from home. It is
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