5,593 research outputs found

    [List of] Special Reports, Geneva Experiment Station

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    This is a four page list of Special Reports published by the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, New York. The Special Reports series began in 1970 with number 1 and concluded in 1996 with number 70. The list contains numerous hand written notes and corrections

    [Bulletin List]

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    List of Bulletin titles published by the New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva NY. Undated, circa 1896

    The Geneva Stock Exchange Price lists 1871-1970. Microfilm list. (Nichimy Corporation 16.Nov.2015)

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    an annotated list of microfilmed items from the Geneva Stock Exchange price list, 1871-1970. Annotations are in Japanese

    A European union and Canadian review of public health nursing preparation and practice.

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    This study explores the preparation and role of the public health nurse (PHN) across European Union (EU) countries (Finland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom) and Canadian provinces (Alberta, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island)

    Geneva University Hospitals Common Problem List

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    **************************************** This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 **************************************** LPH - Problem list Version: 20220401 This archive contains the problem list developed by the Division of Medical Information Sciences (SIMED) of the Geneva University Hospitals (HUG). This list has been manually developed and encoded in various international standards. Any use of this work has to be in the limitations of the CC BY-SA 4.0 licence. Citing this work: To cite this work in a publication, please cite the following article: Gaudet-Blavignac C, Rudaz A, Lovis C Building a Shared, Scalable, and Sustainable Source for the Problem-Oriented Medical Record: Developmental Study JMIR Med Inform 2021;9(10):e29174 URL: https://medinform.jmir.org/2021/10/e29174 DOI: 10.2196/2917

    Geneva rhetoric, national reality : the political economy of introducing plant breeders' rights in Kenya

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    The article is about implementing obligations under Article 27.3(b) of the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS). However, concerned with the fragmentation of international law in a globalised world, the article uses Kenya as a case study to interrogate the apparent choice and latitude in Article 27.3(b). At the TRIPS Council, Kenya has sought to locate Article 27.3(b) within a wider frame by adroitly norm-borrowing, and it canvassed for integrating norms and principles from other multilateral agreements into TRIPS. Yet, when introducing plant breeders' rights into domestic law, Kenya fails to either explore the apparent latitude or deliver on its rhetoric in Geneva. I explain this decoupling between Geneva rhetoric (ritual) and domestic law (behaviour) as another symptom of what Steinberg [(2002), ‘In the Shadow of Law or Power? Consensus-Based Bargaining and Outcomes in the GATT/WTO’, International Organization, 56 (2), pp. 339–74)] characterises as ‘organised hypocrisy’ of the World Trade Organisation. In demonstrating that fragmentation in global legal architecture may not automatically emerge in domestic law, the article draws out the significance of attending to a domestic political economy of law-making

    Development-induced displacement and resettlement: an international bibliography

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    This bibliography highlights academic publications relating to development-induced displacement and resettlement (DIDR) that were published over the last 40 years. The entries are divided by type: books, chapters in edited volumes; journal articles and research papers. While not a comprehensive bibliography, the first four sections list approximately 600 references

    Developing countries'participation in the World Trade Organization

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    In the 1960s and 1970s developing countries viewed UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade&Development) rather than the GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs&Trade) as the main institution through which to promote their interests in international trade. But beginning with the Uruguay Round in the mid-1980s, their attitude changed, many more of them became members of the GATT, and a significant number played an active role in negotiations. The author analyzes developing countries'representation and participation in the World Trade Organization (WTO) as of mid-1997 to determine how developing countries can effectively promote their interests and discharge their responsibilities under the rules and agreements of the new organization. He concludes that although many developing countries are actively participating in the new process, more than half of the developing countries that are members of the WTO participate little more than they did in the early 1980s and have not increased their staffing, despite the vastly greater complexity of issues and obligations. Institutional weaknesses at home are the main constraints to effective participation and representation of their interests at the WTO. To make their participation more effective, he recommends that the developing countries establish adequately staffed WTO missions based in Geneva; failing that, pooling their resources and representation in Geneva; and being sure to pay their dues, which are typically small. He also recommends that the international community place higher priority on programs of assistance in support of institutional development of poorer countries aimed at enhancing their capacity to participate in the international trading system and the WTO -- and that the WTO review its internal rules and procedures to ensure that inadvertently they do not make developing countries participation more difficult.Economic Theory&Research,Decentralization,Economic Conditions and Volatility,Country Strategy&Performance,Labor&Employment Law,Trade and Services,Poverty Assessment,Economic Theory&Research,World Trade Organization,Country Strategy&Performance

    Consistory and Youth Surveillance in the Republic of Geneva: The Case of Games (16th–18th Centuries)

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    This article explores the theme of youth gaming in the Calvinist Republic of Geneva. This investigation is largely based on disciplinary cases found in the registers of the Consistory of Geneva. Legislative sources, and the registers of the Pastor’s Company and the Small Council, are also used herein. This study, deliberately placed at the crossroads of the history of games, childhood, and Calvinist-style ecclesiastical discipline, aims to shed light on the Consistory’s policy of controlling play activities, and to understand what was at stake. The author defends the idea that the surveillance and control of games played by children was intended to prevent them from straying from their religious education, but also to protect them from the excesses and dangers of abusive play and immoderate behavior (violence, lost money, insults, etc.)
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