Results for 'South Wales'

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  1. South Wales and the Rising of 1839.Ivor Wilks & Neville Kirk - 1986 - Science and Society 50 (2):242-245.
     
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  2.  21
    Derision and Demography: New South Wales and the Irish Orphan Girls of the Earl Grey Immigration Scheme, 1848 to 1850.Benjamin McHutchion - 2015 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 6 (2).
    From 1848 to 1850, 4175 female orphans from Irish workhouses were sent to the Australian colonies to escape from the Irish famine and to address the gender imbalance in the colonies. Anglo-centric colonial newspapers condemned the girls for their supposedly inferior demographics – Catholic, illiterate, Irish and female – and raised the spectre of Catholic predominance, leading to the cancellation of the immigration scheme at a time of great humanitarian need. Using the original shipping lists of the girls who landed (...)
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  3.  18
    The universe around them: cosmology and cosmic renewal in Indianized South-east Asia.Horace Geoffrey Quaritch Wales - 1977 - London: A. Probsthain.
  4.  28
    Moral minefields: Save the Children Fund and the moral economies of nursery schooling in the South Wales coalfield in the 1930s.Rebecca Gill & Daryl Leeworthy - 2015 - Journal of Global Ethics 11 (2):218-232.
    We trace the meeting and misalignment of competing moral economies in South Wales during the depression of the 1930s. Our case study is the Save the Children Fund's campaign to open emergency open-air nurseries in distressed communities and we analyse the contested meanings of work, voluntarism and cooperation that arose between charitable enterprises and local political organisers in the area. We also inquire into the attempt of a new generation of female political activists to shape a socialist moral (...)
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  5.  27
    Responding to Health Outcomes and Access to Health and Hospital Services in Rural, Regional and Remote New South Wales.Fiona McDonald & Christina Malatzky - 2023 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (2):191-196.
    Ethical perspectives on regional, rural, and remote healthcare often, understandably and importantly, focus on inequities in access to services. In this commentary, we take the opportunity to examine the implications of normalizing metrocentric views, values, knowledge, and orientations, evidenced by the recent (2022) New South Wales inquiry into health outcomes and access to hospital and health services in regional, rural and remote New South Wales, for contemporary rural governance and justice debates. To do this, we draw (...)
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  6.  17
    Neoliberal peri-urban economies and the predicament of dairy farmers: a case study of the Illawarra region, New South Wales.Ren Hu & Nicholas J. Gill - 2023 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):599-617.
    Rural Australia has been experiencing dramatic agricultural restructuring. A major contributor to this in some areas is peri-urban and rural residential developments, and amenity/lifestyle developments, including those associated with the inflow of urban middle-class groups into rural areas. These processes are intertwined with neoliberal trends in agri-food governance, and have complex effects on farming. However, there is a lack of farm-level studies that explore how professional farmers have been interacting and co-existing with urban/suburban development while also undertaking agricultural intensification and (...)
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  7. Annotated criminal legislation New South Wales 2012-2013 [Book Review].James Maher - 2013 - Ethos: Official Publication of the Law Society of the Australian Capital Territory 229:37.
     
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  8.  17
    Unconventional Labour: Environmental Justice and Working-class Ecology in the New South Wales Green Bans.Paul Bleakley - 2021 - Studies in Social Justice 15 (3):458-474.
    The New South Wales union movement embraced the principles of heritage and conservationism in the 1970s through the imposing of “green bans” – a strategy wherein union members refused to work on construction projects that were a threat to the state’s natural or built environment. Led by radicals like Builders Labourers’ Federation leader Jack Mundey, the green bans were seen in several sectors as a departure from the traditional “Old Left” priorities of securing workers’ wages and conditions. Rather (...)
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  9.  18
    Differences between the Views of Teachers and Students to Aspects of Sixth Form Organization at three Contrasting Comprehensive Schools in South Wales.Ken Reid & Beatrice Avalos - 1980 - Educational Studies 6 (3):225-239.
    (1980). Differences between the Views of Teachers and Students to Aspects of Sixth Form Organization at three Contrasting Comprehensive Schools in South Wales. Educational Studies: Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 225-239.
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  10.  28
    Shielding the learned body: a semiotic analysis of school badges in New South Wales, Australia.Colin Symes - 2023 - Semiotica 2023 (250):167-190.
    School badges, though an integral part of education’s “aesthetic order,” of its signage and apparel, have not been the subjects of much of analysis. In addressing this oversight, the following paper examines the badges of New South Wales government schools and argues that like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, they draw on heraldic models and are constructs of colors, names, motifs, and mottoes that in various ways have local cogency and significance. For example, many badges draw on (...)
