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Pro-Inflammatory Cytokines in Learning & Memory - Amaicha Mara Depino - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Chechnya Still Boiling - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Chechnya Still Boiling - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

In September 1999, Russia''s then-Premier Vladimir Putin ordered military, police, and security forces to enter the breakaway Chechnya region, resulting in these forces occupying the region by early 2000. The conflict has resulted in thousands of military and civilian casualties and the massive destruction of housing and infrastructure. This book looks at Chechnya and Putin''s rise to power and continuing popularity which have been tied at least partly to his perceived ability to prosecute this conflict successfully. In the run-up to Russian legislative elections in December 2003 and a presidential election in March 2004, Putin endeavoured to demonstrate that peace had returned to the region. After Chechen terrorists held hundreds of Moscow theatre-goers hostage in late 2002, the Putin administration appeared unequivocally opposed to talks with the rebels and more dedicated to establishing a pro-Moscow government in Chechnya. This pro-Moscow government has used its own forces to battle the remaining rebels, ostensibly permitting the disengagement and withdrawal of most Russian troops from the region. This "Chechenization" of the conflict, along with related pacification efforts, has constituted the main elements of the Russian government''s campaign to wind down the fighting. The pacification efforts discussed in this book have also aimed to gain the support or acquiescence of the population to federal control and have included rebuilding assistance and elections. However, the assassination of a pro-Moscow Chechen leader in May 2004, the attack on a school in the town of Beslan, Russia in September 2004 by Chechen terrorists, and widening of conflict to other areas of Russia''s North Caucasus have raised questions about whether Chechenization and pacification are succeeding.

DKK 633.00
1

Tumor Necrosis Factor - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Acne - K I E Hon - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Georgia After the Rose Revolution - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Mandatory Minimum Sentencing - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Photonic Hemostasis - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Tunisia & Egypt - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Planning, Progress and Challenges of Built Environments - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Internet Taxation - Albert Tokin - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Systemic & Metabolic Changes Observed in Alcohol Dependent Male Patients After Alcohol Withdrawal - Maria Klopocka - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc

Systemic & Metabolic Changes Observed in Alcohol Dependent Male Patients After Alcohol Withdrawal - Maria Klopocka - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc

Alcohol abuse is associated with psycho-somatic health and social problems. It leads to multi-organ, especially cardiovascular system, alimentary tract, liver, pancreas and immunologic system dysfunction. Therefore withdrawal and anti-relapse therapy should be undoubtedly undertaken in every case. Nevertheless our knowledge about alcohol withdrawal consequences is insufficient. The main purpose of the authors'' investigation was to determine the metabolic, endocrine, haemostatic and immunologic changes during six-month long abstinence period. They studied the abstinence effect on exercise capacity and autonomic nervous system activity estimated by heart rate variability analysis. Their research concerned also changes in upper digestive tract macroscopic and microscopic appearance and its motility, liver function, pro- anti- oxidative balance parameters level, cytokine TNF- alpha and nitric oxide (NO) metabolites plasma concentration. The authors estimated inter-relationships between studied parameters, what seems to be very important in complete analysis. Within six-months long abstinence period pro-atherogenic metabolic changes expressed by decreased HDL and increased LDL- cholesterol plasma concentration occurred. These unfavourable changes were less expressed in patients treated with naltrexone. In the early abstinence period indirect markers of platelets activation were determined. The highest level of fibrinogen, thrombomodulin, antithrombin, markers of trombinogenesis activation in vivo (thrombin- antithrombin, TAT complexes), tissue type plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA:Ag), antigen of plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1:Ag), markers of fibrinolysis activation in vivo, such as D-dimers, plasmin- alpha2- antiplasmin (PAP) complexes was also observed. Mentioned changes were expressed in patients with determinable TNF-alpha plasma level. Abstinence improved effort capacity, positively changed autonomic nervous system activity via vagal nerve influence on heart rate variability. The last finding was also affected by TNF-alpha level. No significant changes appeared in alimentary tract function, estimated by esophageal and gastric pH-metry, esophageal manometry and abdominal ultrasonography, whereas some changes were observed in endoscopic examinations and influence of patients mental status on investigated parameters became noticeable. Favourable effect on liver function tests was affected by pituitary-thyroid and pituitary-gonadal axes hormones, cytokine TNF-alpha, nutrition status, Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric acidity. Some of studied parameters, such as mean platelets volume and nitric oxide metabolites plasma level may be used as new, valuable markers of alcohol abuse. Alcohol withdrawal and early abstinence is a dynamic period with potentially harmful health consequences, especially in cardiovascular system. This suggests the need of multicentre studies to estimate clinical importance of found changes and cost- benefits analysis of selected interventions.

