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The regulation and professionalization of herbal medicineHirschkorn, Kristine Andree. Bourgeault, Ivy Lynn, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- McMaster University, 2005. / Supervisor: I. L. Bourgeault. Includes bibliographical references.
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Alternativy nepodmíněného trestu odnětí svobody / Alternatives to unconditional sentence of imprisonmentBrabec, Ladislav January 2020 (has links)
Alternatives to unconditional sentence of imprisonment ABSTRACT This master's thesis deals with the topic of alternatives to unconditional sentence of imprisonment. The aim of the thesis is to evaluate advantages and disadvantages of alternatives to unconditional sentence of imprisonment, carry out a critical analysis of its legislation and provide own de lege ferenda proposals. Throughout the whole paper, comparative method is widely used. The Czech legislation is compared not only to the legislation of (central) European states, but to the legislation of the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States as well. The paper is divided into nine chapters in total. The first three chapters provide an excursion to the problematics of the term punishment and its purpose, alternative measures and (predominantly) critical analysis of unconditional sentence of imprisonment. Chapters four to seven analyse individual means of alternative sentences, i.e. house arrest, community service, fine and (supervised) conditional sentence of imprisonment. Each of these chapters is build up on the basis of a uniform model. Within single chapters, every type of punishment is analysed from the point of view of its essence and historical development, imposition and exercise of punishment, conversion of sentence into unconditional...
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Sex-Based Employment Protections for Transgender Individuals: A Study of Title VII Legal Cases in the Sixth CircuitHarris, Evan Marshall 07 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / In the U.S., the transgender community disproportionately experiences a rate of
unemployment three times that of the national average. These nearly 1.4 million
individuals receive no explicit federal employment protections. Though judges have
historically concluded that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 does not offer such
protections, the Sixth Circuit recently concluded that transgender discrimination is
prohibited under Title VII.
A study was conducted to discern what lead to the Sixth Circuit explicitly
extending Title VII’s sex-based protections to transgender individuals. Analysis
consisted of data from historical Title VII legal cases—citing sex-based discrimination—
brought by, or on behalf of, transgender individuals in the Sixth Circuit. The sample
included 20 court records from 11 legal cases identified through the Nexis Uni database.
Both a thematic analysis and a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) were
conducted. The thematic analysis illustrated four distinct steps taken by the Sixth
Circuit—in addition to the two steps previously taken by other Circuits and the Supreme
Court. Each stage revealed small deviations in statutory interpretation and application,
which lead to a marked change in the legal discourse on Title VII’s sex-based
discrimination prohibition. The CDA compared the Circuit’s starting discourse to its
more recent discourse and found judges’ moved from a passive to an active role in
constructing the legal discourse. Overall, the study illustrates the judicial branch of government’s influential
impact on employment rights, and more broadly, social justice. Further, the study
presents legal engagement as essential to the pursuit of social change. Given social
work’s value of social justice, forensic participation is a suitable addition to the social
work toolkit. / 2023-08-05
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Implementation of taylor type rules in nascent money and capital markets under managed exchange ratesBirchwood, Anthony January 2011 (has links)
We investigate the practical use of Taylor-type rules in Trinidad and Tobago, which is in the process of implementing market based monetary policy and seeks to implement flexible inflation targeting in the presence of a managed exchange rate. This is motivated by the idea that normative Taylor rules can be shaped by the practical experience of developing countries. We find that the inflation – exchange rate nexus is strong, hence the country may be unwilling to allow the exchange rate to float freely. We contend that despite weak market development the Taylor rule can still be applied as the central bank is able to use moral suasion to achieve full pass through of the policy rate to the market rate. Our evidence rejects Galí and Monacelli’s (2005) argument that the optimal monetary policy rule for the open economy is isomorphic for a closed economy. Rather, our evidence suggests that the rule for the open economy allows for lower variability when the rule is augmented by the real exchange rate as in Taylor (2001). We also reject Galí and Monacelli’s (2005) hypothesis that domestic inflation is optimal for inclusion in the Taylor-type rule. Instead we find that core CPI inflation leads to lower variability. Additionally, our evidence suggests that the monetary rule, when applied to Trinidad and Tobago, is accommodating to the US Federal Reserve rate. Further, we expand the work of Martin and Milas (2010) which considered the pass through of the policy rate to the interbank rate in the presence of risk and liquidity. By extending the transmission to the market lending rate, we are able to go beyond those disruptive factors by considering excess liquidity and spillovers of international economic disturbances. We found that these shocks are significant for Trinidad and Tobago, but it is not significant enough to disrupt the pass through. As a result, full pass through was robust to the presence of these disruptive factors.
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