1,724,672 research outputs found

    Iuliia Anosova

    No full text
    Iuliia Anosova, PhD, is an independent researcher and currently works as a lawyer in Ukrainian CSO “La Strada-Ukraine”, specializing in the fields of gender-based violence, including sexual violence and domestic violence, human trafficking and gender discrimination. Among other things, she is particularly interested in the topic of conflict-related sexual violence and helped to develop the specialised course for Ukrainian judges on this issue. Iuliia completed a PhD programme in Public International Law at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Kyiv, Ukraine). Her PhD thesis was titled “The Jurisdiction of the International Courts over the Crime of Genocide”.https://commons.erau.edu/genocide-bios/1010/thumbnail.jp

    technology based start ups

    No full text
    Iuliia MartiukhinaMasterarbeit Alpen Adria Universität Klagenfurt 201

    technology based start ups

    No full text
    Iuliia MartiukhinaMasterarbeit Alpen Adria Universität Klagenfurt 201

    IaC-Based Cloud Governance Automation Tool for Azure Policies

    No full text
    by: Iuliia SolovevaMasterarbeit Fachhochschule Technikum Wien 2025Arbeit gesperr

    Iuliia Naidenova's Quick Files

    No full text
    The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity

    Iuliia Sherrod Named Men\u27s and Women\u27s Tennis Assistant Coach

    Full text link
    Iuliia Sherrod Named Men\u27s and Women\u27s Tennis Assistant Coach. Armstrong Atlantic State University announced today the hiring of Iuliia Sherrod as assistant men\u27s and women\u27s tennis coach. A former ITA All-American for the Pirates, Sherrod will begin immediately assisting head men\u27s and women\u27s tennis coach Simon Earnshaw with the program

    Iuliia Naidenova's Quick Files

    No full text
    The Quick Files feature was discontinued and it’s files were migrated into this Project on March 11, 2022. The file URL’s will still resolve properly, and the Quick Files logs are available in the Project’s Recent Activity

    Child soldiers and military actors: a variation in detention policies across liberal democracies

    No full text
    The professional militaries of Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom have increasingly recognized that children can become part of opposing forces and face the operational and policy decisions regarding their detention. These Anglo-Saxon, consolidated, liberal democracies demonstrate a high level of similarity, in terms of their shared norms and values, and common security practices. Nonetheless, these three countries have developed distinct policies on the detention of child soldiers. This dissertation addressed the question: what explains the cross-national variation in the development of policies on the detention of child soldiers in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States?In order to answer this research question, I proposed a series of hypotheses to examine the role of three strategic actors in the policy process: military lawyers, government officials, and representatives from non-governmental organizations. I analyzed data that required both quantitative and qualitative methods to test these hypotheses. Specifically, qualitatively, I performed a content analysis of a total of 69 semi-structured interviews; and, quantitatively, I used NVivo 11 coding query tools to generate numerical data to present aggregate results. These methods allowed for comparing the roles of these three actors in each national context. I utilized the comparative case study method to identify causal patterns across these three countries to offer a second test of these hypotheses. My dissertation suggested an explanatory relationship between NGOs’ choice of strategies and the policy outcomes in each of these three countries. First, the NGOs’ choice between different types of framing and how to engage in framing contests, during the agenda-setting stage, had far-reaching implications for the policy-making process. It defined the key terms and demarcated boundaries of the issue in a policy domain that abounds with contested elements. Second, the selection of strategies and decision-making venues simultaneously influenced the NGOs’ ability to shape policy outcomes during the policy formulation stage. Third, the application of the strategy of ‘naming and shaming’ during the policy implementation stage remained effective only if the NGOs applied it in combination with other policy instruments, such as the use of domestic litigation. This dissertation hopes to make an empirical contribution to the debate on how policy actors engage and shape outcomes in contested policy domains, which require balancing national security and human rights agendas.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical referencesby Iuliia Hoba

    Iuliia Buyskykh: The Polyphony of Coexistence

    No full text
    The Polyphony of Coexistence: Local Communities on Polish-Ukrainian Boderland (Case of Podkarpacie) Iuliia Buyskykh’s current field of research is located in Eastern Poland (Przemyśl and surrounding area), mostly the borderland area with Ukraine. This study covers the “everyday diplomacy” (Marsden, Ibañez-Tirado, Henig 2016) relationships in religiously mixed local communities who coexist under the burden of contested memories of the WW II. Here “everyday diplomacy” refers to the local practi..
    corecore