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  11.  13
    (1 other version)Family endowment in new south wales.A. H. Charteris - 1927 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 5 (2):94 – 112.
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  12.  33
    Market forces and kangaroos: The New South Wales kangaroo management plan.Jacqueline Mills - 2006 - Society and Animals 14 (3):295-304.
    In contemporary times, wildlife managers attempt to provide solutions to problems arising from conflicting uses of the environment by humans and nonhuman animals. Within the Kangaroo Management Zones of New South Wales , the commercial culling "solution" is one such attempt to perpetuate kangaroo populations on pastoral land while supporting farmers in continuing inefficient sheep farming. Because wildlife management rests on a distinction between the "nature" of humans and animals, then humanist attention to standards of individual welfare need (...)
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  13. The Ethical Commitments of Health Promotion Practitioners: An Empirical Study from New South Wales, Australia.S. M. Carter, C. Klinner, I. Kerridge, L. Rychetnik, V. Li & D. Fry - 2012 - Public Health Ethics 5 (2):128-139.
    In this article, we provide a description of the good in health promotion based on an empirical study of health promotion practices in New South Wales, the most populous state in Australia. We found that practitioners were unified by a vision of the good in health promotion that had substantive and procedural dimensions. Substantively, the good in health promotion was teleological: it inhered in meliorism, an intention to promote health, which was understood holistically and situated in places and (...)
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  14. Invoking the patronage of saint Bede in New South Wales.Colin Fowler - 2017 - The Australasian Catholic Record 94 (3):294.
    Fowler, Colin At the laying of the foundation stone of the Pyrmont church in February 1867 it was announced that the new mission district would be placed under the patronage of the Venerable Bede. There is no documentation relating to the choice of this patron. However, it may be supposed that the decision was made deliberately to honour the archbishop. The name of this eighth-century English monk had been given to the young John Polding as his personal patron, when he (...)
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  15.  19
    The influence of antenatal and maternal factors on stillbirths and neonatal deaths in new south wales, australia.M. Mohsin, A. E. Bauman & B. Jalaludin - 2006 - Journal of Biosocial Science 38 (5):643-657.
    This study identified the influences of maternal socio-demographic and antenatal factors on stillbirths and neonatal deaths in New South Wales, Australia. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to explore the association of selected antenatal and maternal characteristics with stillbirths and neonatal deaths. The findings of this study showed that stillbirths and neonatal deaths significantly varied by infant sex, maternal age, Aboriginality, maternal country of birth, socioeconomic status, parity, maternal smoking behaviour during pregnancy, maternal diabetes mellitus, maternal hypertension, antenatal (...)
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  16.  16
    A voice to be heard: The first 50 years of the New South Wales College of Nursing.Ann Williams - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (4):307-308.
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  17.  55
    Representations of Surrogacy in Submissions to a Parliamentary Inquiry in New South Wales.Damien W. Riggs & Clemence Due - 2012 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 16 (1):71-84.
    Whilst feminist commentators have long critiqued surrogacy as a practice of commodification, surrogacy as a mode of family formation continues to grow in popularity. In this paper we explore public representations of surrogacy through a discourse analytic reading of submissions made in Australia to an Inquiry regarding surrogacy legislation. The findings suggest that many submissions relied upon normative understandings of surrogates as either ‘good women’ or ‘bad mothers’. This is of concern given that such public representations may shape the views (...)
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  18. Plea Bargaining in Lower Courts in New South Wales.Andrew Alexandra - 1999 - Australian Journal of Professional and Applied Ethics 1 (1).
     
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  19. Bentham's Penal Theory in Action: the Case Against New South Wales: R. V. Jackson.R. V. Jackson - 1989 - Utilitas 1 (2):226-241.
    Bentham was an influential thinker with an ‘essentially practical mind’. His influence on British social and political reform, however, was indirect, coming largely after his death and largely through the work of his disciples. Bentham's own attempts to put his ideas directly into practice generally had little effect. He came closest to success in the area of penal policy, winning a contract from Pitt's government in the early 1790s to build and manage a penitentiary that was to be organized on (...)
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  20.  23
    Comparison of evaporation results in new south wales and south Africa.Garwood Alston - 1895 - Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 9 (1):8-19.
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  21.  22
    Dr. Noel Preston: Understanding Ethics, 3rd edition: The Federated Press, Leichhardt, New South Wales, 2007, 233 pages, ISBN 978 186287 662 0.Rona Smeak - 2014 - Journal of Academic Ethics 12 (2):161-163.
