Spelling suggestions: "subject:"andlocal"" "subject:"anonlocal""
331 |
Visión crítica del funcionamiento, competencia e independencia de los juzgados de polícia localLucio Ahuad, Juan Pablo January 2011 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales) / La presente investigación tiene por objetivo principal dar al lector una visión crítica al sistema de Juzgados de Policía Local y a los desafíos a los cuales se ven expuestos en la realidad chilena contemporánea.
Del mismo modo, la presente obra está dirigida a resolver las siguientes interrogantes:
1.- Si los Juzgados de Policía Local son o no Tribunales de la República y si se ajustan a la Constitución y las Leyes.
2.- Si dichos juzgados pertenecen o no al Poder Judicial.
3.- Determinar qué normativa legal se les aplica desde el punto de vista orgánico.
4.- Identificar y analizar los posibles conflictos de intereses entre los Juzgados de Policía Local y las municipalidades en que funcionan.
5.- Factibilidad de aplicar el modelo español de Jueces de Paz en Chile.
En cuanto al método ocupado, se trata de una investigación documental, pues la información fue recogida básicamente de fuentes escritas, tales como tratados y manuales, artículos de opinión e informes de expertos, entre otros.
El estudio abarcará una fase de tipo descriptivo, identificando elementos y características del problema, dada la novedad que presenta en su escaso desarrollo académico y literario, y su vinculación con aspectos del Derecho Procesal contingente
Los resultados obtenidos de la presente investigación, señalaron que el sistema de Juzgado de Policía Local se encuentra en crisis, haciéndose necesario una reforma de fondo que agilice y satisfaga los requerimientos que en la actualidad se evidencian como necesarios para la buena administración de Justicia de Policía Local.
|
332 |
Local government in Ethiopia: adequately empowered?Ayele, Zemelak January 2008 (has links)
Magister Legum - LLM
|
333 |
Participation and organization in local politics : A comparative study of class and clientage in two small townsAyata, A. G. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
|
334 |
Impact pf provincial local government support for effective implementation of PMS in municipalities (Lukhanji municipality)Sidinana, Ngenanimazizi Orsmond January 2010 (has links)
One of the more frequently heard criticisms of local government is that it is not delivering the required services or it is not delivering an efficient standard of service. Performance management for local government contributes to creating a performance culture in the public service at municipal level. Performance management is a mechanism that is used to ensure that the municipality is doing its work and delivering on its mandate. The SALGA HRD Policy Conference held in March 2003 endorsed the spirit of the relevant legislation on performance management in municipalities. As the employee body and the only recognized voice of municipalities in the country, SALGA has been of the view that the legislative imperative placed on municipalities to be developmental and performance orientated cannot be overly emphasized. Concomitant with the legislative imperative has been the political will or unwavering political commitment to ensure that municipal administrations are accountable to their respective councils, and by extension, the communities they serve. The successful implementation of the Performance Management System at all municipalities will certainly serve as a yardstick in objectively measuring the performance of municipal and provincial local government officials. It is believed that the ongoing measurement of performance will inevitably lead to better delivery of services to our people. The Constitution of South Africa places a developmental mandate on local governments, with the express purpose of them providing effective and efficient services to their communities and to promote local social and economic development. Further to this, the Municipal Systems Act of 2000 provides a legislative framework for municipalities to embark on integrated development planning. Thus all municipalities require an Integrated Development Plan (lDP) to be in place in order to fully realize their objectives as set out in Section 152 of the Constitution. In the interpretation of the legislation, it is clear that the Council (the political body of the municipality) is held responsible to ensure that its municipality has an lDP and PMS in place. Thus both the political principal and the leadership of a municipality are, by law, required to fulfil their obligations in implementing the PMS, while the provincial local government department is charged with the obligation to ensure that such objectives by municipalities are realized by way of providing financial and human capital assistance. Since the lDP and PMS have been legislated in such a manner, it thus becomes legally imperative that municipalities comply with the legislation. The Auditor General is thus required to audit a municipality within this context. Failure to comply may entail certain legal repercussions. Generally, there has been a drive to inculcate improved performance in all three spheres of government. However, it becomes integral that municipalities are performance oriented, especially since it is the sphere of government closest to the grass-roots levels where the real impact of service delivery is experienced. There is undoubtedly a link between lDP and PM. However, it has been observed that both in municipalities and provincial local government there is no synergy between these two components and they tend to operate in isolation of each other. Logically, the scorecards of the organisation and individuals should be derived from the municipality's IDP; however this is not always the case. It is also evident that both the municipality and provincial local government approaches the two issues as different disciplines. Having said this, it is important for SALGA and Provincial Local Government to encourage and ensure better alignment of lDP and PMS in both the province and municipalities.
