Results for ' illegal'

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  1.  87
    Illegal Downloading, Ethical Concern, and Illegal Behavior.Kirsten Robertson, Lisa McNeill, James Green & Claire Roberts - 2012 - Journal of Business Ethics 108 (2):215-227.
    Illegally downloading music through peer-topeer networks has persisted in spite of legal action to deter the behavior. This study examines the individual characteristics of downloaders which could explain why they are not dissuaded by messages that downloading is illegal. We compared downloaders to non-downloaders and examined whether downloaders were characterized by less ethical concern, engagement in illegal behavior, and a propensity toward stealing a CD from a music store under varying levels of risk. We also examined whether downloading (...)
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  2.  16
    Illegal abortion and reproductive injustice in the Pacific Islands: A qualitative analysis of court data.Kate Burry, Kristen Beek, Lisa Vallely, Heather Worth & Bridget Haire - 2023 - Developing World Bioethics 23 (2):166-175.
    The Oceania region is home to some of the world's most restrictive abortion laws, and there is evidence of Pacific Island women's reproductive oppression across several aspects of their reproductive lives, including in relation to contraceptive decision-making, birthing, and fertility. In this paper we analyse documents from court cases in the Pacific Islands regarding the illegal procurement of abortion. We undertook inductive thematic analysis of documents from eighteen illegal abortion court cases from Pacific Island countries.Using the lens of (...)
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  3.  20
    Illegal abortion and reproductive injustice in the Pacific Islands: A qualitative analysis of court data.Kate Burry, Kristen Beek, Lisa Vallely, Heather Worth & Bridget Haire - 2023 - Developing World Bioethics 23 (2):166-175.
    The Oceania region is home to some of the world's most restrictive abortion laws, and there is evidence of Pacific Island women's reproductive oppression across several aspects of their reproductive lives, including in relation to contraceptive decision‐making, birthing, and fertility. In this paper we analyse documents from court cases in the Pacific Islands regarding the illegal procurement of abortion. We undertook inductive thematic analysis of documents from eighteen illegal abortion court cases from Pacific Island countries.Using the lens of (...)
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  4.  7
    Illegal Leisure: The Normalization of Adolescent Recreational Drug Use.Judith Aldridge, Fiona Measham & Howard Parker - 1998 - Routledge.
    _Illegal Leisure _offers a unique insight into the role drug use now plays in British youth culture. The authors present the results of a five year longitudinal study into young people and drug taking. They argue that drugs are no longer used as a form of rebellious behaviour, but have been subsumed into wider, acceptable leisure activities. The new generation of drug user can no longer be seen as mad or bad or from subcultural worlds - they are ordinary and (...)
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  5.  17
    Illegal Skin, White Mask: A Critical Phenomenology of Irregular Child Migrants and the Maintenances of Whiteness in the United States.Sierra Billingslea - 2022 - Puncta 5 (3):42-59.
    I reinterpret the experiences and perceptions of child migrants through the lens of racialization and White Supremacy by advancing work by Cheryl Harris (1993) and Lisa Guenther (2019) on the critical phenomenology of “Whiteness as Property” (WaP) and the protection of “White Space.” WaP is “the collective investment in state violence” to protect the economic, territorial, and legal privileges of Whiteness, while White Space describes its two dimensions: “enclosure and territorial expansion” (Guenther 2019, 202). I build on this foundation by (...)
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  6. Reasonable illegal force: Justice and legitimacy in a pluralistic, liberal society.Alec Walen - 2001 - Ethics 111 (2):344-373.
    Ideally, should liberals in a pluralistic society be able to agree to abide by a common legal system such that all their disputes are resolved without resort to illegal force? Rawls believes the answer is “yes.” I explain and defend his answer, but I also conclude, focusing on the example of abortion, that the truth is “not necessarily, not always.” Rawls’s conceptions of reasonable citizens and public reason help explain why there is a strong prima facie duty to forswear (...)
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  7. Illegal: White Supremacy and Immigration Status.Jose Jorge Mendoza - 2016 - In Alex Sager (ed.), The Ethics and Politics of Immigration: Core Issues and Emerging Trends. London, UK: Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 201-220.
