The first meeting of the General assembly of the United Nations [London, January 10-February 14, 1946]
In: American journal of international law, Band 40, S. 346-373
ISSN: 0002-9300
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In: American journal of international law, Band 40, S. 346-373
ISSN: 0002-9300
In: Austrian journal of political science: OZP, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 297-314
ISSN: 2313-5433
'Der Beitrag ist an der Schnittstelle von Demokratie- und Parteienforschung zu europäischer Integration angesiedelt. Ausgehend von einer funktionalistischen Perspektive werden Parteien als Bindeglied zwischen staatlichen Institutionen und Bürgerinnen, die Repräsentation und Regieren in sich vereinen, behandelt. Ob, mit welchen Themen und wie nationale Parteien diese linkage-Funktion auch im europäischen Mehrebenenkontext wahrnehmen, ist die zentrale Frage dieses Beitrages. Inhaltsanalytisch werden in Wahlkampftexten (Wahlprogramme, Plakate, TV-Diskussionen) der Nationalratswahl 2006 die thematische und diskursive Hereinnahme der europäischen Dimension in den nationalen Parteienwettbewerb unter dem Blickwinkel demokratischer Repräsentation und elektoraler Verantwortlichkeit untersucht. Mit diesem Zugang wird der Fokus auf Parteien als Trägerinnen zentraler Funktionen gelegt und damit eine Brücke zur EU-Demokratieforschung geschlagen.' (Autorenreferat)
Background: The South African government intends to contract with 'accredited provider groups' for capitated primary care under National Health Insurance (NHI). South African solo general practitioners (GPs) are unhappy with group practice. There is no clarity on the views of GPs in group practice on contracting to the NHI. Objectives: To describe the demographic and practice profile of GPs in group practice in South Africa, and evaluate their views on NHI, compared to solo GPs. Methods: This was a descriptive survey. The population of 8721 private GPs in South Africa with emails available were emailed an online questionnaire. Descriptive statistical analyses and thematic content analysis were conducted. Results: In all, 819 GPs responded (568 solo GPs and 251 GPs in groups). The results are focused on group GPs. GPs in groups have a different demographic practice profile compared to solo GPs. GPs in groups expected R4.86 million ($0.41 million) for a hypothetical NHI proposal of comprehensive primary healthcare (excluding medicines and investigations) to a practice population of 10 000 people. GPs planned a clinical team of 8 to 12 (including nurses) and 4 to 6 administrative staff. GPs in group practices saw three major risks: patient, organisational and government, with three related risk management strategies. Conclusions: GPs can competitively contract with NHI, although there are concerns. NHI contracting should not be limited to groups. All GPs embraced strong teamwork, including using nurses more effectively. This aligns well with the emergence of family medicine in Africa.
BASE
In: Mathematical social sciences, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 309
In: Mathematical social sciences, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 195-196
Most approaches to crime analysis focus on geographical crime mapping, which is helpful in identifying crime clusters and allocating police resources, but does not explain why a particular crime took place. Applied Crime Analysis presents a model that brings statistical anchoring, behavioral psychopathology, and victimology from the social sciences together with physical and crime scene evidence to provide a complete picture of crime. This hands-on guide takes theoretical principles and demonstrates how they can be put into practice using real case examples. In addition to covering key topics such as staged crime scenes, false reports, and criminal motivations, the book's includes a final chapter on report writing, showing readers how to use their findings to successfully advance to prosecution and succeed in court
This study investigates the effect of participative political institutions (PPIs) that emerged in many central European cities from the late 13th century. The empirical analysis of the paper is based on newly compiled long-run data for the existence of different types of PPIs in 104 cities in the Holy Roman Empire. The effect of both an overall index of participativeness of political institutions as well as of the individual PPIs is tested empirically. When pooled over all periods and observations, there seems to be a significant positive overall effect of PPIs in the German-speaking area but not in the Low Countries. The study founds considerable spatial and temporal heterogeneity in the effect of PPIs. Furthermore, the effect of different types of PPIs differs substantially and in general seems to be short-lived. That is, the results show that the positive initial effect of some PPIs declined the longer they existed and over time.
BASE
This study investigates the effect of participative political institutions (PPIs) that emerged in many central European cities from the late 13th century. The empirical analysis of the paper is based on newly compiled long-run data for the existence of different types of PPIs in 104 cities in the Holy Roman Empire. The effect of both an overall index of participativeness of political institutions as well as of the individual PPIs is tested empirically. When pooled over all periods and observations, there seems to be a significant positive overall effect of PPIs in the German-speaking area but not in the Low Countries. The study founds considerable spatial and temporal heterogeneity in the effect of PPIs. Furthermore, the effect of different types of PPIs differs substantially and in general seems to be short-lived. That is, the results show that the positive initial effect of some PPIs declined the longer they existed and over time.
BASE
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 50, Heft 6, S. 775-810
ISSN: 1475-6765
In this article, the probability of opening to trade is related to a country's propensity to learn from other countries in its region. It is argued that countries have different motivations to learn, depending upon the responsiveness and accountability of their political regimes. Whereas democracies cannot afford to be dogmatic, authoritarian regimes are less motivated to learn from the experience of others, even if they embrace policies that fail. Using data on trade liberalisation for 57 developing countries in the period 1970-1999, it is found that democracies confronting economic crises are more likely to liberalise trade as a result of learning; among democracies, presidential systems seem to learn more, whereas personalist dictatorial regimes are the most resistant to learning from the experience of others. Adapted from the source document.
SSRN
Working paper
In: Conservative Political Centre, Local Government Series ;4
This book assesses the performance of the first Lula government (2002-06) from different perspectives including economics, politics, history and social policy. While the focus is on Brazil, it also refers to the experiences of similar countries both for comparative purposes and for evidence of the success or otherwise of this 'new' era for Brazil.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.35112204330668
Some vols. issued as Sessional papers of the Ontario Legislative Assembly ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Title varies: Report of the inspector of legal offices ; FOR COMPLETE RECORD SEE CHECKLIST
BASE
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 54, Heft 5, S. 918-940
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
In: Philosophy & methodology of the social sciences 3