|
335 |
Impact assessment of the local governmant reforms in Rwanda : the case study of Kigali CityApollo, Munanura January 2008 (has links)
The local governance system has undergone positive changes since 1994 when the Government of National Unity took over power in Rwanda. The government has instituted democratic changes in the structure and functioning of local government through decentralisation. Since 2000 when the decentralisation policy was launched, Rwanda has evolved a model of local governance that has come to be emulated by its neighbouring countries. Since 2000, when the Local Government Act affected the decentralised structures of local government, some changes have occurred, challenges have emerged and constraints have been experienced in the implementation of the policy of decentralisation. Methodology used in the impact assessment study The researcher administered questionnaires, conducted interviews and documentary analysis. The assessment covered (3) three districts which were purposively selected on the basis of criteria that were considered sufficiently representative and based on the rationale of the study. Key findings of the study The study established that the restructuring exercise streamlined the structures of local governments, aligned mandates to the structures, and graded jobs in line with responsibilities. These reforms have improved the performance of the local governments. Despite notable improvements, the study established that there were still gaps in the local government system that needed to be addressed. These included: i. There is a big skills gap in most local governments. Some positions in local government are not filled due to inadequate resources. ii. Some local governments are finding it difficult to attract qualified and competent personnel to take up jobs at technical and managerial levels. iii. Local government lack attractive working environments. iv. There are limited career growth opportunities in local government service. xiv v. There is low local revenue. This has imposed limitations to accountability, supervision and monitoring of local government programmes. vi. Professional staff in local government is not adequately facilitated to do their work efficiently and effectively. vii. The existing capacity building programmes contribute marginally to career growth of individual staff members. viii. New reform programmes for improving service delivery such as results oriented management (ROM) and fiscal decentralisation strategy (FDS) have been rolled out but are not yet utilised in some of the local governments.
|
336 |
Yukon community governmentSharp, Robert R. January 1973 (has links)
Rural settlements in the Yukon differ from their southern counterparts in that they are characterized by a number of factors such as: geographic isolation, social division of the settlement along White-Indian ethnic lines and political isolation in that many communities have no local mechanism for formulating representative inputs to senior levels of government. These conditions have given rise to difficulties in the administering of rural community' affairs. Residents of these settlements expressed discontent with the way in which community related decisions were made without their involvement. Government agencies on the other hand are confronted with conflicting inputs formulated by individuals or groups from communities so that determining what is representative of the settlement is not an easy task.
The thesis addresses the problems of local participation in the governing of community affairs in six similar, ethnically mixed rural Yukon communities. A five month research program during which interviews were conducted and observations recorded and the author's three year residency in one of the settlements studied, provided the material for the descriptive section of the thesis. Descriptions of the socio-political character of six settlements and their relationships with senior government and descriptions of the government agencies which frequently interact of proposed local governments. A tentative proposal of local circulated among respondents in rural communities. Responses to the questionnaire, in addition to responses to questions about the existing type of local government provide a basis for the analysis.
The analysis conducted in the thesis indicates that a type of local government with specified form, functions, and role are not flexible enough to encompass the diversity which exists among inferences from these findings are that the Territorial Government should formulate the guidelines for local government allowing the specifics to be worked out between the Territorial Government and the residents of each rural settlement so that the particular local government is perceived as appropriate to the socio-political character of the community. In closing, the thesis discusses the implications of these findings may hold for the development of local government in general. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
|
337 |
Synthesis of 2:3-benzo-4-hydroxy-1, 1-dimethyl-1-silacyclohex-2-eneRussell, William Ward January 1969 (has links)
Following the successful synthesis of 2:3-Benzo-l,l-dimethyl-l-silacyelohex-2-ene and its 4-bromo derivative, attempts were made to prepare further derivatives. The syntheses of 2:3-Benzo-4-cyano-l,l-dimethyl-l-silacyclohex-2-ene and 2:3-Benzo-4-hydroxy-l,l-dimethyl-l-silacyclohex-2-ene were attempted via substitution reactions under various conditions. Attempts to prepare the 4-cyano compound were in vain, while the 4-hydroxy compound was readily prepared, on the strength of infrared analyses. The 4-hydroxy compound, however, presented a problem in characterization, as attempts to produce several derivatives of the compound were unsuccessful.
