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Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Incest in the Nineteenth Century -- 2 Medicine and the Law Weigh In -- 3 Gonorrhea and Incest Break Out -- 4 Protecting Fathers, Blaming Mothers -- 5 Incest Disappears from View -- 6 Incest in the Twentieth Century -- Epilogue -- Abbreviations -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- V -- W -- Y.
In: Studies in the history and culture of the Middle East volume 31
Introduction -- Tabula Gratulatoria -- Selected Bibliography of Professor Ahmad Mahdavi Damghani -- Classical Persian Literature and Philology -- Classical Arabic Literature and Philology -- Islamic Theology, Islamic Jurisprudence and Islamic Philosophy -- Islamic History and Historiography
This Palgrave Pivot examines refugee camps in the EU, Australia, and their border zones. The approach is interdisciplinary, comprising perspectives of history, ethics, political science, literature, and health. The book argues that current practice of accommodating refugees is arbitrary and disempowering, ranging from strict regulation within nation states to detrimental conditions in extraterritorial camps. It instead proposes to increase public scrutiny of refugee camps, to enforce existing laws, and to endorse ethical place-making. With its contributions from a wide range of fields, this edited volume will be of interest to academics and students in public health, ethics, sociology, politics, and related fields. Oliver Razum is Dean of the School of Public Health at Bielefeld University, Germany, and heads the Department of Epidemiology & International Public Health as full professor. He has conducted research on migrant and refugee health from a public health perspective for more than 25 years. Lisa Eckenwiler is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at George Mason University, USA. Her research focuses on vulnerable populations, especially in humanitarian settings, and structural health injustice. She is Vice President of the International Association of Bioethics and a Fellow of the Hastings Center. Verina Wild is Professor of Medical Ethics at Augsburg University, Germany. She works in the area of medical ethics/bioethics, public health ethics and global health ethics, with a special focus on vulnerability, justice and population health. Angus Dawson is Professor of Bioethics and Director of Sydney Health Ethics at The University of Sydney School of Public Health, Australia. He is working in public health ethics with a research interest in ethical issues and dilemmas in international contexts.
With the free movement of people in the European Union, medical mobility has increased significantly. This is notably the case for disciplines for which shortage of well-trained staff has occurred. Pathology is among those specialties and effectively the discipline is confronted with a striking increase in mobility among trainees and qualified specialists. The presumption underlying unlimited mobility is that the competencies of the medical specialists in the European countries are more or less equal, including significant similarities in the postgraduate training programs. In order to assess whether reality corresponds with this presumption, we conducted a survey of the content and practice requirements of the curricula in the EU and affiliated countries. The results indicate a striking heterogeneity in the training program content and practice requirements. To name a few elements: duration of the training program varied between 4 and 6 years; the number of autopsies required varied between none at all and 300; the number of biopsies required varied between none at all and 15,000. We conclude that harmonization of training outcomes in Europe is a goal that needs to be pursued. This will be difficult to reach through harmonization of training programs, as these are co-determined by political, cultural, and administrative factors, difficult to influence. Harmonization might be attained by defining the general and specific competencies at the end of training and subsequent testing them through a test to which all trainees in Europe are subjected.
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In: OUP Handbook of International Tax Law (F. Haase, G. Kofler eds., Oxford University Press 2021 Forthcoming)
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Robert Burkhardt, Marine, E Company, 2nd Battalion, 5th Regiment, 1st Marine Division. Robert Burkhardt was in Korea during the war and describe being attacked a number of times. He related that he suffered from frozen feet and a foot wound. He applied for a Purple Heart and was denied, because they told him frozen feet did not warrant a Purple Heart. It said they did not acknowledge that he was also wounded. ; https://vc.bridgew.edu/vhp_stories/1001/thumbnail.jpg
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