    IntroductionThis paperback text is an intermediate text and is simply written. As the author himself states, “the book aims to speak to that growing number of interested persons who want to understand more about the study of ethics, ethical issues and the ways ethicists approach them” . The author intends for this book to be an introduction to ethics and uses the first few chapters to swiftly and succinctly provide an introduction to the basics of ethics and the main ethical (...)
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  22.  14
    Science and ethics: papers presented at a symposium held under the aegis of the Australian Academy of Science, University of New South Wales, November 7, 1980.David Roger Oldroyd (ed.) - 1982 - Kensington, NSW, Australia: New South Wales University Press.
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  23.  5
    Sue Bruley, The Women and Men of 1926. The General Strike and Miners’ Lockout in South Wales.Marion Fontaine - 2013 - Clio 38:324-327.
    La grève des mineurs de 1926 fait partie des épisodes majeurs de l’histoire sociale britannique et atteste que la radicalité des conflits de classe ne fut en rien spécifique de la France. Cette grève a déjà été l’objet de nombreux travaux en Grande-Bretagne, notamment dans les années 1960-1970, travaux souvent empreints d’une dimension militante et tournés vers une analyse politique de l’événement : les causes du conflit, les raisons de son échec (autour de la question, très polémique, de la...
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  24.  14
    And the so-far consequence argument Stephen Hetherington university of new south wales.Sofar Incompatibilism - 2007 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 73:163-178.
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  25.  18
    Roy MacLeod, Archibald Liversidge, FRS: Imperial Science under the Southern Cross. Sydney: The Royal Society of New South Wales and Sydney University Press, 2009. Pp. xvii+637, illustrated. ISBN 978-1-920898-80-9. AU$59.95. [REVIEW]W. Brock - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (4):610-611.
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  26.  48
    Evaluation of the Condom Distribution Program in New South Wales Prisons, Australia.Kate Dolan, David Lowe & James Shearer - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (1):124-128.
    Male to male unprotected anal sex is the main route of HIV transmission in Australia. The Australian Study of Health and Relationships, a large, representative population survey of sexual health behaviors, found that six percent of males in the general population have engaged in homosexual activity. These findings were consistent with studies in Europeand North America. Condoms have been shown to reduce the transmission of HIV in the community. Barriers to the use of condoms include access,stigma,and cost? Nevertheless, increased condom (...)
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  27.  14
    A Sense of the Sacred.[A project linking the Catholic faith tradition with the key learning area of science in the New South Wales curriculum].Therese D'Orsa - 1996 - The Australasian Catholic Record 73 (2):195.
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  28.  35
    Why euthanasia should not be legalised.[Address to the New South Wales Parliament, 16 October 1996].Tony Burke - 1997 - The Australasian Catholic Record 74 (1):67.
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  29. Deputy Director, Northern Metropolitan Health Region, Department of Health, New South Wales [The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and not nec-essarily those of the Department of Health, New South Wales.].Peta Colebatch - forthcoming - The Tiniest Newborns: Survival-What Price?.
     
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  30.  25
    Professional associations as regulators: an interview study of the Law Society of New South Wales.Deborah Hartstein & Justine Rogers - 2019 - Legal Ethics 22 (1-2):49-88.
    ABSTRACTProfessional associations, once the bodies responsible for professional self-regulation, have lost regulatory power. Some have entered into co-regulatory arrangements with state or independ...
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  31.  8
    David Crouch, ed., Llandaff Episcopal Acta, 1140–1287.(Publications of the South Wales Record Society, 5.) Cardiff: South Wales Record Society, 1988. Pp. xlvi, 114; frontispiece. [REVIEW]Robert Patterson - 1992 - Speculum 67 (4):956-957.
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  32.  30
    Corrupting the youth: A history of philosophy in australia by James Franklin. Paddington new south wales: Macleay press 2003; pp. 465. Aus. $59.95. [REVIEW]Jenny Teichman - 2005 - Philosophy 80 (1):151-156.
  33.  10
    Book Review: Greg Barns, Selling the Australian Government: Politics and propaganda from Whitlam to Howard (Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2005). 93 pp., $16.95, ISBN 0 86840 802 6. [REVIEW]J. Cahill - 2005 - Dialogue: Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. 3 (2):105-106.
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  34.  21
    Julie Marcus. The Indomitable Miss Pink: A Life in Anthropology. 352 pp., illus. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2002. $32.95. [REVIEW]Janet Mccalman - 2004 - Isis 95 (2):328-329.
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  35.  51
    Michelle Bastian completed her Ph. D. in philosophy at the University of New South Wales. She is currently a Chancellor's Fellow at the Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh. Her work focuses on the use of time in social practises of inclusion and exclusion. [REVIEW]Helen Beebee - 2013 - In Katrina Hutchison & Fiona Jenkins (eds.), Women in Philosophy: What Needs to Change? New York, NY: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 261.
