1,295 research outputs found
National Report for Sweden
Introduction 1: Christopher Symes: National Report for Australia 2: Eric Dirix and Roel Fransis: National Report for Belgium 3: Rachel Sztajn, Paulo Fernando Campos Salles de Toledo and Fernando César Nimer Moreira da Silva: National Report for Brazil 4: Ngaundje Leno Doris: National Report for Cameroon 5: Stephanie Ben-Ishai: National Report for Canada 6: Wang Weiguo: National Report for the People's Republic of China 7: Tomáš Richter: National Report for the Czech Republic 8: Gerard McCormack: National Report for England 9: Cécile Dupoux and Carole Nerguararian: National Report for France 10: Christoph G. Paulus and Matthias Berberich: National Report for Germany 11: David Hahn: National Report for Israel 12: Carlos Sanchez-Mejorada y Velasco: National Report for Mexico 13: Dennis Faber and Niels Vermunt: National Report for the Netherlands 14: Marek Porzycki: National Report for Poland 15: Kathleen van der Linde: National Report for South Africa 16: Soogeun Oh and Heejong Song: National Report for the Republic of Korea (South Korea) 17: J. Ignacio Tirado: National Report for Spain 18: Annina H. Persson and Marie Karlsson Tuula: National Report for Sweden 19: Benhajj Masoud: National Report for Tanzania 20: Jason Kilborn Bibliography: National Report for the United States The s
Book Review: Comparative Consumer Bankruptcy
This is a review of Comparative Consumer Bankruptcy by Jason J. Kilborn. Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2007
Twitter Tweets for Donald J. Trump (@realdonaldtrump)
Dataset Metrics
Total size of data uncompressed:115901693 bytes
Number of objects (submissions): 40,241
Start Date: Mon May 04 18:54:25 +0000 2009
End Date: Thu Jul 11 15:52:19 +0000 2019
Format: ndjson (new line delimited JSON)
Overview
This dataset contains all known publicly available tweets for Donald J. Trump's (@realdonaldtrump) Twitter account.
Methodology
This data was compiled from multiple sources including several online Github accounts that contained the status ids for previous tweets made by Donald Trump. All ids were compiled into a single list and then those ids were requested from Twitter's "statuses lookup" endpoint. Tweets deleted by Donald Trump will not be in this dataset but can be obtained from the author of this publication for a subset of the time range present in this dataset. This dataset will also include the tweet information for any retweeted tweets under the "retweeted_status" key for each JSON object. The user object has been left in each tweet (both the main tweet and retweeted / quoted tweets if they exist).
Contact
If you have any questions about the data or require more details on the methodology, you are welcome to contact the author
Twitter Tweets for Donald J. Trump (@realdonaldtrump)
Dataset Metrics
Total size of data uncompressed:115901693 bytes
Number of objects (submissions): 40,241
Start Date: Mon May 04 18:54:25 +0000 2009
End Date: Thu Jul 11 15:52:19 +0000 2019
Format: ndjson (new line delimited JSON)
Overview
This dataset contains all known publicly available tweets for Donald J. Trump's (@realdonaldtrump) Twitter account.
Methodology
This data was compiled from multiple sources including several online Github accounts that contained the status ids for previous tweets made by Donald Trump. All ids were compiled into a single list and then those ids were requested from Twitter's "statuses lookup" endpoint. Tweets deleted by Donald Trump will not be in this dataset but can be obtained from the author of this publication for a subset of the time range present in this dataset. This dataset will also include the tweet information for any retweeted tweets under the "retweeted_status" key for each JSON object. The user object has been left in each tweet (both the main tweet and retweeted / quoted tweets if they exist).
Contact
If you have any questions about the data or require more details on the methodology, you are welcome to contact the author
Micropolitan areas: splitting the difference
by Jason J. Yohannan.Title from PDF caption (viewed on February 24, 2020).Converted from HTML.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Landslide risk reduction in Wasco County, Oregon
by William J. Burns, Nancy Calhoun, Jon Franczyk, Jason D. McClaughry, and Katherine Daniel.Title from PDF cover (viewed on February 27, 2023).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 20-24).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
\u3cem\u3eLa Responsabilisation de L\u27economie\u3c/em\u3e: What the United States Can Learn from the New French Law on Consumer Overindebtedness
This Article on the French law continues a study of European consumer debt-relief systems, which the author began previously in an article on the German system. With rapid legal and practical developments in consumer debt-relief law, Europe provides an excellent comparative legal laboratory for observing the potential benefits and pitfalls of consumer bankruptcy reforms. In particular, French and German experiences with long-term payment plans shed useful light on the great debate raging in the United States over similar plans
The Personal Side of Harmonizing European Insolvency Law, 25 No. 5 J. Bankr. L. & Prac. 581 (2016)
Treating the New European Disease of Consumer Debt in a Post-Communist State: The Groundbreaking New Russian Personal Insolvency Law, 41 Brook. J. Int\u27l L. 655 (2016)
This article examines the tumultuous transition from restrictive Communism to the debt-fueled consumer economy of modern Russia. In particular, it surveys Russia’s legal response to severe debt distress, situating it in the context of nearly one thousand years of historical development. Effective 1 October 2015, Russia finally joined most of its European neighbors in adopting a personal bankruptcy law, with characteristics that reflect both evolving international best practices and a series of lessons not learned. This article offers the first detailed exposition in English of the two steps forward represented by this new law, as well as an evaluation of the one step back that will likely result when Russia experiences the same challenges with personal insolvency procedures that its European neighbors have faced in recent years. The analysis here contributes to a deeper understanding of modern Russian law and society by tracing the striking emergence of a massive consumer debt problem only a few years after the fall of Communism, along with the development of a solution that is largely consistent with European norms but remains in many respects uniquely Russian
Comparative Cause and Effect: Consumer Insolvency and the Eroding Social Safety Net, 14 Colum. J. Eur. L. 563 (2008)
This paper explores the connection between social welfare reform and the adoption of consumer debt relief law in Europe. Health care expenses and unemployment are significant contributors to overindebtedness in Europe, and outside the primary sources, one finds suggestions to the effect that the unraveling social safety net was a major contributing factor in the adoption of consumer debt relief laws in Europe in the 1990s. This paper critically analyzes this notion by tracking the recent scaling back of social assistance programs in Sweden, Germany, and France, and comparing that movement with the adoption of consumer insolvency regimes in those three countries. The temporal correlation seems to be quite weak, and closer examination of the individual social welfare regimes reveals latent weaknesses that were amplified by changes in consumer economic factors in the 1980s. Rather than an eroding social safety net causing the adoption of consumer bankruptcy law, other powerful variables seem to have driven both of these reform processes. In countries with both strong and weak safety nets, consumer insolvency law has become the treatment of choice for new financial risks confronting consumers in the 21st century
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