    This chapter looks at the history of US citizenship and immigration law and argues that denying admission or citizenship status to certain groups of people is closely correlated to a denial of whiteness. On this account whiteness is not a fixed or natural concept, but instead is a social construction whose composition changes throughout time and place. Understanding whiteness in this way allows one to see how white supremacy is not limited merely to instances of racism or ethnocentrism, but can (...)
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  8.  27
    Illegal products and the question of consumer redress.Shaheen Borna - 1989 - Journal of Business Ethics 8 (6):499 - 505.
    Despite the enormous size of the illicit market in the United States, there is a paucity of research concerning the rights of consumers of illegal products. In this article it is argued that the illicit nature of a transaction should not deny consumers the right to safety and redress. Recognition of these rights is not only in line with the public policy goal, i.e., protecting public interests, but it can also serve as a deterrent factor for the sales of (...)
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  9. Institutional illegality and disobedience: Local government narratives.Cooper Davina - 1996 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 16 (2).
  10. Illegality in equity.Paul S. Davies - 2018 - In Paul S. Davies, Simon Douglas & James Goudkamp (eds.), Defences in equity. New York: Hart.
     
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  11.  28
    Reconsidering Illegal Hunting as a Crime of Dissent: Implication for Justice and Deliberative Uptake.Erica von Essen & Michael P. Allen - 2017 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 11 (2):213-228.
    In this paper, we determine whether illegal hunting should be construed as a crime of dissent. Using the Nordic countries as a case study where protest-driven, illegal hunting of protected wolves is on the rise, we reconsider the crime using principles of civil disobedience. We invoke the conditions of intentionality, nonevasion, dialogic effort, non-violence and appeal to parameters of reasonable disagreement about justice and situate the Nordic illegal hunting phenomenon at a nexus between conscientious objection, assisted disobedience (...)
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  12.  22
    Illegality in the Research Protocol: The Duty of Research Ethics Committees under the 2001 Clinical Trials Directive.Christopher Roy-Toole - 2008 - Research Ethics 4 (3):111-116.
    In this paper, the author shows how research ethics committees must deal with illegality in the research protocol. He defines their legal duty by reference to the 2001 Clinical Trials Directive, and especially in the key areas of insurance, indemnity and no-fault compensation. The author is critical of the current GAfREC and recent guidelines issued by the Royal College of Physicians. He concludes that new rules are needed to replace the 2001 edition of GAfREC.
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  13.  47
    Illegal Immigrants, Health Care, and Social Responsibility.James Dwyer - 2004 - Hastings Center Report 34 (1):34-41.
    “Nationalists” argue that illegal immigrants have no claim to health benefits. “Humanists” say access to care is a human right and should be provided to everyone. Neither view is adequate.
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  14.  16
    Transformative Illegality: How Condoms ‘Became Legal’ in Ireland, 1991–1993.Máiréad Enright & Emilie Cloatre - 2018 - Feminist Legal Studies 26 (3):261-284.
    This paper examines Irish campaigns for condom access in the early 1990s. Against the backdrop of the AIDS crisis, activists campaigned against a law which would not allow condoms to be sold from ordinary commercial spaces or vending machines, and restricted sale to young people. Advancing a conception of ‘transformative illegality’, we show that illegal action was fundamental to the eventual legalisation of commercial condom sale. However, rather than foregrounding illegal condom sale as a mode of spectacular direct (...)
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  15.  34
    The illegal way in and the moral way out.Gerhard Øverland - 2007 - European Journal of Philosophy 15 (2):186–203.
    At the heart of the current debate about immigration we find a conflict of convictions. Many people seem to believe that a country has a right to decide who to let in and who to keep out, but quite often they appear equally committed to the view that it is morally wrong to expel someone from within the borders of their country if that would seriously jeopardise the person in question. While the first conviction leads to stricter border controls in (...)
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  16.  50
    A “little bit illegal”? Withholding and withdrawing of mechanical ventilation in the eyes of German intensive care physicians.Sabine Beck, Andreas van de Loo & Stella Reiter-Theil - 2008 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 11 (1):7-16.
