Results for 'Global Restructuring'

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  1. The editor has review copies of the following books. Potential reviewers should contact the editor to obtain a review copy (aghuval@ nervm. nerdc. ufl. edu). Books not previously listed are in bold faced type. [REVIEW]Food Agrarian Questions & Global Restructuring - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15:195-196.
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  2.  17
    Globalising Food: Agrarian Questions and Global Restructuring. David Goodman and Michael J. Watts, editors.David Goodman, Michael J. Watts & Andrew N. Rowan - 1998 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 11 (1):61-63.
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  3.  13
    “This isn't Paradise—I Work Here”: Global Restructuring, the Tourism Industry, and Women Workers in Caribbean Costa Rica.Darcie Vandegrift - 2008 - Gender and Society 22 (6):778-798.
    Tourism has received relatively scant attention in feminist analysis of women's work under economic restructuring. The industry creates a sector without a shop floor based on the provision of authenticity, leisure, and price-sensitive services. Migrant women from the First World and the Third World labor with national workers in a highly informalized and stratified employment setting. This article examines how structural conditions shape tourism employment in Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica. Drawing from data including observation, interviews, and a longitudinal business (...)
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  4.  27
    China and the Dynamics of Transnational Accumulation: Causes and Consequences of Global Restructuring.Martin Hart-Landsberg & Paul Burkett - 2006 - Historical Materialism 14 (3):3-43.
  5.  29
    Globalising food: Agrarian questions and global restructuring. David Goodman and Michael J. Watts, editors. [REVIEW]Andrew Rowan - 1998 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 11 (1):61-63.
  6.  29
    David Goodman and Michael J. Watts (eds.), Globalising Food: Agrarian Questions and Global Restructuring[REVIEW]Amitrajeet A. Batabyal - 1999 - Agriculture and Human Values 16 (4):443-444.
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  7.  72
    Entropy-Driven Global Best Selection in Particle Swarm Optimization for Many-Objective Software Package Restructuring.Amarjeet Prajapati, Anshu Parashar, Undefined Sunita & Alok Mishra - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-11.
    Many real-world optimization problems usually require a large number of conflicting objectives to be optimized simultaneously to obtain solution. It has been observed that these kinds of many-objective optimization problems often pose several performance challenges to the traditional multi-objective optimization algorithms. To address the performance issue caused by the different types of MaOPs, recently, a variety of many-objective particle swarm optimization has been proposed. However, external archive maintenance and selection of leaders for designing the MaOPSO to real-world MaOPs are still (...)
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  8.  3
    The Agrofuels Transition: Restructuring Places and Spaces in the Global Food System.Annie Shattuck & Eric Holt-Giménez - 2009 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 29 (3):180-188.
    Despite recent critiques of agrofuels, the industry is booming, signaling transformations in the world's food and fuels systems. International financial institutions, biotechnology firms, governments, and agribusiness are restructuring control over land, genetic resources, economic space, and market power. These moves prefer transnational capital at the expense of farmers in the North and extensive areas vital to the livelihoods of small producers in the Global South. This article suggests that the agrofuels boom may be a new—and particularly destructive—stage in (...)
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  9.  24
    The restructuring of the agricultural and food system: Social and economic equity in the reshaping of the Agrarian Question and the Food Question. [REVIEW]Alessandro Bonanno - 1991 - Agriculture and Human Values 8 (4):72-82.
    The paper investigates the characteristics of the global restructuring of the agricultural and food system that has occurred in recent years. Emphasis is placed on the emergence of the “Food and Natural Resource Question” and its relation to the “Agrarian Question.” It is argued that rather than being separate issues, these are two aspects of a unified process occurring at the global level. Moreover, it is argued that the transnational unity of the agrarian question and the food (...)
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  10.  8
    Restructuring Interlinked With Employer and Corporate Branding Amidst COVID-19: Embodying Crowdsourcing.Raja Irfan Sabir, Muhammmad Nazvi, Muhammad Bilal Majid, Hamid Mahmood, Khurram Abbas & Sobia Bano - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The COVID-19 pandemic is an unprecedented time in history. Surrounding this pandemic are many enormous uncertainties across the globe. Severe consequences have assessed for the incomes of almost 84% of employers and 68% of self-employed who are working and living in countries that are or have went through a phase of closing workplaces. Similarly, the global rate of unemployment is also expected to be increased in the coming years as 54% of employers worldwide are running their businesses in the (...)
