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Det (o)möjliga föräldraskapet : Reproduktion och etablering av en god familjerelation / The (im)possible parenthood : the reproduction and construction of the ideal familyLaine, Anna January 2008 (has links)
This theises focus on how a ideal parentship can be reproduced and established in an organization that is incorporated in the familycourt, provided by the social institution. The organization provides help for parents and children during and after a divorce or separation, the organization also provides help for families where violence has occured or in cases when parent and child doesn´t know one another. When a custodial dispute arise´s and one of the two is granted soul costody of the child, the guardian in most cases is the mother. Therefor this organization mostly handels fathers and their children. The study shows that gender, class and possesing of the right will are the three main aspects that have an effect on who ends up at the organization. This study also shows how the mothers continuously are reproduced as the head guardians, and how the fathers parenthood are subordinated the parenthood of the mothers.
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Land disputes between villages in the highland of Eritrea : the case of Guaquat and Geddele villages.Ghebreab, Habteab Werede. January 2004 (has links)
This thesis is an examination into the problem of land disputes between villages in the highland (kebessa) area of Eritrea. Through a case study of the dispute between the villages of Guaquat and Goddele, which are located in the district of Mereta Keih, Southern Zone, this study explores the causes, nature and consequences of land disputes and the mechanisms by which they are settled. It interprets the land dispute by placing it within its historical, social, and political contexts and in the land tenure systems in the area, establishing the complex nature of the case study in particular and land disputes in the highland in general. In this area of the country, where the society is made up of settled peasant cultivators, the village is the basic land owning-community in which land is communally owned. For almost all of rural Eritreans land remains the sole means of subsistence, hence the means of life. Yet, over the decades, because of high population density land resource became extremely scarce. As a result land became a source of competition and struggle for existence. It is a kind of property that must be jealously defended. While scarcity of land is the underlying cause of land disputes, other immediate causal factors have been identified, which result from tenural arrangements, unclear boundaries between villages, trespassing, etc. The disputes manifest themselves through endless litigation processes and with clashes between disputant villages. The long-established permanent village settlements, which go back for centuries, created a strong and inextricable link between land and communities. Land is, thus, a source of dignity and identity. Over the years this strong link between land and society intensified people's attachment to land, which in tum resulted in the development of significant social and cultural value to land. All these factors added fuel to the struggle for the vital resource of land. The study also shows that the new land proclamation, which puts land in the hands of the state , cannot eliminate land disputes between communities to the extent is expected, but, rather adds another dimension to the problem of land disputes. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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Conflict management in BC provincial parks: a case study of mountain biking in Garibaldi ParkThompson, Paul David 05 1900 (has links)
At the same time resources are becoming more scarce there is
an increase in the use of parks, wilderness and other natural
environments for recreational purposes. This is evident in
British Columbia where much of provincial parks planning is
concerned with the accommodation of an ever increasing diversity
of outdoor recreation activities. For a variety of reasons the
people engaged in those activities do not always get along
therefore resolving these social conflicts is becoming an ever
larger part of recreation resource planners’ and managers’ jobs.
The problem with conflict management in outdoor recreation is
that the methods which are commonly used do not address the
sources of conflict. Even though it is the recreationists who
are experiencing conflict the focus remains on managing the
resource.
The traditional conflict management prescription is to
separate activities that are considered to be incompatible. This
action is necessary in some cases but it can often exacerbate the
conflict. Since the reasons for conflict are largely
sociological and psychological it is necessary that the groups in
conflict get together to find a solution. Conflict management
methods based on the spatial separation of activities that do not
include this step will not be as effective as those that do.
This thesis establishes a number of weaknesses in activity
based conflict prevention by examining both the sources of conflict in outdoor recreation and the methods of conflict
management which are traditionally used. These weaknesses are
then considered in a two part examination. First, the conflict
management policies of BC Parks are examined. Second, a closer
look is taken at a specific conflict issue: the Garibaldi Master
Plan and its treatment of the issue of mountain biking in the
park.
In general, without a formal conflict management policy in
place users of BC’S provincial parks who find themselves in
conflict with other users can not be assured that the sources of
conflict will be addressed. In the Garibaldi Park case study, BC
Parks focused on managing the resource rather than managing the
social conflict that was occurring. They took steps in the right
direction but failed to take the most crucial step which is
getting the parties in conflict talking to each other. Even
though the sources of conflict are recognized they are not the
prime consideration in resolving the conflict.
