520 resultados para TREATIES


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Ninety-nine Finnish peacekeepers, who had been serving in 15 different operations around the world, participated in the study (8 women, 27-52 years old, m = 37.4, SD = 8.9; and 91 men, 21-69 years old, m = 41.4, SD = 10.2). Three military crisis management trainers from the Finnish Defence Forces International Centre also participated in the study. The data was collected with two webbased questionnaires. In addition two interviews were made with specialists of civilian crisis management in Finland. The study also provides an overview of international treaties concerning children’s rights in armed conflict. The results show that 48.7 % of dangers for children in conflicts reported by the peacekeepers were related to physical injury (e.g. landmines and traffic), and 27.4 % were related to social problems (e.g. poverty, child soldiers, and trafficking). 24.1 % of the peacekeepers had made observations of children’s rights violations either often or very often during peacekeeping operations. 49.6 % of the observations were related to social problems (e.g. child labour or being forced to beg), and 33.0 % were related to physical injury (e.g. assault). Frequency of observation of children’s rights violations was not associated with either sex or military degree of the peacekeepers; instead it was significantly correlated with the peacekeepers’ degree of knowledge of EU’s child protection guidelines. On the basis of the results, it is recommended that knowledge about children’s rights and protection should be included in the training of Finnish crisis management personnel to a much higher degree than at the present.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Most of this volume consists of correspondence between high ranking U.S. and British statesmen. E.g., James Madison, James Monroe, The Marquess Wellesley (brother of Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington). The discussion centers around the War of 1812. Also includes facsimilies of treaties signed between Great Britain and Sweden, Russia and Sicily.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La inversión extranjera constituye una oportunidad de elevar los índices de crecimiento y desarrollo económico de Colombia. Desde la reforma económica de 1990-1994, el país cambió su política frente a temas como: la economía, las finanzas públicas, la estructura empresarial, el sector agrícola y la base tributaria, entre otros. En respuesta a este cambio, con la entrada de las políticas de corte neoliberal y el nuevo sistema político e institucional del país, se modificaron sus estructuras e instituciones. Asimismo surgieron nuevas prioridades. De ahí que se iniciaran también nuevas relaciones estratégicas‚ con otros Estados, para satisfacer estos nuevos intereses. Dentro de estas nuevas prioridades surgió el interés de atraer inversión extranjera directa y de portafolio. En ese momento‚ e inclusive ahora se hace necesario financiar la economía emergente y nada más propicio que la inversión extranjera para este propósito. Es decir, se complementa el crecimiento económico, con flujos de capital externo, que puede llegar en forma de inversión directa o de figuras financieras como las acciones, los bonos, etc.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Why does the European Union (EU) join international human rights treaties? This paper develops motivational profiles pertaining either to a ‘logic of appropriateness’ or a ‘logic of consequentialism’ in order to answer this question. It compares the EU’s motivations for its recent accession to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) with those dominating the EU’s nonaccession to the Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence (Istanbul Convention). Based on this cross-case analysis, I argue that the EU’s accession decisions are best viewed as cost-benefit calculations and explained by the strength of opposition and the desire to spread its norms. The EU is only marginally concerned with efforts to construct an ‘appropriate role’, although its accession considerations are positively influenced by (varying degrees) of an internalized commitment to human rights. The paper aims at deepening the understanding of the EU’s motivations in the paradigmatic hard case of accession to international human rights treaties not least to evaluate the EU’s ‘exceptional nature’, facilitate its predictability for stake-holders and contribute to political and ethical debates surrounding future rites of passage as a global actor.