DKK 534.00
1

Iran - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Iran - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

The Bush Administration has pursued several avenues to attempt to contain or end the potential threat posed by Iran, at times pursuing limited engagement, and at other times leaning toward pursuing efforts to change Iran''s regime. Some experts believe a potential crisis is looming over Iran''s nuclear program because the Bush Administration is sceptical that efforts by several European allies to prevent a nuclear breakout by Iran will succeed, although the Administration announced steps in March 2005 to support those talks. U.S. concerns have been heightened by the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, an admitted hardliner, in Iran''s presidential election on June 24, 2005. Some advocate military action against Iran''s nuclear infrastructure, but others believe that a combination of diplomatic and economic rewards and punishment are the only viable options on the nuclear issue. U.S. sanctions currently in effect ban or strictly limit U.S. trade, aid, and investment in Iran and penalise foreign firms that invest in Iran''s energy sector, but unilateral U.S. sanctions do not appear to have materially slowed Iran''s WMD programs to date. Other major U.S. concerns include Iran''s policy in the Near East region, particularly Iran''s material support to groups that use violence against the U.S.-led Middle East peace process, including Hizballah in Lebanon and the Palestinian groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Some senior Al Qaeda activists are in Iran as well, although Iran claims they are "in custody" and will be tried. Iran did not obstruct the U.S. effort to oust Iraq''s Saddam Hussein, a long-time Tehran adversary, at least partly in the expectation that pro-Iranian Shiite Islamic factions would come to power in Iraq in the aftermath. That result occurred as a product of 30 January 2005 elections there. Iran is also assisting pro-Iranian local leaders in Afghanistan, although that support does not appear to be materially hindering the stabilisation and development of Afghanistan. Iran''s human rights practices and strict limits on democracy have been consistently criticised by official U.S. and U.N. reports, particularly for Iran''s suppression of political dissidents and religious and ethnic minorities. New limits on personal freedoms could be imposed by Ahmadinejad, who has consistently advocated a return to many of the original principles of the Islamic revolution as set down by the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. However, Iran does hold elections for some positions, including that of president, suggesting to some experts that there might be benefits to engaging Iranian officials. According to this view, new sanctions or military action could harden Iran''s positions without necessarily easing the potential threat posed by Iran.

DKK 405.00
1

Antiphospholipid Antibodies (APLA) - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Antiphospholipid Antibodies (APLA) - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

The opening chapter of Antiphospholipid Antibodies (APLA): Types and Functions in Health and Disease is focused on the modern immunoassays for the determination of aPL in biological fluids. The principles of these methods will be described and the possibility of their applications for aPL analysis will be mentioned. Next, the authors examine antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), a clinical disorder characterized by thrombosis and/or pregnancy morbidity in the persistence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) that are pathogenic and have pro-coagulant activities. Two different strategies on the assessments of the aPL testings are indicated: quantitative assessments of the thrombotic risks using aPL profiles and new combination of aPL tests for screening APS diagnosis. This book goes on to discuss how in 2003, as a parallel to the seronegative rheumatoid arthritis and the seronegative lupus, G.R. Hughes and M.A. Khamashta introduced the term seronegative antiphospholipid syndrome (SN-APS). The diagnosis of SN-APS has been subjected to multiple discussions, disputes and investigations. The review presented in this collection summarizes the contemporary knowledge on SN-APS and its diagnosis and treatment and shows the authors experience in this field. In closing, the authors describe the current knowledge on the mechanisms of antiphospholipid antibodies -associated renal damage, the main clinical manifestations, diagnostic and therapeutic considerations in APS in renal patients and our experience in this group.

