46,038 research outputs found
Women and the Law: How Far We\u27ve Come and Where We Need to Go
Introduction to the program on “Women and the Law: How Far We\u27ve Come and Where We Need to Go” held at Pace Law School, October 24, 2008
Loyalt\u27s Reward - A Felony Conviction: Recent Prosecutions of High-Status Female Offenders
This Article analyzes white-collar female crime and compares several high profile cases to those of regular female offenders. It uses government statistical data on female crime to paint a portrait of the female offender. It then compares the prosecution of street-level and white-collar female offenders. The Article discusses the prosecutions of Martha Stewart, Betty, Vinson, and Lea Fastow. The Article argues that these women often share a similar trait of committing the crime out of loyalty to a man engaged in wrong-doing
Hogan vs. Gawker II: A Statutory Solution to Fraudulent Joinder
This Article will first review the intersection of federal jurisdiction and litigation strategy by examining the requirements for diversity jurisdiction in federal court as well as the circumstances that must be present to allow a defendant to remove a case from state court to federal court. The Article will then review the history of the court-created doctrine of fraudulent joinder, and will examine the various tests currently in use by the lower federal courts. The Article will then address whether it makes more sense to create a statutory solution, and will examine and analyze the Fraudulent Joinder Prevention Act of 2016, which was recently passed by the House of Representatives. After analyzing the Act, this Article will conclude that, while a statutory solution to this issue is appropriate, the current proposal needs to be adjusted in various ways
Effect of mycophenolate mofetil on the white blood cell count and the frequency of infection in systemic lupus erythematosus.
Leukopenia is a common manifestation of SLE. Addition of immunosuppressive therapy in a SLE patient who is already leukopenic is a clinical concern. It could worsen leukopenia, increase the risk of infection, or both. The aim of this study was to analyze the immediate effect of mycophenolate mofetil on the white blood cell count and the rate of infection in SLE patients. Two hundred and forty-four patients within the Hopkins Lupus Cohort who were newly started on mycophenolate mofetil were included in the study. The white blood cell count and interval infection history on the day mycophenolate mofetil was started were compared with the white blood cell count and interval infection history at the next visit. The study was based on 244 patients who began taking mycophenolate mofetil in the cohort. The study population included 47 % African Americans, 44 % Caucasians, and 9 % other ethnicities. There was a slight but not statistically significant increase in the white blood cell count (6.63 vs. 7.01), after starting mycophenolate mofetil. Patients with a baseline white blood cell count \u3c3000/mm(3) did have a statistically significant increase in the white blood cell count after starting mycophenolate mofetil (2.57 vs. 5.13, P = 0.0047). We also found a statistically significant increase in the risk of bacterial infection (but not viral infection) after starting mycophenolate mofetil (4 vs. 9 %, P = 0.0036). Leukopenia does not worsen with mycophenolate mofetil. However, mycophenolate mofetil appears to slightly increase the rate of bacterial (but not viral) infection
Engaging Disconnected Young People in Education and Work
Project Rise served 18- to 24-year-olds who lacked a high school diploma or the equivalent and had been out of school, out of work, and not in any type of education or training program for at least six months. After enrolling as part of a group (or cohort) of 25 to 30 young people, Project Rise participants were to engage in a 12-month sequence of activities centered on case management, classroom education focused mostly on preparation for a high school equivalency certificate, and a paid part-time internship that was conditional on adequate attendance in the educational component. After the internship, participants were expected to enter unsubsidized employment, postsecondary education, or both. The program was operated by three organizations in New York City; one in Newark, New Jersey; and one in Kansas City, Missouri
Further Results on Coding for Reliable Communication over Packet Networks
In "On Coding for Reliable Communication over Packet Networks" (Lun, Medard,
and Effros, Proc. 42nd Annu. Allerton Conf. Communication, Control, and
Computing, 2004), a capacity-achieving coding scheme for unicast or multicast
over lossy wireline or wireless packet networks is presented. We extend that
paper's results in two ways: First, we extend the network model to allow
packets received on a link to arrive according to any process with an average
rate, as opposed to the assumption of Poisson traffic with i.i.d. losses that
was previously made. Second, in the case of Poisson traffic with i.i.d. losses,
we derive error exponents that quantify the rate at which the probability of
error decays with coding delay.Comment: 5 pages; to appear in Proc. 2005 IEEE International Symposium on
Information Theory (ISIT 2005
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