Second chambers
In: Openbaar bestuur: tijdschrift voor beleid, organisatie en politiek, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 17-18
ISSN: 0925-7322
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In: Openbaar bestuur: tijdschrift voor beleid, organisatie en politiek, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 17-18
ISSN: 0925-7322
In: Index on censorship, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 32-35
ISSN: 1746-6067
One of Argentina's leading writers, Julio Cortàzar has lived in Paris since 1951. Both 'Apocalypse at Solentiname' (Index 1/1979) and the following story are banned in Argentina. This is their first publication in English.
In: The women's review of books, Band 15, Heft 9, S. 23
In: Policy review: the journal of American citizenship, Heft 71, S. 75
ISSN: 0146-5945
Policymakers around the country are grappling with how to provide a second chance to people with criminal records. These records create collateral consequences-invisible punishments that inhibit opportunity in all facets of a person's life. Over the past seven years, states have repeatedly tried to legislate new paths for people trying to move on with their lives. State legislators passed more than 150 laws targeting collateral consequences in 2019 alone. But what happens when these paths to second chances are littered with learning, compliance, and psychological costs? The people who most need these new opportunities may find that they are out of reach. A major problem, I argue, is the administrative burdens involved in accessing these remedies. Because of these hurdles, people with fewer resources-the population that would most benefit from the help-are the ones most likely to find these second chances out of reach. The Article closely examines one increasingly popular type of second-chance program: certificate laws that remove employment barriers. Building on recent research identifying the low usage rates of petition-based second-chance programs, this Article catalogs and analyzes the costs and burdens placed on people attempting to access employment certificates. Of particular concern is not only these low usage rates themselves, but also the identity of those least likely to access these interventions. Second-chance programs like employment certificates that provide a way forward for people with greater resources while leaving behind those without may be more harmful than helpful when placed in the larger context of mass criminalization and social change, even if they help the small number of individuals who do access them. In contrast, a well-designed second-chance initiative that appropriately considers administrative burdens and the way that interventions like employment certificates fit into the broader picture of social change could provide short-term benefits to people with criminal records while ...
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The term "sanctuary" has long expressed a sympathy for immigrants' rights and resistance to federal immigration enforcement. Recently, the word has become associated with another divisive political topic, as local governments have begun declaring themselves "Second Amendment Sanctuaries" in defiance of statewide gun-control measures they deem unconstitutional. This gun-rights resistance movement not only flips the political script on the nature of sanctuaries, but also presents important and challenging questions about local–state power sharing, the proper scope of "subfederal commandeering," and the role of coordinate branches in constitutional decision-making. This Article provides the first scholarly treatment of Second Amendment Sanctuaries. In doing so, it explores both the unique facets of this new localism and the broader implications for sanctuary movements generally. Most early commentary dismisses Second Amendment Sanctuaries as purely symbolic and presumptively invalid pursuant to state preemption principles and the judicial supremacy model of constitutional interpretation. This Article challenges that narrative and articulates a theory of limited viability for Second Amendment Sanctuaries and other local intrastate resistance movements more broadly. The theory this Article presents proceeds in three parts, with each part presenting a novel approach to local–state governmental conflict that contributes to the existing literature. First, localities can resist broad state preemption in limited circumstances via the state's "home rule" provisions when local regulation of a particular issue is rooted in history and has normative policy appeal. Second, localities may passively resist statewide regulation through a form of "subfederal anticommandeering" analogous to the Tenth Amendment's anticommandeering principles protecting states from federal overreach, so long as the locality takes no affirmative steps to frustrate state enforcement. Third, local enforcement officers may defend their resistance on ...
BASE
In: The Rand journal of economics, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 41
ISSN: 1756-2171
SSRN
In: Cambridge elements
In: Elements in applied linguistics
This Element introduces the areas that second language (L2) pragmatics research has investigated. It begins with a theme-based review of the field with respect to L2 pragmatics learning, teaching, and assessing. The section on pragmatics learning examines studies on learners' pragmatic production and perception, and analyzes research modalities in this field. The section on pragmatics teaching examines the effects of and different approaches to L2 pragmatics instruction; and the section on pragmatics assessing examines the aspects involved in testing learners' pragmatic competence, and studies on issues related to validity and rating in pragmatics assessing. The Element then analyzes studies exploring learners' cognitive processes during pragmatic performance, and case studies are provided to showcase two ongoing projects, one investigating advanced learners' self-praise on social media and the other investigating lingua franca pragmatics among children. Finally, the Element offers some topics and questions for future research in L2 pragmatics.
World Affairs Online
In: Défense nationale et sécurité collective. [Englische Ausgabe] : current strategic thinking, Band [64], Heft [11], S. 112-116
ISSN: 1779-3874
World Affairs Online
In: Feminist studies: FS, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 247
ISSN: 2153-3873