Showing 201 - 220 results of 251 for search '"Prohibition in Canada', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
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    Part II: Moving in the right direction: Tobacco packaging and labeling in the Americas by Ernesto M Sebrie, Eric Crosbie, Olufemi Erinoso, Sara Perez

    Published 2023-04-01
    “…Twenty-seven countries ban brand descriptors with references to implied harm reduction (e.g., “light”), 24 ban figures, colors, and other signs, but only 13 prohibit emission yields printed on the packs. Only Canada and Uruguay have adopted standardized tobacco packaging while Uruguay also requires a single presentation (one brand variant) per brand family. …”
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  3. 203

    The application of Islamic Law relating to non-consensual sexual offence: a comparative study by Mohamad Yunus, Mohamad Ismail

    Published 2002
    “…This article is aimed at studying and examining the past and present law relating to sexual offences under the Islamic law and to compare with the laws at the common law jurisdiction such as in England, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, including Malaysia. …”
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  4. 204

    PROBLEMS OF THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF GENDER EQUALITY (COMPARATIVE LEGAL ASPECT) by Maria Mendzhul

    Published 2021-07-01
    “…The study has identified that the principle of gender equality prohibits discriminatory treatment on the basis of gender in different spheres of social relations. …”
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    Characterizing cheat meals among a national sample of Canadian adolescents and young adults by Kyle T. Ganson, Mitchell L. Cunningham, Eva Pila, Rachel F. Rodgers, Stuart B. Murray, Jason M. Nagata

    Published 2022-08-01
    “…Abstract Background “Cheat meals”, described as brief eating episodes that depart from established dietary practices to consume prohibited foods, represent a novel and increasingly common eating behavior with particular salience in adolescence and young adulthood. …”
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  14. 214

    Healthcare workers’ freedom of movement in times of pandemics: an emerging norm of customary international law by Andrés Constantin, Aliya Sternstein

    Published 2023-11-01
    “…Within months, Argentina, Colombia, Kenya, South Africa, India, Japan, Spain, the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States, ten nations representing most regions of the world, recognized, as law, the practice of excluding healthcare workers from prohibitions on movement. …”
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