27,410 research outputs found
Hostile Protected Persons or Extra-Conventional Persons: How Unlawful Combatants in the War on Terrorism Posed Extraordinary Challenges for Military Attorneys and Commanders
First, this Article reviews policymakers\u27 and commentators\u27 categorization of participants in Operation Enduring Freedom, the armed conflict in Afghanistan against al Qaeda and Taliban fighters. This Article concentrate specifically on the status of participants operating at the fringes of the categories of persons protected by the Geneva Conventions. It shows, for example, how al Qaeda and the Taliban fighters tested the bounds of the Conventions by employing methods of “warfare” which rendered them non-distinct and therefore made a determination of their status unclear. This Article demonstrates how policymakers and ultimately the U.S. President created a class of persons--so-called extra-conventional persons--who participated in hostilities yet failed to qualify for protection under any of the applicable Geneva Conventions. Second, this Article presents the training and education available to the judge advocates who faced these legal issues. it further presents perspectives on the law of war as it appeared from the resources, education, and training commonly available to deployed judge advocates. This Article ultimately concludes that international law and U.S. military doctrine classify many who participate in hostilities as “protected persons” under the Fourth Geneva Convention--a concept ultimately at odds with the determination made by U.S. policymakers.Third, and in concert with the two issues identified above, this Article describes the enormous challenges these issues created for U.S. military persons participating in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Specifically, it illustrates operational and legal challenges faced by military attorneys and the commanders they advised. It then explores legal issues that arose during the detention and occupation operations with respect to fighters associated with Saddam Fedayeen. Observing apparent similarities between Saddam Fedayeen and Taliban fighters earlier categorized as extra-conventional, this Article describes how, despite similarities in applicable law and attributes, judge advocates determined that these irregular fighters were protected persons under the Fourth Geneva Convention. It concludes that judge advocates dealt with these challenges responsibly, providing sound legal advice that balanced commanders\u27 mission requirements with the humanitarian spirit of the law of war
The Perceived Impact of the In-Trust Agreements on CGIAR Germplasm Availability: An Assessment of Bioversity International's Institutional Activities
This study assesses the generation and consequences of the In-Trust Agreements (ITAs) that established the legal status of the CGIAR germplasm as freely available for the benefit of humanity under the auspices of FAO. The analysis looks at the history of the ITAs and focuses on the role of Bioversity International in research and other activities in influencing, facilitating and enabling the ITA negotiations. Results confirm the central role of Bioversity and policy research in the negotiations process. Concepts developed during the ITA negotiations contributed toward subsequent multilateral negotiations that eventually culminated in the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources
A pitfall of piecewise-polytropic equation of state inference
The only messenger radiation in the Universe which one can use to
statistically probe the Equation of State (EOS) of cold dense matter is that
originating from the near-field vicinities of compact stars. Constraining
gravitational masses and equatorial radii of rotating compact stars is a major
goal for current and future telescope missions, with a primary purpose of
constraining the EOS. From a Bayesian perspective it is necessary to carefully
discuss prior definition; in this context a complicating issue is that in
practice there exist pathologies in the general relativistic mapping between
spaces of local (interior source matter) and global (exterior spacetime)
parameters. In a companion paper, these issues were raised on a theoretical
basis. In this study we reproduce a probability transformation procedure from
the literature in order to map a joint posterior distribution of Schwarzschild
gravitational masses and radii into a joint posterior distribution of EOS
parameters. We demonstrate computationally that EOS parameter inferences are
sensitive to the choice to define a prior on a joint space of these masses and
radii, instead of on a joint space interior source matter parameters. We focus
on the piecewise-polytropic EOS model, which is currently standard in the field
of astrophysical dense matter study. We discuss the implications of this issue
for the field.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Modelling and simulation of a biomimetic underwater vehicle
This paper describes work carried out at the