DKK 820.00
1

Persian Gulf States - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

DKK 316.00
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Iraq - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Iraq - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Operation Iraqi Freedom overthrew Saddam Hussein''s regime, but much of Iraq remains violent because of Sunni Arab resentment and a related insurgency, compounded by Sunni-Shiite sectarian violence that, in the judgment of many, constitutes a "civil war." Mounting U.S. casualties and financial costs -- without dramatic improvements in levels of violence or clear movement toward national political reconciliation among Iraq''s major communities -- have intensified a debate within the United States over whether to reduce U.S. involvement without completely accomplishing initial U.S. goals. President Bush announced a new strategy on January 10, 2007 ("New Way Forward") consisting of deployment of an additional 28,500 U.S. forces ("troop surge") to help stabilise Baghdad and restive Anbar Province. The strategy is intended to provide security conditions conducive to Iraqi government action on a series of key reconciliation initiatives that are viewed as "benchmarks" of political progress. The FY2007 supplemental appropriation, P.L. 110-28, linked some U.S. reconstruction aid to progress on the eighteen named benchmarks, but allows for a presidential waiver to continue the aid even if little or no progress is observed in Administration reports due July 15, 2007 and September 15, 2007. The latter will include a major assessment of the effects of the "troop surge" to date. According to the required July 15, 2007 Administration report, released on July 12, the Baghdad security plan has made progress on several military indicators and some political indicators, but progress is unsatisfactory on the most important political reconciliation indicators. The Administration report asserts that the "overall trajectory... has begun to stabilise," a finding on the security situation that is corroborated, to some extent, by an August 2007 National Intelligence Estimate A required report by the GAO released September 4, 2007, assesses less progress on security benchmarks than does the Administration and is pessimistic, as is the NIE, on the prospects for political reconciliation. Some in Congress -- as well as the Iraq Study Group -- believe that the United States should begin winding down U.S. combat involvement in Iraq. Both chambers adopted a FY2007 supplemental appropriation to fund U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan (H.R. 1591) that would have set an outside deadline of March 31, 2008, for U.S. combat withdrawal if the President did not certify Iraqi progress on the "benchmarks." President Bush vetoed it on May 1, 2007, and subsequent bills mandating forms of withdrawal or combat reduction have not moved forward. Some observers say such legislation might see further action after the Administration''s September 15 progress report, while others say some positive assessments of the "troop surge" might forestall immediate congressional action. Iraq has not previously had experience with a democratic form of government, although parliamentary elections were held during the period of British rule under a League of Nations mandate (from 1920 until Iraq''s independence in 1932), and the monarchy of the Sunni Muslim Hashemite dynasty (1921-1958). The territory that is now Iraq was formed from three provinces of the Ottoman empire after British forces defeated the Ottomans in World War I and took control of the territory in 1918. Britain had tried to take Iraq from the Ottomans earlier in World War I but were defeated at Al Kut in 1916. Britain''s presence in Iraq, which relied on Sunni Muslim Iraqis (as did the Ottoman administration), ran into repeated resistance, facing a major Shiite-led revolt in 1920 and a major anti-British uprising in 1941, during World War II. Iraq''s first Hashemite king was Faysal bin Hussein, son of Sharif Hussein of Mecca who, advised by British officer T.E Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia"), led the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire during World War I. Faysal ruled Iraq as King Faysal I and was succeeded by his son, Ghazi, who was killed in a car accident in 1939. Ghazi was succeeded by his son, Faysal II, who was only four years old. A major figure under the British mandate and the monarchy was Nuri As-Said, a pro-British, pro-Hashemite Sunni Muslim who served as prime minister 14 times during 1930-1958. Faysal II, with the help of his pro-British Prime Minister Nuri al-Sa''id who had also served under his predecessors, ruled until the military coup of Abd al-Karim al-Qasim on July 14, 1958. Qasim was ousted in February 1963 by a Baath Party-military alliance. Since that same year, the Baath Party has ruled in Syria, although there was rivalry between the Syrian and Iraqi Baath regimes during Saddam''s rule. The Baath Party was founded in the 1940s by Lebanese Christian philosopher Michel Aflaq as a socialist, pan-Arab movement, the aim of which was to reduce religious and sectarian schisms among Arabs. One of the Baath Party''s allies in the February 1963 coup was Abd al-Salam al-Arif. In Nove