    Research questions and backgroundThis study explores a highly controversial issue of medical care in Germany: the decision to withhold or withdraw mechanical ventilation in critically ill patients. It analyzes difficulties in making these decisions and the physicians’ uncertainty in understanding the German terminology of Sterbehilfe, which is used in the context of treatment limitation. Used in everyday language, the word Sterbehilfe carries connotations such as helping the patient in the dying process or helping the patient to enter the dying process. (...)
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  17.  16
    The Illegal Way In and The Moral Way Out.Gerhard Øverland - 2007 - European Journal of Philosophy 15 (2):186-203.
    At the heart of the current debate about immigration we find a conflict of convictions. Many people seem to believe that a country has a right to decide who to let in and who to keep out, but quite often they appear equally committed to the view that it is morally wrong to expel someone from within the borders of their country if that would seriously jeopardise the person in question. While the first conviction leads to stricter border controls in (...)
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  18.  20
    A “little bit illegal”? Withholding and withdrawing of mechanical ventilation in the eyes of German intensive care physicians.Sabine Beck, Andreas Loo & Stella Reiter-Theil - 2008 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 11 (1):7-16.
    Research questions and backgroundThis study explores a highly controversial issue of medical care in Germany: the decision to withhold or withdraw mechanical ventilation in critically ill patients. It analyzes difficulties in making these decisions and the physicians’ uncertainty in understanding the German terminology of Sterbehilfe, which is used in the context of treatment limitation. Used in everyday language, the word Sterbehilfe carries connotations such as helping the patient in the dying process or helping the patient to enter the dying process. (...)
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  19.  11
    Illegal migrant Basotho women in South Africa: Exposure to vulnerability in domestic services.Mosiuoa B. Makhata & Maake J. Masango - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (2).
    The illegal migration of Basotho women to South Africa in order to render domestic service is alarming because they are subjected to harsh treatment. This is a pastoral and theological concern for the church. As migrants, their struggle begins from the household circumstances that often force them to leave and seek job opportunities undocumented or without following prescribed migration procedures. They are then subjected to migration processes and procedures: for example, corruption and bribery by migration officers and illegal (...)
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  20.  34
    Illegal Migrants’, Gender and Vulnerability: The Case of the EU’s Returns Directive. [REVIEW]Heli Askola - 2010 - Feminist Legal Studies 18 (2):159-178.
    Feminist legal efforts to make sense of the external migration policies of the European Union (EU) have focused almost exclusively on the EU’s initiatives against trafficking in women. This article examines one of the more neglected areas of EU immigration policy—the return of ‘illegal immigrants’. It analyses the so-called 2008 Returns Directive in the light of the multidimensional inequalities experienced by migrant women, which affect their migration status and expose some of them to the threat of removal. Owing to (...)
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  21. Illegal Immigration: A Case for Residency.Reginald Williams - 2009 - Public Affairs Quarterly 23 (4):309-323.
    This paper argues that illegal migrant laborers who are currently in the United States should be granted permanent residency if they have contributed to its economy for a certain period of time, which I will not attempt to specify, and if they have not committed any serious crimes in the country . My argument is theoretical and tentative. For some of my points would benefit from empirical support, but there are no definitive statistics on the relevant issues. The aim, (...)
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  22.  24
    Illegal behavior.Richard Foley - 1982 - Law and Philosophy 1 (1):131 - 158.
    What is illegal behavior? An intuitively plausible answer is that illegal behavior is behavior which the government discourages by the use of coercion. Although such coercion theories are generally out of favor today, the usual objections to such a theory can be plausibly answered, and moreover the theory has significant advantages over other ways of understanding the notion of illegal behavior.
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  23.  28
    Illegal beings. Human cloning and the law.D. E. Cutas - 2008 - Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (6):510-510.
    A Professor of Law at Santa Clara University, Kerry Lynn Mackintosh presents us with a rigorously structured book on anticloning legislation. Although written for US readers and thus focusing on US context and legislation, the book is very much relevant internationally, due to the similarities between the various anticloning legislative endeavours and between their underlying premises.The book is divided into three parts. In Part I, Macintosh identifies and discusses the five most common sources of objections to human cloning, and shows (...)
