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Networks in Auxology – proceedings of the 31st Aschauer Soiree, held at Aschau, Germany, June 17th 2023
Published 2023-12-01“…Examples of the psychosocial stress caused by the forced migration of modern Kyrgyz children and Polish children after World War II were presented, as well as the effects of nutritional stress during and after World War I. …”
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82
Savings Behavior in Muslim and Non-Muslim Countries in Context to the Interest Rate
Published 2015-12-01“…But if you do not then listen to the declaration of War from Allah and his messenger (SAW). …”
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83
Global Surge in Intimate Partner Violence after Mandatory Lockdown: Implications for Pakistan
Published 2021-01-01“…Pakistan ranks among the countries with the highest IPV rates [2]. On 11th March 2020, the World Health Organization declared the highly infectious and lethal Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (COVID-19) to be a pandemic [3]. …”
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84
British and American relations with independent Ukraine, 1917-1921 and 1991-1994
Published 2001“…Finally, the comparative analysis of the two periods under consideration assesses the difference between the principles underlying relations of Great Britain and the United States with Ukraine at the end of World War I and in the early nineties and the ways these relations affected the process of nation-state formation in the Republic. …”
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85
Examining Afghan People's Right to Self-Determination in International Law, Emphasizing the Legal Status of the Self-proclaimed "Islamic EMARIT" Government
Published 2023-04-01“…Self-determination, as a democratic principle, requires the consent of the governed meaning the people must always have the right to freely choose their rulers.Therefore, institutionalization and gradual legalization of this right, especially after World War I, gave a new concept to domestic and global relations. …”
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86
The Politics of Pain
Published 2017-09-01“…For example, countries with strong histories of Buddhist thought and culture have traditionally opposed the ideology of palliative care.[26] In Buddhism, suffering is considered an inextricable part of life and masking this suffering through medical intervention is looked down upon.[2] For example, Vietnam, a country with a culture strongly imbued with Eastern Buddhist values, has a long history of rejecting palliative care and pain medications in general.[26] Due to this, the World Health Organization’ declaration that palliative care is a universal human right could also be understood as a Western organization blatantly ignoring Buddhist cultural traditions. …”
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87
The Ecology and Economic Practices of the Isukha and Idakho Communities in Colonial Period 1895-1963
Published 2023-01-01“…This paper, therefore, finds that Land as a natural resource was alienated with forests being gazetted and animals confiscated to feed the soldiers of World Wars I and II.…”
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88
Pedagogical partnership in higher education institutions: expediency and capabilities
Published 2022-10-01“…Since the beginning of war in Ukraine, university life has certainly undergone significant changes, which has reflected either on learning and teachers-students attitudes. …”
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Legal Aspects of the Pandemic Covid19: Obligations and Duties of Government
Published 2020-09-01“…The host country should call for help and accept any humanitarian help offered by the world community. States, due to their sovereignty, have the obligation to protect the people living in their territory and assist them during natural disasters. …”
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The Famous Slovenes in Croatia throughout the History
Published 2006-12-01“…At the beginning of the 21st century there are only about 14,000 individuals among all Croatian citizens who declare themselves as Slovenes. Particularly in the 20th century, between the two world wars, they experienced the Golden Age of their national flourishing, having been very well organized in Slovene cultural societies and other associations. …”
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91
Heart of America Annual Survey: A Call for Unity and the Power of Racial Healing
Published 2024-01-01“…But the decades before that were periods of protracted defiance and resistance to racial and ethnic integration.4 This dramatic change in 1965 was fully a hundred years after the end of the civil war. That war ended more than two centuries of denial of the humanity of millions of enslaved African Americans. …”
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92
COPING WITH COVID-19: URGENT NEED FOR BUILDING RESILIENCE THROUGH COGNITIVE BEHAVIOUR THERAPY
Published 2020-03-01“…At the start of 2020, originating from Wuhan city, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) started to spread throughout China.1 The World Health Organization has declared this to be a pandemic.2 Both healthcare workers and the general public have been experiencing psychological problems, including anxiety, depression, and stress, as a result of the rapidly increasing numbers of confirmed cases and deaths.3 Isolation strategies are used throughout the world to limit the spread of the virus. …”
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93
Limited Access to Research Involving Incarcerated Persons as a Result of Protectionism
Published 2021-03-01“…Rigorous research protections in the United States originated after World War II, during which Nazi attorneys likened unethical experiments on Jewish people and others to practices common in U.S. correctional facilities.[2] With increased public awareness of research abuses in the wake of the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study, Congress appointed a national commission to create guidelines for research involving vulnerable populations, including the incarcerated.[3] Constituted under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (DHEW), the commission produced Report and Recommendations: Research Involving Prisoners (hereinafter the “DHEW Report”).[4] The report recommended that incarcerated people “receive a fair share of the benefits of research,” and encouraged such research to be aimed toward improving “prisoners’ health and/or investigate the causes and effects of incarceration.”[5] These regulations were incorporated into the 1979 Belmont Report and later into the “Common Rule.”[6] However, many groups representing vulnerable or minority populations, such as women’s rights advocacy and AIDS support groups, requested revisions of the DHEW Report to ensure that a “fair share of the benefits of research” was realized for minority populations, whose interests had not been originally considered.[7] This awareness campaign eventually led the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to loosen restrictions on vulnerable groups’ participation in research of more than minimal risk. …”
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Public Policy Through the Lens of Necessity
Published 2021-01-01“…“Philosophy of organ donation: Review of ethical facets.” World journal of transplantation vol. 5,2 (2015): 44-51. doi:10.5500/wjt.v5.i2.44 [17] James, Scott M. …”
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Contextual Vulnerability Should Guide Fair Subject Selection in Xenotransplantation Clinical Trials
Published 2023-03-01“…[xxvii] The Nuremberg Code, Trials of War Criminals before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law 2, no. 10: 181-2 (Washington, DC: U.S. …”
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Contextual Vulnerability Should Guide Fair Subject Selection in Xenotransplantation Clinical Trials
Published 2023-03-01“…[xxvii] The Nuremberg Code, Trials of War Criminals before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law 2, no. 10: 181-2 (Washington, DC: U.S. …”
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Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation: Creating Public Sentiment
Published 2021-09-01“…These truth-telling efforts have been used most often to reunite previously warring factions, the most widely recognized of which is the South African TRC process. …”
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Compulsory COVID-19 Vaccination?
Published 2020-12-01“…Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response: A WHO Guidance Document. World Health Organization. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK143061/.…”
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