DKK 534.00
1

Stem Cell Research - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Stem Cell Research - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Embryonic stem cells have the ability to develop into virtually any cell in the body, and may have the potential to treat medical conditions such as diabetes and Parkinson''s disease. In August 2001, President Bush announced that for the first time federal funds would be used to support research on human embryonic stem cells, but funding would be limited to ''existing stem cell lines''. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has established the Human Embryonic Stem Cell Registry which lists stem cell lines that are eligible for use in federally funded research. Although 78 cell lines are listed, 21 embryonic stem cell lines are currently available. Scientists are concerned about the quality, longevity, and availability of the eligible stem cell lines. For a variety of reasons, many believe research advancement requires new embryonic stem cell lines, and for certain applications, stem cells derived from cloned embryos may offer the best hope for progress in understanding and treating disease. A significant cohort of pro-life advocates support stem cell research; those opposed are concerned that the isolation of stem cells requires the destruction of embryos. Letters from Congress, one signed by 206 Members of the House and a second signed by 58 Senators, have been sent urging President Bush to expand the current federal policy concerning embryonic stem cell research. Some have argued that stem cell research be limited to adult stem cells obtained from tissues such as bone marrow. They argue that adult stem cells should be pursued instead of embryonic stem cells because they believe the derivation of stem cells from either embryos or aborted foetuses is ethically unacceptable. Other scientists believe adult stem cells should not be the sole target of research because of important scientific and technical limitations. Groups make ethical distinctions in the debate on how to proceed with stem cell research based upon embryo protection, relief of suffering, viability, the purpose and timing of embryo creation and destruction, donor consent, scientific alternatives, federal funding, and cloning. Other countries are moving fast with active research programs. This book presents the current confused situation along with a selective bibliography.

DKK 554.00
1

Burma in Turmoil - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Burma in Turmoil - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

By the end of September 2007, the Burmese military regime had suppressed with force anti-regime protests that began in late August, escalated in mid- September, and were led by Buddhist monks and pro-democracy activists. This drew new protests from the United States over the regime''s abusive human rights record. According to human rights reports by the U.S. State Department and private organisations, Burma''s poor record worsened in 2004, 2005, and 2006. These reports have laid out a familiar pattern of government and military abuses of civilians. As in the past, U.S. diplomatic initiatives in September 2007 did not prevent the regime''s crackdown. China blocked a U.S.-European Union proposal to have the United Nations Security Council consider imposing sanctions on Burma. However, Burmese military leader Than Shwe proposed to a United Nations envoy that he would meet with opposition leader Aung Sann Suu Kyi if she would cease encouraging confrontation with the government and foreign economic sanctions. The SPDC appears unaffected by sanctions imposed by the United States and other Western nations. Western sanctions are uneven with U.S. sanctions being the heaviest. Burma has been able to expand exports of a variety of commodities, including growing earnings from natural gas production. China and India have signed deals with the SPDC for substantial purchases of natural gas. Burma also reportedly earns between $1 billion and $2 billion annually from exports of illegal drugs, heroin and methamphetamines. Most of these earnings go to drug traffickers connected to the Wa and Shan ethnic groups; but Burmese military officials have means to gain a substantial share of these earnings. Burma''s fellow members in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have grown more critical of the SPDC, but they continue to oppose sanctions. Chinese diplomatic support of the SPDC and military and economic aid is very important: $2 billion in military aid since the early 1990s, $200 million annually in economic aid, substantial foreign investment including new investment in natural gas, and a huge influx of Chinese migrants into Burma, mainly traders. China''s role is a prime justification for India''s "constructive engagement" policy toward Burma. Burma has re-established diplomatic relations with North Korea amidst reports of growing military co-operation between them. This book presents a background report on Burma and incisive reports on the country and its internal strive and international interactions.