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  24.  13
    An Illegal Assembly of One.Beverly Fok - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (1):67-79.
    In Singapore, the law holds that one person may constitute an illegal assembly. This makes each person, individually and at all times, latently assembled if not actually so. But where exactly does the permissible, non-assembled one end and the unlawful, gathered one begin? How and when does one become more than one, that is, some? For here an excess of one is not many, but rather an indeterminate some. Of what does this someness consist? This essay draws on Foucault (...)
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  25.  44
    Illegal Hunting and Angling:The Neutralization of Wildlife Law Violations.Stephen Eliason - 2003 - Society and Animals 11 (3):225-243.
    This study provides a descriptive account of rationalizations for poaching used by wildlife law violators. There has been little research on motivations for poaching. This study uses qualitative data obtained from surveys and in-depth interviews with wildlife law violators and conservation officers in Kentucky to examine rationalizations used by wildlife law violators to excuse and justify participation in this type of illegal activity. Comments from conservation officers and violators revealed widespread use of rationalizations, with denial of responsibility being most (...)
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  26.  11
    Between Illegalities and Riots. The Foucaultian Reading of E.P. Thompson's Work.Miguel Ángel Martín Martínez - 2022 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 38:184-213.
    RESUMEN Los años setenta son el período más explícitamente militante en la trayectoria de Foucault. Un concepto clave en la primera mitad de estos años y que resultará fundamental, tanto para entender el nacimiento de la prisión como el de la delincuencia, es el de los ilegalismos. El propósito de este artículo es el de rastrear la influencia que, en el desarrollo de este concepto de ilegalismos, tuvieron las lecturas de la obra de E.P. Thompson por parte de Foucault, el (...)
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  27.  34
    The Illegal Alien Who Needs Surgery.Mark G. Kuczewski - 2000 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (1):128-128.
    A 24-year-old Hispanic male came into the emergency room of a large public teaching hospital with acute cardiac failure and chest pain. He was admitted and diagnosed with rheumatic heart disease and regurgitation and stenosis of both mitral and aortic valves. Medical judgment concluded that the patient needed to be medically stabilized and then undergo cardiac surgery to repair heart valves. The patient spoke only Spanish. Investigation through an interpreter revealed that he was an illegal alien from a Central (...)
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  28.  6
    Illegal literature: toward a disruptive creativity.David S. Roh - 2015 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    What is the cultural value of illegal works that violate the copyrights of popular fiction? Why do they persist despite clear and stringent intellectual property laws? Drawing on the disciplines of new media, law, and literary studies, Illegal Literature suggests that extralegal works such as fan fiction are critical to a system that spurs the evolution of culture. Reconsidering voices relegated to the cultural periphery, David S. Roh shows how infrastructure--in the form of legal policy and network distribution--slows (...)
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  29. The Uses of Illegal Groups in Particle Physics.E. C. G. Sudarshan - 1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann (ed.), Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship. pp. 64.
     
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  30.  29
    Illegal but ethical: An inquiry into the roots of illegal corporate behaviour in russia.Gavriel Meirovich & Arie Reichel - 2000 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 9 (3):126–135.
    This paper examines the perceptions of Russian executives toward the relationship between legal and ethical conduct. The focus is on questions of tax evasion attitudes and corporate illegal behavior. Forty Russian managers and entrepreneurs from a variety of organizations were interviewed. Their actions are aimed at gaining corporate income and profit from operations through hiding corporate activity from state and local authorities in a context where these authorities levy excessive taxes and other types of payment from businesses. Tax evasion (...)
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  31.  16
    Illegal but ethical: an inquiry into the roots of illegal corporate behaviour in Russia.Gavriel Meirovich & Arie Reichel - 2000 - Business Ethics: A European Review 9 (3):126-135.
    This paper examines the perceptions of Russian executives toward the relationship between legal and ethical conduct. The focus is on questions of tax evasion attitudes and corporate illegal behavior. Forty Russian managers and entrepreneurs from a variety of organizations were interviewed. Their actions are aimed at gaining corporate income and profit from operations through hiding corporate activity from state and local authorities in a context where these authorities levy excessive taxes and other types of payment from businesses. Tax evasion (...)