Attempts were also made to improve the methods of synthesis and the yields of various intermediate compounds. / Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of / Graduate
|
338 |
Reconceptualizing the theory of local autonomyBrown, Michael Peter January 1990 (has links)
Conceptualizations of local autonomy to date are critiqued and an alternative theory is offered. Three ideal types of local autonomy are reconstructed from existing literature: fiscal, political, and legal autonomy. Two specific criticisms are made: that each holds a deficient conceptualization of the local; and that each has a negative and constrained view of power and autonomy. Existing literature oversimplifies states' domination at the expense of local autonomy. A theory of local autonomy, I argue, must begin with the question of how localities can and cannot be autonomous rather than a prevailing focus on what they stand autonomous from. In this way, local autonomy and its absence (heteronomy) become dialectical concepts. I develop these points through a discussion of Massachusetts' inclusionary housing policy. The policy's drafting and its current impact in four suburbs provide the empirical basis for theoretical reconstruction. "Local" is viewed from a place-making perspective: places are seen as meaningful sets of social relations relative to a geographic context. Meaning is produced, reproduced, and contested within those contexts. A place's autonomy is related to the way in which meaningful sets of social relations are made to be "powerful" or "powerless" through a process of reification. Relating "local" to "autonomy" demands a relational and circulatory theory of power rather than prevailing corporeal theories. This reconceptualization is beneficial in theoretically relating power and place because it emphasizes the complexity and dynamics of relations of domination and resistance; because it highlights the relation between place making and truth/knowledge claims; and because it does not heuristically disentangle social processes whose very interaction is theoretically significant. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
|
339 |
Plaaslike bestuur in Suid-Afrika : verlede, hede en toekomsBotha, Nantes 28 July 2014 (has links)
D.Com. (Business Administration) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
|
340 |
Concentração de metahemoglobina em adultos apos a administração de Prilocaina atraves de tecnica anestesica infiltrativaPereira, Solange Leão 12 December 1993 (has links)
Orientador: Jose Ranali / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Odontologia de Piracicaba / Made available in DSpace on 2018-07-18T04:22:18Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
Pereira_SolangeLeao_M.pdf: 836503 bytes, checksum: a6ddce8a537893ca6dda61ad9a5c14ac (MD5)
Previous issue date: 1992 / Resumo: O cloridrato de prilocaina é amplamente utilizado na prática odontológica por apresentar características tais como início rápido de ação, efetivo bloqueio nervoso, não ser irritante aos tecidos locais e possuir baixa toxicidade sistêmica (RITCHIE, 1991). Porém,dentre os produtos de metabolização da prilocaína, encontra-se {}-toluidina como composto intermediário na formação de metahemoglobina (TEUNIS 197O),et alii. Se os níveis de metahemoglobina superarem valores acima de 1,5% poderá haver sinais de cianose e em presença de quantidades elevadas de metahemoglobina pode haver hipóxia (BERNARD et alii,1976). Assim sendo o objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar o nível de metahemoglobina após anestesia infiltrativa na maxila, com prilocaina na dose de 300 mg e associada com felipressina a 0,03 UI/ml. Foram selecionados 16 voluntários, jovens, saudáveis e de ambos os sexos, que não estavam sob tratamento medicamentoso de nenhuma espécie e tampouco apresentavam qualquer patologia sistêmica. Após a administração, do anestésico, amostras de sangue foram colhidas nos intervalos de tempo: 0, 1, 2, 4 e 6 horas. Através de método espectrofotométrico foram verificados os níveis de metahemoglobina no sangue. Os resultados obtidos não indicaram um aumento significativo da concentração de metahemoglobina, revelando que em adultos saudáveis a dose de 200 mg de prilocaina não determina níveis de metahemoglobina que possam causar sinais e sintomas clínicos importantes / Abstract: Not informed. / Mestrado / Farmacologia / Mestre em Ciências
|
Page generated in 0.0515 seconds