DKK 890.00
1

Quantum Chemical, Spectroscopic & Structural Study of Hydrochlorides, Hydrogens Squarates & Ester Amides of Squaric Acid of Amina - Tsonko Kolev - Bog

Quantum Chemical, Spectroscopic & Structural Study of Hydrochlorides, Hydrogens Squarates & Ester Amides of Squaric Acid of Amina - Tsonko Kolev - Bog

The interest to amino acid amides arises from their biological important role. Some C-n£\- amidated amino acids Ile, Val, Thr, Ser, Met, Trp, Gln and Arg have been studied by single crystal X-ray diffraction and their bioactivity have been compared with the corresponding amino acids due to most of mammalian peptide hormones as calcitonin, gastrin, neurokinins or neuropeptides possess a C-£\-terminal-amides. The most C-£\- amides are much more biologically active, comparing with the corresponding C-£\- terminal free acids. For example the "potency ratio" of peptide amide towards the corresponding peptide free acid in neurocinin is more than 40 000. Since the protonated forms of amino acid amides and C-£\-amidated peptides exists in the living cell their investigation could provide an understanding of their biological role. The choice of the acidity agent for the in vitro investigations are based manly of its own biological activity as for example squaric acid (H2Sq). Its application for synthesis of optically active amino acid derivatives with potential non-linear optical and electro-optical properties is well known, but its important biological role is intensively studied in last five years. A large number of medications based on H2Sq derivatives are effective inhibitors of protein tyrosine phosphatases or DNA polymerases from several viruses. H2Sq diamides replaced a phosphate diester linkage in oligodeoxynucleotide. Selective antagonist of ionotropic glutamate receptors is obtained by replacing of £^-carboxylic acid of a glutamate residue within a polyamine toxin with squaric acid derivatives. Some H2Sq-based peptides are inhibitors of matrix metalloprotease V1. These facts provoked the systematic investigations of hydrochlorides, hydrogensquarates and ester amides of squaric acid of amino acid amides of Ala, Arg, Tyr, Ser, Met, Ile, Lys, Tyr, Val, Leu, Pro and Phe. Some of them have been structurally characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction. Their spectroscopic properties have been obtained using solid-state conventional and linearpolarised IR- and Raman spectroscopy and 1H- and 13C-NMR. However, the complicated spectroscopic data difficult in significant level their interpretation. Moreover, in the cases of hydrogensquarates and ester amides of squaric acid various intermolecular hydrogen bonds in solid-state with participation of H2Sq have been established. Having in mind that physical and chemical properties of above mentioned compounds can be precise calculated by means of ab initio and DFT methods at Hartee-Fock, MP2 and B3LYP level of theory, varying basis sets (6-31G*, 6-31G**, 6-31++G, 6-31++G*, 6-31++G**, 6-311G, 6-311G*, 6-311G** and 6-31++G**) have been employed. The results obtained allow a precise assignment of many vibrational bands to the corresponding normal modes as well as the electronic structure and conformational analysis have been carried out.

DKK 514.00
1

German Foreign & Security Policy - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

German Foreign & Security Policy - - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

