990 resultados para Roman law (Medieval)
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Report on the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy for the year ended June 30, 2011
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Harassment is illegal in all areas protected by Iowa Code Chapter 216. This includes education, employment, public accommodations, credit and housing. Acts of harassment take place every day in schools across the country. Frequently these acts, even if reported to administration, are dismissed as harmless, as "kids will be kids," or as "no big deal." Many people do not realize that harassment that interferes with a person's educational progress is illegal, just as it is illegal in the workplace.
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For people with disabilities, however, housing options have been limited. Today, state and federal laws are changing this. Who will benefit? All of us. For “accessibility” is an issue that, at one time or another, affects us all. This is true whether _ temporarily or permanently _ we use wheelchairs, need grab bars, cannot climb stairs, require easy-to-reach shelves, or rely on easy-to-navigate living spaces. The primary purpose of accessible housing law is to prevent discrimination against people with disabilities, but the end result is a living environment that is more usable for everyone. For example, both the very young and the very old will find an accessible dwelling more comfortable. People with temporary limitations due to injury or illness will find it easier to live in. Such a home will be more welcoming to guests with disabilities.
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Another recently enacted law is the Iowa Safe Schools Law. Effective September 1, 2007, Iowa Code Chapter 280 requires both public and private schools to establish policies prohibiting harassment and bullying against students by employees, school volunteers, or other students. Sexual Orientation and Gender identity are covered under the Safe Schools Law. Students may now seek remedies under both Chapter 216 and Chapter 280.
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Effective July 1, 2007, the Iowa Civil Rights Act (Iowa Code Chapter 216) was expanded to add sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of protected classes. It is now ILLEGAL in Iowa to discriminate against a person because of his/her sexual orientation or gender identity.
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Effective July 1, 2007, the Iowa Civil Rights Act (Iowa Code Chapter 216) was expanded to add sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of protected classes. It is now ILLEGAL in Iowa to discriminate against a person because of his/her sexual orientation or gender identity.
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In 2012, the Iowa legislature passed a bill for an act relating to school bus safety, including providing penalties for failure to obey school bus warning lamps and stop signal arms, providing for a school bus safety study and administrative remedies, and making an appropriation. The bill, referred to as Iowa Senate File (SF) 2218 or “Kadyn’s Law,” became effective March 16, 2012. A multiagency committee addressed three specific safety study elements of Kadyn’s Law as follows: * Use of cameras mounted on school buses to enhance the safety of children riding the buses and aid in enforcement of motor vehicle laws pertaining to stop-arm violations * Feasibility of requiring school children to be picked up and dropped off on the side of the road on which their home is located * Inclusion of school bus safety as a priority in driver training curriculum This report summarizes the findings for each of these topics.
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Forme archaïque, présente dès l'aube de l'écriture; forme ergonomique, présente autour de nous de manière bien plus courante que toute narration; la liste est un objet fascinant, qui ne dévoile jamais autant sa complexité que lorsqu'elle apparaît dans un cadre littéraire. Un cadre permettant de questionner, en les confrontant, la liste et son énonciateur - son sujet. Qui parle quand une liste se dit? Que dit-elle de celui qui l'énonce? Qui parle, lorsque la syntaxe se bouleverse au point de détruire les hiérarchies permettant habituellement de fixer au discours une origine, une destination, une reprise en charge? Il s'agira de répondre à ces questions et donc de passer d'une poétique à une éthique de la liste, afin de montrer que la description d'un tel objet est indissociable de sa contextualisation discursive, sa subjectivisation. Celle-ci traverse, par une constante métalepse (glissement entre les instances de responsabilité du discours), tout le spectre des actants du texte-liste - de la figure d'auteur à celle du lecteur. La spécificité de la liste littéraire se déporte alors dans un espace éthique, puis bientôt thymique, constitué par un faisceau d'oppositions : par exemple, la liste peut être fermée ou ouverte, hyper- ou hypolisible ; signe d'ordre (c'est l'inventaire, où à l'item correspond la chose) comme de désordre (c'est l'accumulation proliférante). Mais le couple oppositionnel le plus fécond est constitué par l'hybris et la mélancolie: hybris, ou l'orgueil de croire à une réinvention du monde par le pouvoir d'une juxtaposition sans limites. Mélancolie, ou miroitement du mot manquant, évidence de l'absence. C'est sous l'égide de cette opposition que je traite un vaste corpus constitué de huit auteurs contemporains, marqués par un XXe siècle catastrophique, où à l'hybris pléthorique de l'expression de la monstruosité et de l'abondance (J-M.G. Le Clézio, Georges Perec, Eric Chevillard) répond la mélancolie d'une absence ontologique : identitaire (Patrick Modiano), épistémologique (Pierre Senges) langagière (Pascal Quignard, Olivia Rosenthal), voire politique (Antoine Volodine).