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Adoption : En komparativrättslig studie om lagstiftning, myndigheternas arbete i adoptionsprocesser samt säkerställandet av barnets rättigheter i Sverige och Norge / The adoption legislation and the government efforts to ensure the rights of the child in the adoption process : a juridical study in the principle of good administration towards the individual person with the responsibility that comes with international commitments in Sweden and NorwayHedman, Wendela January 2011 (has links)
This essay discusses in a comparative way the Swedish and Norwegian legal system, mainly laws that contain adoption regulations. It also compares the administrative work that the government in both countries practices in relation to the individual person. In this essay, focus lies on the legal rights of the child in the adoption process and how well the government and its service meet the requirements from abroad.This essay has shown that the government has many rules and regulations that regulate their work and that all the sub processes are designed to ensure the child’s best in the adoption in both Sweden and Norway. Despite some differences in the investigation process, the work is very much alike. The differences in the investigation that leads to an approval has shown that the government in Norway is not as controlling in comparison to the Swedish government. This could lead to the child’s rights being neglected to a certain extent.
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Structure from motion using omni-directional vision and certainty gridsOrtiz, Steven Rey 15 November 2004 (has links)
This thesis describes a method to create local maps from an omni-directional vision
system (ODVS) mounted on a mobile robot. Range finding is performed by a
structure-from-motion method, which recovers the three-dimensional position of objects
in the environment from omni-directional images. This leads to map-making,
which is accomplished using certainty grids to fuse information from multiple readings
into a two-dimensional world model. The system is demonstrated both on noise-free
data from a custom-built simulator and on real data from an omni-directional vision
system on-board a mobile robot. Finally, to account for the particular error characteristics
of a real omni-directional vision sensor, a new sensor model for the certainty
grid framework is also created and compared to the traditional sonar sensor model.
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Hur tillvaratas rättssäkerheten vid direktupphandling? : Ett arbete om rättssäkerheten inom direktupphandling med anledning av den höjda direktupphandlingsgränsen / How is the legal certainty assured in direct procurement? : A study on the legal certainty concerning direct procurement due to the increase of the limit for direct procurementHafdell, Linda, Rosenquist, Olivia January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biasesTullos, Sara Ansley 10 April 2012 (has links)
Children use many cues to differentiate reality from fantasy, including context, testimony from others, and physical evidence in the world around them. However, due to individual differences, some children hold strong reality status biases that interfere with their ability to infer reality status from these cues correctly. This research identified two general cognitive skills, inhibitory control and a metacognitive understanding of certainty, which serve as mechanisms for overcoming biases to infer reality status. In general, children with a high interest in fantastical play and older children with poorer developed inhibitory control skills are more likely to display a reality status bias. Additionally, children with reality status biases are more likely to overcome them to infer reality status correctly when they have a better metacognitive understanding of certainty and better developed inhibitory control. This research informs both the fantasy/reality literature and the scientific reasoning literature in demonstrating how biases can affect children's judgments. / text
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Certainties and uncertainties : ethics and professional identities of early childhood educatorsThomas, Louise M. January 2009 (has links)
This study is an inquiry into the professional identity constructions of early childhood educators, where identity is conceptualised as social and contextual. Through a genealogical analysis of narratives of four Queensland early childhood teachers, the thesis renders as problematic universal and fixed notions of what it is to be an early childhood professional. The data are the four teachers’ professional life history narratives recounted through a series of conversational interviews with each participant. As they spoke about professionalism and ethics, these teachers struggled to locate themselves as professionals, as they drew on a number of dominant discourses available to them. These dominant discourses were located and mapped through analysis of the participants’ talk about relationships with parents, colleagues and authorities. Genealogical analysis enabled multiple readings of the ways in which the participants’ talk held together certainties and uncertainties, as they recounted their experiences and spoke of early childhood expertise, relational engagement and ethics. The thesis concludes with suggestions for ways to support early childhood teachers and pre-service teachers to both engage with and resist normative processes and expectations of professional identity construction. In so doing, multiple and contextual opportunities can be made available when it comes to being professional and ‘doing’ ethics. The thesis makes an argument for new possibilities for thinking and speaking professional identities that include both certainty and uncertainty, comfort and discomfort, and these seemingly oppositional terms are held together in tension, with an insistence that both are necessary and true. The use of provocations offers tools through which pre-service teachers, teachers and teacher educators can access new positions associated with certainties and uncertainties in professional identities. These new positions call for work that supports experiences of ‘de-comfort’ – that is, experiences that encourage early childhood educators to step away from the comfort zones that can become part of expertise, professional relationships and ethics embedded within normative representations of what it is to be an early childhood professional.
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The development of the idea of certitude in the thought of John Henry NewmanRusinak, Maryanne A., January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 97-98).
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Living uncertain lives : a study in the sociology of uncertainty /Woolley, Richard. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Western Sydney, 2002. / "Dissertation submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, September 2002." Bibliography: p. 445 - 466.
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The principle of legal certainty in EC law /Raitio, Juha. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Univ., Diss.--Helsinki, 2002.
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An ecological model of realism of confidence in one's general knowledgeJuslin, Peter. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Uppsala University, 1993. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 83-90).
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The scientific proof / La prueba científicaSimons Pino, Adrián 30 April 2018 (has links)
The scientific advances have greatly influenced the perception of the facts, generating some objectivation of the perception of the proof . In the past, many decisions were made on the basis of common sense and presumptions. This is reduced by the performance of more reliable evidence, which can generate a better conviction in the judge or legal operator.In this article, the author develops the effects that scientific evidence has had on legal practitioners, such as judges. Also, a theoretical framework will be proposed to understand this type of test, taking as reference emblematic cases. / Los avances científicos han influenciado enormemente la percepción de los hechos, generando cierta objetivación de la percepción de la prueba. En el pasado, muchas decisiones se tomaban sobre la base del sentido común y las presunciones. Ello se ve reducido con la actuación de medios probatorios más certeros y fiables, los cuales pueden generar una mejor convicción en el juez u operador jurídico.En el presente artículo, el autor desarrolla los efectos que ha tenido la prueba científica en los operadores del derecho, como los jueces. Asimismo, se planteará un marco teórico para comprender a dicho tipo de prueba, tomando como referencia casos emblemáticos.
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