German Chancellor Angela Merkel took office in November 2005 promising a foreign policy anchored in a revitalised transatlantic partnership. Most observers agree that since reaching a low-point in the lead-up to the Iraq war in 2003, relations between the United States and Germany have improved. With recent leadership changes in the United Kingdom, France, and Italy, U.S. officials view Germany under Chancellor Merkel as a key U.S. ally in Europe. Despite continuing areas of divergence, President Bush and many Members of Congress have welcomed German leadership in Europe and have voiced expectations for increased U.S.-German co-operation on the international stage. German unification in 1990 and the end of the Cold War represented monumental shifts in the geopolitical realities that had traditionally defined German foreign policy. Germany was once again Europe''s largest country, and the Soviet threat, which had served to unite West Germany with its pro-western neighbours and the United States, was no longer. Since the early 1990s, German leaders have been challenged to exercise a foreign policy grounded in a long-standing commitment to multilateralism and an aversion to military force while simultaneously seeking to assume the more proactive global role many argue is necessary to confront emerging security threats. Until 1994, Germany was constitutionally barred from deploying its armed forces abroad. Today, over 7,000 German troops are deployed in peacekeeping, stabilisation, and reconstruction missions world-wide. However, as Germany''s foreign and security policy continues to evolve, some experts perceive a widening gap between the global ambitions of Germany''s political class, and an increasingly sceptical German public. Since the end of the Cold War, Germany''s relations with the United States have been shaped by several key factors. These include Germany''s growing support for a stronger, more capable European Union, and its continued allegiance to NATO as the primary guarantor of European security; Germany''s ability and willingness to undertake the defence reforms many argue are necessary for it to meet its commitments within NATO and a burgeoning European Security and Defence Policy; and German popular opinion, especially the influence of strong public opposition to recent U.S. foreign policies on German leaders. Under Merkel''s leadership, Germany has sought to boost transatlantic co-operation in areas ranging from economic and trade relations, climate change policy, and global counter-terrorism and non-proliferation policy, to peacekeeping, reconstruction and stabilization efforts in Afghanistan, the Middle East, Africa, and the Balkans. Merkel has enjoyed relatively strong domestic support for her transatlantically-oriented foreign policy agenda. However, as her term progresses, and domestic political tensions mount, she may be more hard-pressed to justify her Atlanticist foreign policy to a public which appears increasingly sceptical of U.S. influence in the world. Imprint: Global Affairs Press

DKK 890.00
1

Sexual Harassment & Violence Against Women - Charles V Dale - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Sexual Harassment & Violence Against Women - Charles V Dale - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Gender-based discrimination, harassment, and violence against women in the home, workplace, and society at large are continuing topics of legislative and judicial concern. Legal doctrines condemning the extortion of sexual favours as a condition of employment or job advancement, and other sexually offensive workplace behaviours resulting in a ''hostile environment'', have evolved from judicial decisions under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and related federal laws. The earlier judicial focus on economic detriment or quid pro quo harassment -- making submission to sexual demands a condition to job benefits -- has largely given way to Title VII claims alleging harassment that creates an ''intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment''. In 1994, Congress broke new legal ground by creating a civil rights cause of action for victims of ''crimes of violence motivated by gender''. The new law also made it a federal offence to travel interstate with the intent to ''injure, harass, or intimidate'' a spouse, causing bodily harm to the spouse by a crime of violence. In recent years, the US Supreme Court has addressed a range of issues from the legality of same-sex harassment to the vicarious liability of employers and a local school district for monetary damages as the result of harassment by supervisors and teachers. In Oncale vs Sundowner Offshore Services Inc., the US Supreme Court resolved a conflict among the federal circuit courts by ruling that sex discrimination consisting of same-sex harassment is actionable under Title VII. Faragher vs City of Boca Raton and Burlington Industries vs Ellerth, held employers vicariously liable for sexual harassment of an employee by a supervisor with immediate or successively higher authority of that employee. Where the harassment results in a ''tangible employment action'' -- such as demotion or discharge -- against the victim, Title VII liability is automatic and no defence is available to the employer. In cases not involving tangible reprisals or loss of job benefits, however, the failure of a complaining employee to take advantage of any anti-harassment policy and procedures made available by the employer may be asserted as an affirmative defence. Doe vs Lago Vista Independent School District, by contrast, ruled 5 to 4 that Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 imposes no liability on local school districts for teacher harassment of students unless a school official with authority to institute corrective measures has actual knowledge of the alleged misconduct and is deliberately indifferent to it. On June 14, 2004 the Supreme Court considered the defences, if any, that may be available to an employer against an employee''s claim that she was forced to resign because of ''intolerable'' sexual harassment at the hands of a supervisor. In Pennsylvania State Police vs Suders, the plaintiff claimed the tangible adverse action was supervisory harassment so severe that it drove the employee to quit, a constructive discharge in effect. The Court, in an opinion by Justice Ginsburg, only Justice Thomas dissenting, accepted the theory of a constructive discharge as a tangible employment action, but it also set conditions under which the employer could assert an affirmative defense and avoid strict liability under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