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  36.  15
    Gerard Goggin (ed), Virtual Nation (Sydney, University of New South Wales Press, 2004), 300pp., $49.95, ISBN 0 86840 503 5. [REVIEW]Amy E. Cooper - 2005 - Dialogue: Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. 3 (1):207-210.
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  37. David Boonin and Graham Oddie. What's Wrong? New York: Oxford Press, 2005, 746 pp. ISBN 0-19-516761-9 (pb). Stephen Boyden. The Biology of Civilisation. Sydney, Australia: University of New South Wales Press, 2004, 189 pp (indexed). ISBN 0-8840-766-6, $22.50 (pb). [REVIEW]Harold Coward, Andrew J. Weaver, Alan Dershowitz, Jose van Dijck & Phil Dowe - 2005 - Journal of Value Inquiry 39:543-545.
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  38.  9
    Interview with Sarah Waters (CWWN conference, University of Wales, Bangor, 22nd April 2006).Lucie Armitt - 2007 - Feminist Review 85 (1):116-127.
    Sarah Waters was born in Pembrokeshire in South Wales in 1966. She is the author of four novels, Tipping the Velvet (1998), Affinity (1999), Fingersmith (2003) and The Night Watch (2006). Among her many awards and nominations one can include the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year (2000), Author of the Year at the British Book Awards (2003), and the South Bank Award for Literature (2003). Most recently, The Night Watch has been short–listed for the Orange (...)
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  39. The Making of Greater India: A Study in South-East Asian Culture Change By H. G. Quaritch Wales London: Bernard Quaritch, 1951. Pp. 209. 8°. [REVIEW]G. Coedes - 1953 - Diogenes 1 (1):119-122.
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  40.  21
    ‘an Amusing Account Of A Cave In Wales’: William Buckland and the Red Lady of Paviland. [REVIEW]Marianne Sommer - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Science 37 (1):53-74.
    In 1823 the first Reader of Geology at Oxford University, William Buckland , unearthed the human skeleton known as the ‘Red Lady’ in Paviland cave, south Wales. While the Red Lady is valued today as a central testimony of early Upper Palaeolithic humans in Britain, Buckland considered the skeleton as of postdiluvian age, meaning from after the biblical Deluge. Rather than viewing Buckland as either obscurantist or as having worked entirely within ordinary scientific practice, the paper focuses on (...)
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  41.  4
    Identity, creativity and performance spaces in Wales and Southwest England.Philippa Fincher, John McLoughlin, Morgan Lee & Gifty Andoh Appiah - unknown
    Globally, performative spaces and venues of artistic creativity are governed by sets of conventions which impact the creative process. In this article, we discuss the experiences of four different creatives, operating in four different creative spaces. A poet and football player, a theatre producer and script writer, a gallery curator, and a ballet dancer have all shared their experiences of how traditionally white and heteronormative discourses regulate their respective creative spaces, the ways they conform to or transgress these norms, and (...)
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  42.  13
    Convict Surveillance and Reform in Theory and Practice.Matthew Allen - 2022 - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes 21.
    Thanks to Michel Foucault, Jeremy Bentham's panopticon has become the iconic modern prison. But Foucault and most of his readers neglect the fact that a significant proportion of Bentham's panoptical writings were concerned with critically contrasting his ideal prison with the reality of penal transportation to New South Wales. Among his many criticisms, Bentham focussed particular attention on the problem of convict reform, arguing that surveillance was necessary to ensure genuine reformation, and that such surveillance was impossible in (...)
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  43.  30
    It’s agony for us as well.Janet Green, Philip Darbyshire, Anne Adams & Debra Jackson - 2016 - Nursing Ethics 23 (2):176-190.
    Background: Improved techniques and life sustaining technology in the neonatal intensive care unit have resulted in an increased probability of survival for extremely premature babies. The by-product of the aggressive treatment is iatrogenic pain, and this infliction of pain can be a cause of suffering and distress for both baby and nurse. Research question: The research sought to explore the caregiving dilemmas of neonatal nurses when caring for extremely premature babies. This article aims to explore the issues arising for neonatal (...)
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  44.  21
    The Deleuze Dictionary.Adrian Parr (ed.) - 2005 - Cambridge University Press.
    This dictionary, the first dedicated to the work of Gilles Deleuze, offers an in-depth and lucid introduction to one of the most influential figures in continental philosophy. It defines and contextualizes more than 150 terms relating to Deleuze's philosophy, including "becoming," "body without organs," "deterritorialization," "difference," "repetition," and "rhizome." The entries also explore Deleuze's intellectual influences and the ways in which his ideas have shaped philosophy, feminism, cinema studies, postcolonial theory, geography, and cultural studies. More than just defining and describing (...)