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Mediating community disputes : the regulatory logic of government through pastoral powerPavlich, George Clifford 11 1900 (has links)
The protracted crises of authority that characterized the 1960s and 1970s left their imprints on
a number of institutions in Canadian society. The dispute resolution arena, for one, was affected
by the turmoil of this age as more informal, 'empowering' alternatives were sought to replace
the disempowering procedures of courtroom adjudication. The present thesis focuses on one
aspect of an ensuing 'alternative dispute resolution' movement in the Canadian province of
British Columbia; namely, community mediation. In particular, it begins by looking at the
rhetoric and practices through which community mediation has been deployed. Advocates tout
this process as an 'empowering' method of resolving disputes because it encourages individuals
to work conflict out in the 'community', thus - so their reasoning goes - limiting state intrusion
into people's everyday lives. By contrast, critics of the movement argue that the deployment of
informal justice actually expands state control, and contend that it does so rather insidiously
under the guise of 'restricting' state activities.
Close scrutiny of this debate, however, reveals significant weaknesses in both positions, mainly
relating to their unnecessarily narrow definition of the 'problem'; i.e., whether informal justice
expands or reduces state control. This is a highly questionable formulation, for it demands a
simple response from what is a much more complex and ambiguous event. Taking its cue from
more recent developments in the literature, the following analysis reconceptualizes the 'problem'
by asking: what is the logic of control embodied by mediation practices in a given context? It
responds to the question by developing certain Foucauldian precepts into a theory that explicates
the model of power through which mediation regulates action. Its implicit objective is to understand the political rationale of mediation in order to pursue how this might be used to
further social justice.
Various genealogical procedures are employed to formulate such a theory by responding to four
central questions. What are the wider lines of descent that have helped to produce the particular
version of community mediation that now colours British Columbia's landscape? What precise
model of power does the rhetoric and practice of mediation reflect? How does this informal
model of power link up with the formal power of the law/state? What are the implications of this
for engaging politically with community mediation, if one's aim is to achieve social justice?
Responding to each of these in turn supplies the basic thesis of the following text.
In brief, I argue that community mediation has developed in British Columbia in tandem with
a shift from Fordist to Post-Fordist modes of regulation (politics) and production (economics) that
characterized the 1970s. Influenced by legal reforms and experiments with 'alternatives' to courts,
community mediation has assumed an identity which incorporates a 'pastoral' model of power.
This model is articulated to the state's 'law-sovereign' model as a 'complementary,' but
subordinate, alternative. The association between these results in an indirect form of governance -
'government at a distance' - that may expand the state's potential to control people, but which
is also considerably less predictable. This offers both opportunities and barriers to political action
in the informal justice arena. Consequently, while the current deployment of community
mediation in British Columbia tends to support the professionalised justice of the existing legal
system, it may yet be possible to transform its identity through an 'alternative' politics of law
that strives for social justice.
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Opening the club - a liberal approach to private participation in the World Trade Organization's dispute settlement systemUllrich, Dierk 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis intends to provide an argument in favour of private participation in the dispute
settlement system of the World Trade Organization (WTO) as an area of the world trading system
most visible to but also most removed from the influence of private actors. Private participation
is understood as the direct and formal involvement of non-governmental actors in dispute
resolution. It will distinguish between passive and active participation, the former addressing the
flow of information from the WTO to civil society (understood as the community of all Member
societies affected by the world trading system), while the later is concerned with issues of access
and standing.
As first step, I will develop an analytical framework for international dispute settlement systems
based on the three elements of actors, material scope and procedures, as well as the underlying
theoretical conceptions for each element. After having given an overview of the relevant features
of the world trading system and its dispute resolutions mechanisms as set forth in the
Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU) of the
WTO, I continue by subsuming the DSU under the analytical framework.
Based on the position of the DSU within the analytical framework, I will submit an argument in
favour of private participation, drawing particularly from the international relations theory of
liberalism. Parting from realist-institutionalist assumptions predominant in public international
law, liberalism places the individual at the center of international and WTO law, opening the
latter for new categories of international actors. Finally, taking into account the liberal reliance on individual rights and democratic participation,
I will suggest models to implement private participation in WTO dispute settlement. My aim is
to promote meaningful involvement of private actors whose interests and objectives are affected
by the world trading system, with varying procedural roles reflecting their relation to the WTO's
trade regime, ranging form passive participation, to party status, to amici curiae.
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The protection of the online consumer through online dispute resolution and other models of redressSchulze Suedhoff, Ulrich 11 1900 (has links)
Traditional redress mechanisms such as litigation and traditional
alternative dispute resolution generally fail to strengthen consumer confidence
in e-commerce. Rather they may represent an additional source of uncertainty.
In particular litigation fails to offer the certainty the consumer seeks. To date,
neither European nor American courts have found reliable criteria for
determining Internet jurisdiction and have failed to provide consistency in their
decisions. In addition, uncertainty arising from unclear concepts on the
enforcement level and the high volume of disputes with low monetary value
have led to the development of online ADR providers that allow individuals from
across the world to settle disputes. Both online mediation and online arbitration
serve consumers as appropriate instruments to enforce their rights arising out
of online disputes. They are designed for disputes with small monetary value
and are capable of overcoming jurisdictional obstacles. On the enforcement
level, online arbitration based on the New York Convention provides the
consumer with a powerful tool on global level. Online consumer arbitration can
ensure a maximum of enforceability if the consumer arbitration rules of online
ADR providers incorporate the requirements of the New York Convention.