DKK 1034.00
1

Terrorism - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

Terrorism - Kenneth Katzman - Bog - Nova Science Publishers Inc - Plusbog.dk

This book is an analysis of Near Eastern terrorist groups and countries on the. U.S. "terrorism list," a list of countries that the Secretary of Commerce and Secretary of State have determined provide repeated support for international terrorism. This book adopts the same definition of terrorism as that used by the State Department in its annual reports the definition contained in Title 22 U.S.C. Section 2656f(d). According to this section, "terrorism" means "premeditated politically motivated violence perpetrated against non combatant targets by sub national groups or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an audience." Five out of the seven states currently on the terrorism list are located in the Near East region Iran, Iraq Syria, Libya, and Sudan. (The other two are Cuba and North Korea, which will not be covered in this book). The composition of the list has not changed since Sudan was added in 1993. The groups analysed in this book include, but are not limited to, those designated as "Foreign Terrorist Organisations" (FTOs), pursuant to the Anti Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (P.L. 104 132). The last section of the book discusses significant themes in U.S. unilateral and multilateral efforts to combat terrorism in or from the region. The State Department''s annual report on international terrorism, entitled Patterns of Global Terrorism: 2000; is a significant source for this book; other sources include press reports and conversations with U.S. counter terrorism officials, experts, investigative journalists, and foreign diplomats. Although the September 11 attacks have placed Near Eastern terrorist groups at the centre of U.S. anti terrorism policy, Near Eastern terrorist groups and their state sponsors have been a focus of U.S. counter-terrorism policies for several decades. Since the 1970s, many of the most high profile acts of terrorism against American citizens and targets have been conducted by these groups, sometimes with the encouragement or at the instigation of their state sponsors. However, no single terrorist attack either in or outside the Near East region compares in scale to the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, which killed a total of over 3,000 persons. Senior U.S. officials have attributed this attack to the Al Qaeda network, whose leaders enjoyed sanctuary in Afghanistan from 1996 until their defeat at the hands of the U.S. military and its Afghan partners in late 2001. According to Patterns of Global Terrorism: 2000 (available on the U.S. Department of State''s web site at http://www.state.gov/s/et/rls/pgtipt/2000/]; hereafter cited as Patterns 2000), world-wide terrorism related casualties increased to 405 in 2000 from 233 in 1999, but the number of attacks increased only slightly, from 392 in 1999 to 423 in 2000. Of these 2000 totals, only 16 of the 423 attacks and 19 of the 405 casualties occurred in the Middle East, although Patterns 2000 covered only three months of the Palestinian uprising that began in late September 2000. Since 2001 began, there have been dozens of terrorism related Israeli casualties resulting from Palestinian suicide bomb attacks, some of them in retaliation for Israeli actions against suspected Palestinian militants. Thirty one of the attacks and 12 of the deaths during 2000 occurred in Eurasia (Central Asia, the Caucasus, and. Russia). The terrorist groups analyzed often differ in their motivations, objectives, ideologies, and levels of activity. The Islamist groups remain generally the most active, stating as their main objective the overthrow of secular, pro Western governments, the derailment of the Arab Israeli peace process, the expulsion of U.S. forces from the region, or the end of what they consider unjust occupation of Muslim lands. Some groups, such as the Kurdistan Workers'' Party (PKK), fight for cultural and political rights or the formation of separate ethnically based states. Table 1 below shows the 20 Near Eastern groups currently designated by the State Department as FTOs. The designations were mostly made when the FTO list was inaugurated in October 1997 and revised in October 1999 and October 2001, A group can be added to the list at any time; Al Qaeda (the bin Laden network) was added on August 2 1, 1998, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan was designated on September 25, 2000, and two Pakistani groups Lashkar e Tayyiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad were added to the FTO list on December 26, 2001.

DKK 534.00
1