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  32. Illegal downloading, free riding and justice.Geert Demuijnck - 2012 - In Annabelle Lever (ed.), New Frontiers in the Philosophy of Intellectual Property. cambridge university press.
     
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  33.  63
    Illegal Loves and Sexual Deviancy: Homosexuality as a Threat in Cold War Canada”.Erin Gallagher-Cohoon - 2013 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 4 (2).
    This paper analyzes the criminalization and medicalization of homosexuality during the early twentieth century in Canada. Through court records and medical texts the discourse of homosexuality as a threat to the family unit and to the nation is contextualized within Cold War rhetoric. A Foucaultian conceptualization of power and discipline helps frame questions regarding homosexuality as a criminal offense and as a mental illness. It is argued that both state control and societal pressures constructed the homosexual as criminal, the homosexual (...)
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  34.  20
    Illegal Loves and Sexual Deviancy: Homosexuality as a Threat in Cold War Canada.Erin Gallagher-Cohoon - 2013 - Constellations (University of Alberta Student Journal) 4 (2).
    This paper analyzes the criminalization and medicalization of homosexuality during the early twentieth century in Canada. Through court records and medical texts the discourse of homosexuality as a threat to the family unit and to the nation is contextualized within Cold War rhetoric. A Foucaultian conceptualization of power and discipline helps frame questions regarding homosexuality as a criminal offense and as a mental illness. It is argued that both state control and societal pressures constructed the homosexual as criminal, the homosexual (...)
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  35. Illegibility : on the spirit of origins.John P. Leavey Jr - 2010 - In Martin McQuillan & Ika Willis (eds.), The Origins of Deconstruction. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  36.  58
    Illegal Immigration and Moral Obligation.Michael R. Taylor - 2008 - Public Affairs Quarterly 22 (1):29-41.
  37.  38
    Illegal actions, universal maxims, and the duty to obey the law: The case for civil authority in the crito.Daniel M. Farrell - 1978 - Political Theory 6 (2):173-189.
  38. Illegible Salvation: The Authority of Language in The Concept of Anxiety.Sarah Horton - 2018 - In Joseph Westfall (ed.), Authorship and Authority in Kierkegaard's Writings. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 121-137.
    This essay examines the analysis of language in The Concept of Anxiety and argues that language ultimately reveals itself as both dangerous and salvific. The pseudonymous author, Vigilius Haufniensis, is suspicious of language, for it divides the individual from herself and thereby makes possible the self-forgetfulness of objective chatter. Indeed, this warning (which commenters have tended to follow uncritically) is a legitimate one – yet it fails to grasp that by rendering the self other than itself, language constitutes the self. (...)
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  39.  18
    Illegal, Legal, Irregular or Regular – Who is the Incoming Foreigner?Magdalena Perkowska - 2016 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 45 (1):187-197.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric Jahrgang: 45 Heft: 1 Seiten: 187-197.
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  40. my illegal research on humans at Ryerson.Paul Bali - unknown
    trying to get info on vivisection at Ryerson U, i was threatened with legal action. an overview of my experience, with some findings.
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  41.  11
    Deterring illegal behavior by officials of complex organizations.Jameson W. Doig, Douglas E. Phillips & Tycho Manson - 1984 - Criminal Justice Ethics 3 (1):27-56.
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  42.  3
    Management of Illegal Fishing in Lower Sesan 2 Reservoir, Stung Treng.Narith Por - 2021 - Dissertation,
    This is the Professional Thesis of the DPP that was conducted from February to May 2021. The research focuses on “Illegal Fishing Management in Lower Sesan 2 Reservoir, Stung Treng Province, Cambodia” with two research objectives: to understand the illegal fishing situation and to explore solutions to address the illegal fishing issues in the Lower Sesan 2 Reservoir. The research is approached by a Conceptual Framework addressing four elements of illegal fishing in the Lower Sesan 2 (...)