In addition or instead of online ADR, businesses increasingly rely on
other dispute avoidance and dispute settlement instruments in order to promote
consumer confidence. Some of those models employed by e-commerce
companies succeed in promoting trust, while others do so only to a limited
extent. In particular, mandatory credit card chargeback regimes give consumers
an effective and quick means of disputing a transaction with a merchant at
almost no cost. On the other hand, escrow services seem to be less appropriate
for the typical small amount e-commerce transaction mainly since consumers
are generally not willing to pay the added costs for the use of the escrow
service for the average small amount transaction. Trustmark and seal programs
provide the potential to give guidance to the consumer about consumer
protection standards of the online seller before any damage is done and offer
effective and inexpensive certification, monitoring and enforcement procedures.
However, to date trustmark and seal systems have applied these powerful tools
only to a limited extent. A proliferation of trustmark and seal programs make it
hard for consumers to distinguish between differences in the programs and to
assess their quality. Rating and feedback systems provide an immediate and
inexpensive source of information to buyers about sellers and a strong incentive
for good performance to repeat sellers. These systems are prone to abuse and
information gathered through these systems is often unreliable.
In my thesis I argue that traditional litigation no longer provides the most
appropriate means of dispute settlement in the case of small amount crossborder
consumer transactions. Neither do traditional ADR mechanisms provide
the most convenient and efficient method of settling online consumer disputes.
Online ADR and several other models of redress successfully replace traditional
mechanisms since they better meet the challenges of online disputes and live
up to recognised consumer protection principles. I argue that online arbitration
based on international arbitration law such as the New York Convention
presents a particularly viable instrument for the settlement of the average smallamount
online consumer disputes. After having sketched the jurisdictional
hurdles for the resolution of online disputes I analyse whether both online ADR
and other trust-creating models are capable of providing an efficient and fair
redress instrument for the consumer. For this purpose, the practises and
policies of online dispute resolution providers are mirrored in recognised
consumer protection principles and the international legal framework. Likewise
the potential and limits of other trust-creating models are explored under the
question of to what extent they serve the consumer as a viable instrument to
impose her rights. The guiding questions of this evaluation will be if and to what
extent these recently evolved institutions meet - according to their policies and
practises - the challenges set up by the particularities of online consumer
transactions.
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Mediacija kaip konfliktų sprendimo būdas / Mediation as the Way of Dispute ResolutionRinkūnaitė, Rasma 04 March 2009 (has links)
Konfliktai egzistuoja tiek, kiek ir pati visuomenė, tačiau dar niekam nepavyko atrasti tobulo mechanizmo jiems spręsti. Iš daugelio alternatyvių ginčų sprendimo būdų šiame darbe autorius nagrinėja tik vieną – mediaciją – į interesus nukreiptą konflikto sprendimo procesą, kurio metu neutralus ir nešališkas asmuo skatina ir padeda konfliktuojančioms šalims pasiekti jas abi tenkinantį sprendimą. Didelės išlaidos ir sprendimų priėmimo vilkinimas asocijuojasi su teisminiu civilinių bylų nagrinėjimu. Todėl žmonėms reikia naujo būdo, įgalinančio spręsti ginčus daug efektyviau. Vis labiau pripažįstama, kad būtent mediacija padeda išsaugoti tarpusavio santykius, nustatyti tikrąsias ginčo priežastis, jaustis vertinamiems teisingai ir sąžiningai, su pagarba ir nepažeidžiant asmens orumo. Tai pavyksta dėl keleto esminių priežasčių. Pirma, taikant mediaciją nenustatinėjama kaltė ar nekaltumas. Antra, šalys yra lygios, ir pačios nusprendžia, koks sprendimas geriausias. Trečia, teismo procesas šalims yra įtemptas, tuo tarpu mediacijoje nėra trikdančių formalumų. Lietuvoje prielaidos mediacijai atsirado tik 2003-01-01 įsigaliojus naujajam Civilinio proceso kodeksui. Taikant mediaciją gali būti sprendžiami iš esmės daugiausia civiliniai ginčai kylantys iš šeimos, rangos, nuomos, darbo santykių, taip pat komerciniai ginčai, nesutarimai tarp kaimynų ir bendruomenių, vartotojų ir verslininkų, privataus kaltinimo bylos, ginčai dėl intelektinės nuosavybės ir kt. Nepaisant to, kad kol kas nėra... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / Conflicts exist as long as all society, but nobody could devise a perfect mechanism for resolving their disputes. Of all the existing methods of alternative dispute resolution, in this job author will speak only about the one – mediation - an informal method of dispute resolution, in which a neutral third party, the mediator, attempts to assist the parties in finding resolution to their problem through the mediation process. The high cost and long delays is associating with trial of civil matters. That’s way human needs the new way, which could help them to resolve conflicts more effectively. More and more we recognize the mediation as a process for saving relationship, finding the main reasons of dispute, also people are treated with respect in this procedure, they can save their dignity. There are some reasons for this point. First, mediation has no goal to find the guilty or innocence. The second, parties are equal and they can decide which settlement is the best in this situation. Third, litigation is always stressful, while mediation has no disconcerting formalism. Premises of mediation have come in Lithuania only with new Civil Code. By applying mediation can be resolved mostly civil matters as divorce, commercial treaties, employment. There is no direct regulation in Lithuanian domestic law, but we can find some regulations in various legal documents and international treaties. Direct procedure of mediation process is also not regulated, but the essential principles... [to full text]
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Mokestinių ginčų dėl PVM teisinė analizė Lietuvoje / The tax disputes on VAT legal analysis in LithuaniaBučelytė, Odeta 26 June 2013 (has links)
Magistro baigiamajame darbe atlikta teisinė analizė mokestinių ginčų dėl PVM atžvilgiu bei iškeltos problemos ir pateiktos išvados dėl PVM reglamentavimo Lietuvoje ir jo atitikimo šiandienos aktualijoms, kadangi būtent dėl PVM kyla daugiausia mokestinių ginčų. Teisinė analizė atlikta pasinaudojus egzistuojančia mokestinio ginčo nagrinėjimo struktūra, t.y. ikiteismine bei teismine stadijomis. Minėta analizė atlikta mokestinius ginčus dėl PVM suskirsčius į tris rūšis: ginčus dėl PVM atskaitos; ginčus dėl PVM atskaitos tikslinimo; ginčus dėl lengvatinio 0 PVM tarifo taikymo. Pirmojoje darbo dalyje teoriniu aspektu nagrinėjama mokestinio ginčo samprata, mokestinio ginčo stadijos, mokestinius ginčus nagrinėjančių institucijų reikšmė. Antroje darbo dalyje aptariami pagrindiniai PVM elementai, PVM reglamentavimas ir PVM reikšmė Lietuvoje. Trečioje darbo dalyje pateikiama mokestinių ginčų statistika 2010 metams, bei atliekama teisinė analizė mokestinių ginčų dėl PVM Lietuvoje atžvilgiu. / In a final master‘s work, there is presented a legal analysis of fee disputes due to VAT. There are revealed the problems and given the conclusions due to regulation of VAT in Lithuania too. Exactly for this reason of VAT, rise many disputes of the fees. The juridical analysis was accomplished using the research structure of existing taxable disputes, it means: pre-juridical and juridical stage. In the first part of the work there is written about the concept of the taxable disputes in a theoretical aspect, their stages and the importance of pending institutions. In the second part there are disputed the main elements of VAT, its regualation and importance in Lithuania.
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The Conspiracy: The Canadian Response to the Order of the Midnight Sun and the Alaska Boundary Dispute2013 September 1900 (has links)
In September 1901 the North-West Mounted Police learned that a group of American miners, calling themselves the Order of the Midnight Sun, were planning to take over the Yukon. The Conspiracy, as the plot to overthrow the Mounted Police and establish an independent republic in the Alaska boundary region was known, appealed to Americans in the region. The location of the Alaska boundary was not set when the Klondike Gold Rush (1897-1899) brought thousands of miners and traders into the Yukon, northern British Columbia, and Alaska. The Canadian government’s efforts to maintain order and protect its interests in the Alaska boundary dispute angered American miners and businessmen and led them to support the Order. After the Conspiracy was discovered, the Mounted Police and the Canadian government launched a full scale investigation and response. To fully investigate the Conspiracy during the Alaska boundary dispute, the Mounted Police, a domestic force, had to operate in Canada and the United States and cooperate with American authorities in Skagway. The Dominion Police were also involved in the investigation and they too had to work with American authorities in Seattle and San Francisco. But the Mounted Police did not view the Conspiracy as a serious threat. Their experience in the north had shown that such threats rarely amounted to anything. The Canadian government, however, responded differently. Canadian officials in Ottawa feared that the Conspiracy would cost Canada in the Alaska boundary negotiations and they took steps to ensure that the Mounted Police could defend the region and prevent further unrest. This thesis examines the Mounted Police and Canadian government responses to the Conspiracy and the reasons for these different responses, within the context of the Alaska boundary dispute.
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Framing the Intervention: How Canada Staged its Takeover of the Lubicon Lake NationBork, Dietlind L R Unknown Date
No description available.
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