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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law
In the current scenario of Forensic Science and Criminal
Investigation, experts are facing many challenges due to huge
amounts of data, tiny pieces of evidence in the chaotic and complex
environment, traditional laboratory structures and sometimes
insufficient knowledge which may lead to failure of investigation
or miscarriage of justice. Artificial Intelligence and imaging
technologies are the promising solutions to address these
challenges with case based reasoning for errorless, objective and
reproducible results in various fields of forensics. This book will
not only provide a platform for researchers to present state of the
art technologies, but will be a reference for law enforcement to
use for crime investigation along with researchers in the field .
This astute and comprehensive book provides in-depth analysis of
the space sector with an 'insurance as governance' approach.
Chapters highlight and examine the key aspects of this important
subject including space tourism, risk mitigation and insurance
requirements. Considering the role of space insurers working across
national boundaries, this book addresses the ability of insurers to
fill an existing regulatory void and describes the actions they can
take to improve their capability to execute that governance
function. The author also gives a fresh and contemporary insight
into topics such as the influences of international space law,
international air law and US domestic space law. Insightful and
discerning, Space Insurance and the Law is ideal for space
insurance professionals and those with an interest in space
entrepreneurship, international space law and the commercial space
industry.
Juvenile Justice for the 21st Century provides students with
engaging articles and the latest research on emerging topics within
the field. This anthology provides readers with valuable
information on the current issues facing contemporary youths and
the professionals who work with them on a daily basis. The text is
composed of one original piece and seven research articles that
cover issues related to race, substance abuse, LGBTQ identity and
community, mental health, technology, and reentry success.
Individual topics include minority disproportion in the system, the
impact of juvenile mental health court on recidivism rates among
youth, the overrepresentation of LGBTQ youth within the child
welfare to juvenile justice crossover population, and more. The
text recognizes the critical role of treatment and rehabilitation
in the juvenile justice system and underscores the importance of
leveraging current research to guide effective practices and
approaches. Featuring timely, scholarly information, Juvenile
Justice for the 21st Century is an ideal supplementary text for
courses within criminal justice and sociology, especially those
with focus on juvenile justice and delinquency issues.
This book examines the calculation and evaluation of regulatory
costs by regulators in accordance with a legislative mandate. A
serious limitation in that enterprise, the possibility of
technological change and innovation, often compromises those
efforts and has long been under-appreciated in standard
'cost-benefit analysis.' Regulators who study the inducement of
innovation and the avoidance of regulatory costs by the regulated
often find significant cost-saving opportunities, leading to more
stringent and more effective risk governance. Ultimately, the
weighing of costs in this more elaborate model is more than simple
welfare maximization. It views regulatory costs as important to
society for a range of reasons, some grounded in fairness and some
in deliberative process values, as a society seeks to minimize all
costs over time. This analysis places the weighing of regulatory
costs in context by comparing cost calculation methods and
evaluative tools in three illuminating case studies. It assesses
cost-factoring methods under different normative frameworks and
highlights the role of technological innovation in cost
minimization over time while considering regulatory costs that
result from multiple regulatory tool choices. A single regulatory
cost investigation is tracked from agency to legislative back to
agency choice, outlining the steps to consensus-oriented cost
factoring methods. Academic and professional lawyers in fields like
environmental protection, food and drug safety, and workplace
safety will find this an invaluable resource, as will researchers
in disciplines dealing with judicial choice from economic or
political theoretical frameworks and regulatory agencies charged
with regulating risks.
This book is aimed at students of labour law and is useful as a first point of reference for practitioners.
This title deals with the common law and statutory rules applicable to labour law within its constitutional framework. It covers both standard and non-standard employment and includes discussion of regulatory material, judgments and arbitration awards.
These are papers from the 10th Cambridge Tax Law History
Conference, which took place in July 2020. The papers fall within
the following basic themes: - UK tax administration issues - UK tax
reforms in the 20th century - History of tax in the UK - The UK's
first double tax treaty - The 1982 Australia-US tax treaty - The
legacy of colonial influence - Reform of Dutch excises, and -
Canadian tax avoidance.
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