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  43. Socially Irresponsible and Illegal Behavior and Shareholder Wealth A Meta-Analysis of Event Studies.Jeff Frooman - 1997 - Business and Society 36 (3):221-249.
    This article provides empirical results indicating that acting in a socially respon- sible and lawful manner is a necessary, though not sufficient, condition for increasing shareholder wealth. It meta-analyzes 27 event studies that have mea- sured the stock market's reaction to incidences of socially irresponsible and illicit behavior. It finds that for firms engaging in socially irresponsible and illicit behavior, the effect on shareholder wealth is negative (wealth decreases), statisti- cally significant (p <.001), and so substantial in size (D = (...)
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  44. The illegal body: `Eurodac' and the politics of biometric identification. [REVIEW]Irma van der Ploeg - 1999 - Ethics and Information Technology 1 (4):295-302.
    Biometrics is often described as `the next big thingin information technology'. Rather than IT renderingthe body irrelevant to identity – a mistaken idea tobegin with – the coupling of biometrics with ITunequivocally puts the body center stage. The questions to be raised about biometrics is howbodies will become related to identity, and what thenormative and political ramifications of this couplingwill be. Unlike the body rendered knowable in thebiomedical sciences, biometrics generates a readable body: it transforms the body's surfaces andcharacteristics into (...)
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  45.  4
    Illegal Immigration and U.S. Obligation.Claudia Mills - 1981 - Philosophy & Public Policy Quarterly 1 (1):1.
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  46.  19
    Disposable Subjects: Staging Illegality and Racial Terror in the Borderlands.Armando García - 2019 - Critical Philosophy of Race 7 (1):160-186.
    This article draws on Gloria Anzaldúa's philosophy to analyze Latina/o cultural forms as responses to the lawful violence that renders migrants and other minoritarian peoples as disposable subjects. The article turns to Latina/o playwrights and undocumented poets whose art forms, produced under the deportation regime, express a desire for freedom from terrorizing governance. Focusing on Lydia, a play by Mexican American playwright Octavio Solis, and poetry by an undocumented artist, Yosimar Reyes, it links these representations of “illegal” migrants to (...)
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  47.  6
    The Illegal as Normative.Orly Benjamin & Sarit Nisim - 2015 - Business and Society 54 (5):676-700.
    This article explores the ways in which employers’ organizational networks, as shaped by the emergence of the “contract state” and related changes in the legal environment, affect employment practices. The classic analysis of the ways in which the legal environment benefits elites has successfully been applied to large organizations. Here, from a microsociological perspective, the authors researched how within an ambivalent legal context small and medium size cleaning companies interact with members of their organizational network. Semistructured interviews with cleaning subcontractors (...)
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  48.  30
    II. Illegal Actions, Universal Maxims, and the Duty To Obey the Law: The Case for Civil Authority in the Crito.Daniel M. Farrell - 1978 - Political Theory 6 (2):173-189.
  49.  36
    Perceived correlates of illegal behavior in organizations.Terence R. Mitchell, Denise Daniels, Heidi Hopper, Jane George-Falvy & Gerald R. Ferris - 1996 - Journal of Business Ethics 15 (4):439 - 455.
    A survey was conducted of the perceived correlates of illegal abuses in the electronics industry. Human resource directors of thirty-one firms responded to a questionnaire which assessed their perceptions of the degree to which illegal behavior was caused by (1) deficiencies in the moral character of employees (2) the clarity of expectations and standards describing illegal behavior and (3) the presence of reinforcements and punishments contingent on these behaviors. All three variables were related to the frequency of (...)
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  50.  10
    Non-conventional/illegal political participation of male and female youths.Claire Gavray, Bernard Fournier & Michel Born - 2012 - Human Affairs 22 (3):405-418.
    Belgian data from the PIDOP project show that boys are more involved than girls in illegal political actions, namely the production of graffiti and other acts of “incivility”. These activities must be considered in both groups as complementary to conventional political and social participation and not as their opposite. The main explanatory factor is the level of the perceived efficaciousness of such actions. The lack of trust in institutions and the level of awareness of societal discrimination play no significant (...)
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