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Foreword
Editor's Foreword to the Special Issue celebrating the career of Professor John Prebbl
Foreword
It is a pleasure to write a foreword to this issue of Frontier as Inaugural Doctoral College Director
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Granites and Related Rocks: a tribute to Guillermo Corretgé (Geologica Acta 15, 4, Special Issue). Foreword
Foreword
Foreword for the Association of Fashion and Textile Courses (FTC) post-conference publication Futurecan: Mapping the Territory. The conference took place at the Foresight Centre, University of Liverpool, 17-18 November 2009.Futurescan: Mapping the TerritoryEdited by Sally Wade and Kerry WaltonFebruary 2011ISBN: 978 1 907382 30 7</div
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Foreword
Foreword to Vol. 41 No. 2 (2023): Special Issue: Minority Migration from Muslim Asia. Guest Editor: Vera Skvirskaja.Paul Anderson: Associate Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, University of CambridgeMagnus Marsden:Professor of Social Anthropology and Director of the Sussex Asia Centre, University of SussexVera Skvirskaja: Associate Professor, Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen</p
Foreword
This Foreword provides an overview of Fifty Years of Loving v. Virginia and the Continued Pursuit of Racial Equality, a symposium hosted by the Fordham Law Review and cosponsored by the Fordham Law School Center on Race, Law & Justice. Even fifty years later, Loving provides ample foundation for an inquiry into the operation of race and racial inequality in the United States, which touches on the queries outlined above, as well as many others. In our view, a symposium focused on Loving makes a significant contribution by deepening scholarly analysis of that decision and by explicating the kinds of issues and concerns that should be at the heart of research concerning racial equality today
Foreword
This Foreword provides an overview of Criminal Behavior and the Brain: When Law and Neuroscience Collide, a symposium hosted by the Fordham Law Review and cosponsored by the Fordham Law School Neuroscience and Law Center. While the field of neuroscience is vast—generally constituting “the branch of the life sciences that studies the brain and nervous system”— this symposium focused on the cutting-edge ties between neuroscience evidence and the different facets of criminal law. Such an intersection invited commentary from an expert group on a wide span of topics, ranging from the historical underpinnings between law and neuroscience to the treatment of young adults to the different roles of neuroscience in the context of sentencing, expert testimony, defenses, prediction, punishment, and rehabilitation, as well as the civil and criminal divide. These diverse subjects have an overarching theme in common: each pertains in some way to the criminal justice system’s effort to punish or rehabilitate more fairly and effectively
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