University of Glasgow investigating biomimetic
fish-like propulsion systems for underwater
vehicles. The development of a simple
mathematical model is described for a
biomimetic fish like vehicle which utilizes a
tendon drive propulsion system. This model is
then compared with a model of a vehicle of
similar size but with a propeller for main
propulsion. Simulation results for both models
are shown and compared
Analysis of variability in the burst oscillations of the accreting millisecond pulsar XTE J1814-338
The accreting millisecond pulsar XTE J1814-338 exhibits oscillations at the
known spin frequency during Type I X-ray bursts. The properties of the burst
oscillations reflect the nature of the thermal asymmetry on the stellar
surface. We present an analysis of the variability of the burst oscillations of
this source, focusing on three characteristics: fractional amplitude, harmonic
content and frequency. Fractional amplitude and harmonic content constrain the
size, shape and position of the emitting region, whilst variations in frequency
indicate motion of the emitting region on the neutron star surface. We examine
both long-term variability over the course of the outburst, and short-term
variability during the bursts. For most of the bursts, fractional amplitude is
consistent with that of the accretion pulsations, implying a low degree of fuel
spread. There is however a population of bursts whose fractional amplitudes are
substantially lower, implying a higher degree of fuel spread, possibly forced
by the explosive burning front of a precursor burst. For the first harmonic,
substantial differences between the burst and accretion pulsations suggest that
hotspot geometry is not the only mechanism giving rise to harmonic content in
the latter. Fractional amplitude variability during the bursts is low; we
cannot rule out the hypothesis that the fractional amplitude remains constant
for bursts that do not exhibit photospheric radius expansion (PRE). There are
no significant variations in frequency in any of the bursts except for the one
burst that exhibits PRE. This burst exhibits a highly significant but small
(Hz) drop in frequency in the burst rise. The timescale of the
frequency shift is slower than simple burning layer expansion models predict,
suggesting that other mechanisms may be at work.Comment: 20 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. Uses
emulateapj.cl
Identity and Search in Social Networks
Social networks have the surprising property of being "searchable": Ordinary
people are capable of directing messages through their network of acquaintances
to reach a specific but distant target person in only a few steps. We present a
model that offers an explanation of social network searchability in terms of
recognizable personal identities: sets of characteristics measured along a
number of social dimensions. Our model defines a class of searchable networks
and a method for searching them that may be applicable to many network search
problems, including the location of data files in peer-to-peer networks, pages
on the World Wide Web, and information in distributed databases.Comment: 4 page, 3 figures, revte
Impact of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris (L.) on As, Cu, Pb and Zn mobility and speciation in contaminated soils
To assess the risks that contaminated soils pose to the environment properly a greater understanding of how soil biota influence the mobility of metal(loid)s in soils is required. Lumbricus terrestris L. were incubated in three soils contaminated with As, Cu, Pb and Zn. The concentration and speciation of metal(loid)s in pore waters and the mobility and partitioning in casts were compared with earthworm-free soil. Generally the concentrations of water extractable metal(loid)s in earthworm casts were greater than in earthworm-free soil. The impact of the earthworms on concentration and speciation in pore waters was soil and metal specific and could be explained either by earthworm induced changes in soil pH or soluble organic carbon. The mobilisation of metal(loid)s in the environment by earthworm activity may allow for leaching or uptake into biota
Forebody and vertical stabilizer effects on directional stability of a reusable LOX/RP (061) booster AR 12161-2
Results are presented of a wind tunnel test on the directional stability of space shuttle booster configurations. The test was conducted at the 14-inch trisonic tunnel starting 6 December 1971 and continued through 11 December 1971 for a total of 66 occupancy hours. Configurations tested included a cylindrical body with two axisymmetrical noses, one with and without canopy, one delta wing, located in two positions, five vertical tails (including a V tail), two having split rudders, ventral fins, two sets of chines, three airbreathing engine pods, and rocket engine shrouds. The model scale was 0.003366
A re-assessment of the phosphorus loading to Loch Leven, Kinross (Tayside), 1994 [Progress Report]
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