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  45.  13
    Communal Beingness and Affect: An Exploration of Trauma in an Ex-industrial Community.Valerie Walkerdine - 2010 - Body and Society 16 (1):91-116.
    The article explores the place of affect in community relations with respect to trauma following the closure of a steelworks for a working-class community in the South Wales valleys in 2002. A review of sociological approaches to community demonstrates the poor handling of relational and affective aspects which, it is argued, are central to the way in which community relations were formed and provided a safe and containing skin against the uncertainty of industrial production. Using psychoanalytic approaches to (...)
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  46.  31
    On the edge of undoing: Ecologies of agency in Body Weather.Sarah Pini - 2022 - In Kath Bicknell & John Sutton (eds.), Collaborative Embodied Performance: Ecologies of Skill. Methuen Drama. pp. 35-52.
    This chapter explores the practice of Body Weather (BW), a postmodern dance methodology, addressing how BW performers experience and enact agency in this context of practice. Adopting a cognitive ecological, ethnographic, and phenomenological approach, this work focuses on the creation of AURA NOX ANIMA (2016) – a short dance film directed by Sydney-based visual artist Lux Eterna and filmed on the sandy dunes in Anna Bay, New South Wales, Australia – to underscore the role played by the physical (...)
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  47.  49
    An Ethics Framework for Making Resource Allocation Decisions Within Clinical Care: Responding to COVID-19.Angus Dawson, David Isaacs, Melanie Jansen, Christopher Jordens, Ian Kerridge, Ulrik Kihlbom, Henry Kilham, Anne Preisz, Linda Sheahan & George Skowronski - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):749-755.
    On March, 24, 2020, 818 cases of COVID-19 had been reported in New South Wales, Australia, and new cases were increasing at an exponential rate. In anticipation of resource constraints arising in clinical settings as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, a working party of ten ethicists was convened at the University of Sydney to draft an ethics framework to support resource allocation decisions. The framework guides decision-makers using a question-and-answer format, in language that avoids philosophical and medical (...)
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  48.  28
    Similar Facts in Civil Cases.H. L. Ho - 2006 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 26 (1):131-152.
    This essay evaluates the recent restatement in O’Brien v Chief Constable of South Wales Police of the law on similar facts in civil proceedings. The two-stage approach propounded in O’Brien contains a number of conceptual problems. Apparent simplicity was achieved by avoiding fundamental issues underlying this area. Prior to the Criminal Justice Act 2003, judges recognized that the common law similar facts rule had a role to play in both civil and criminal trials; but they gave the rule (...)
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  49.  24
    Rural and remote communities, technology and mental health recovery.Oliver K. Burmeister & Edwina Marks - 2016 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 14 (2):170-181.
    Purpose This study aims to explore how health informatics can underpin the successful delivery of recovery-orientated healthcare, in rural and remote regions, to achieve better mental health outcomes. Recovery is an extremely social process that involves being with others and reconnecting with the world. Design/methodology/approach An interpretivist study involving 27 clinicians and 13 clients sought to determine how future expenditure on ehealth could improve mental health treatment and service provision in the western Murray Darling Basin of New South (...), Australia. Findings Through the use of targeted ehealth strategies, it is possible to increase both the accessibility of information and the quality of service provision. In small communities, the challenges of distance, access to healthcare and the ease of isolating oneself are best overcome through a combination of technology and communal social responsibility. Technology supplements but cannot completely replace face-to-face interaction in the mental health recovery process. Originality/value The recovery model provides a conceptual framework for health informatics in rural and remote regions that is socially responsible. Service providers can affect better recovery for clients through infrastructure that enables timely and responsive remote access whilst driving between appointments. This could include interactive referral services, telehealth access to specialist clinicians, GPS for locating clients in remote areas and mobile coverage for counselling sessions in “real time”. Thus, the technology not only provides better connections but also adds to the responsiveness of any treatment available. (shrink)
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  50.  15
    Expanded terminal sedation: dangerous waters.Thomas David Riisfeldt - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (4):261-262.
    Gilbertson et al should be commended for their insightful exploration of expanded terminal sedation (ETS)1; however, there are a number of concerns that I will address in this response. I will first better characterise the currently accepted and commonplace ‘standard’ TS (STS), and then argue that the advocated forms of ETS draw very close to—and at times clearly constitute a subtype of—euthanasia, as opposed to representing a similar but separate practice. I will then conclude with concerns regarding the inappropriate application (...)
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