"Small Business Committee Document no. 111-119 [i.e. 019]." ; Shipping list no.: 2009-0372-P, 2010-0142-P (errata). ; Errata: " . printed incorrectly with the wrong document number on the title page. The document number should be '111-019' not '111-119.'" ; Mode of access: Internet.
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 77 S721-4 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
"Serial no. 67." ; Shipping list no.: 95-0013-P. ; Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
"Serial no. 41." ; Shipping list no.: 92-0368-P. ; Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. ; Item 1020-A, 1020-B (MF) ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
In: International law reports, Volume 40, p. 230-232
ISSN: 2633-707X
230Treaties — Operation of — Necessity for municipal legislation — Effect of treaty on prior statutes — Whether treaty provisions amend existing law — Austrian State Treaty, Articles 25 and 26 — Whether self-executing — The law of Austria.
In the field of family law, attorneys frequently expose themselves to highly emotional and traumatized clients. Litigation is by nature a high‐stress occupation, demanding a high level of intellectual and emotional engagement from the contesting lawyers. Adding the burden of inherently distressing content to litigation can impair a lawyer's functioning. The effects are often referred to as "secondary trauma." This Note proposes that state bar associations should take a more active role in providing mental health support to prevent burnout in family law attorneys by (1) offering voluntary classes to educate attorneys about the dangers of, and ways to cope with, the burnout that comes with working with traumatized clients in family law and (2) organizing support groups among local family law communities.
Key Points for the Family Court Community: Claims against family law practitioners account for the third highest percentage of all malpractice claims against lawyers. Burnout is a serious problem for family law attorneys. Programs sponsored by state bar associations are available and need to be expanded. The American Bar Association's Model Rules require that a lawyer shall not represent a client or, where representation has commenced, shall withdraw from the representation of a client if the lawyer's physical or mental condition materially impairs the lawyer's ability to represent the client. The unique nature of family law, centered on relationships and emotions, puts family law attorneys at a higher risk for experiencing the effects of secondary trauma than other areas of law. Lawyers at risk for secondary trauma can avoid its effects by educating themselves about such effects.
AbstractIn terms of its disruptive impact and intensity of violence, banditry is the gravest security threat that Nigeria currently faces, and it is driving her worst national humanitarian crisis in decades. There are contests about the origin, nature and the drivers of banditry and how well bandits by their modus operandi fit into the various definitional frameworks of an organized criminal group. The article examines what is known about bandits and banditry in light of existing definitional and conceptual paradigms of organized crime and criminal groups, and interrogates the applicability of international humanitarian law to this security crisis that characterizes the current face of conflict in the West African Sahel.
"Nachtragsheft zu Stier-Somlo, Kommentar zur Gewerbeordnung. 2. Aufl. 1923": 16 p. laid in. ; "Abkürzungverzeichnis": p. [ix]-xii. ; Mode of access: Internet.