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  11.  95
    The restructuring of food systems: Trends, research, and policy issues. [REVIEW]Mustafa Koc & Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1999 - Agriculture and Human Values 16 (2):109-116.
    This issue brings together a selection of articles based on presentations at two Conferences in 1997. The aim has been 1) to offer clearer and more understandable descriptions of the major trends and relationships that are involved in the structural transformations that are occurring in food systems at all levels; 2) to help develop better theoretical and conceptual tools to aid us in analyzing such restructurings and their dynamics; and 3) to clarify a number of practical issues facing those seeking (...)
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  12.  48
    Evolving Theory in International Ethics International Relations in a Changing Global System: Toward a Theory of the World Polity, Second edition, Seyom Brown , 208 pp., $17.95 paper, $49.95 cloth. The Restructuring of International Relations Theory, Mark Neufeld , 188 pp., $16.95 paper, $54.95 cloth. Ethics in International Relations: A Constitutive Theory, Mervyn Frost , 264 pp., $18.95 paper, $59.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Chris Brown - 1997 - Ethics and International Affairs 11:293-294.
  13.  48
    The Expansion and Restructuring of Intellectual Property and Its Implications for the Developing World.David Lea - 2008 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 11 (1):37-60.
    In this paper we begin with a reference to the work of Hernando de Soto The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else, and his characterization of the Western institution of formal property. We note the linkages that he sees between the institution and successful capitalist enterprise. Therefore, given the appropriateness of his analysis, it would appear to be worthwhile for developing and less developed countries to adjust their systems of ownership to conform more (...)
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  14.  5
    A critical study of Acts 6:1–3 and its implications for political restructuring in Nigeria.Omaka K. Ngele & Prince E. Peters - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):8.
    The nascent church in Jerusalem represented in Acts 6 verses 1–3 was promptly challenged by the problem of inequity and lack of fair play among the various stakeholders and such disaffection reached a situation of murmur and open agitation. This challenge to the apostles was a threat to the consolidation of the already established Christian community in Jerusalem and its spread to the whole world. Something must be done to arrest the situation or the Church runs the risk of disintegration. (...)
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  15.  55
    Women Workers, Industrialization, Global Supply Chains and Corporate Codes of Conduct.Marina Prieto-Carrón - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 83 (1):5-17.
    The restructured globalized economy has provided women with employment opportunities. Globalisation has also meant a shift towards self-regulation of multinationals as part of the restructuring of the world economy that increases among others things, flexible employment practices, worsening of labour conditions and lower wages for many women workers around the world. In this context, as part of the global trend emphasising Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the 1980s, one important development has been the growth of voluntary Corporate Codes (...)
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  16.  54
    Political theory of global justice: a cosmopolitan case for the world state.Luis Cabrera - 2004 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Could global government be the answer to global poverty and starvation? Cosmopolitan thinkers challenge the widely held belief that we owe more to our co-citizens than to those in other countries. This book offers a moral argument for world government, claiming that not only do we have strong obligations to people elsewhere, but that accountable integration among nation-states will help ensure that all persons can lead a decent life. Cabrera considers both the views of those political philosophers who (...)
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  17.  42
    Re-embedding global agriculture: The international organic and fair trade movements. [REVIEW]Laura T. Raynolds - 2000 - Agriculture and Human Values 17 (3):297-309.
    The international organic agricultureand fair trade movements represent importantchallenges to the ecologically and sociallydestructive relations that characterize the globalagro-food system. Both movements critique conventionalagricultural production and consumption patterns andseek to create a more sustainable world agro-foodsystem. The international organic movement focuses onre-embedding crop and livestock production in ``naturalprocesses,'' encouraging trade in agriculturalcommodities produced under certified organicconditions and processed goods derived from thesecommodities. For its part, the fair trade movementfosters the re-embedding of international commodityproduction and distribution in ``equitable socialrelations,'' developing a (...)
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  18.  19
    Managerialism, fundamentalism, and the restructuring of faith‐based community schools.Chaya Herman - 2006 - Educational Theory 56 (2):137-158.
    In this essay, Chaya Herman explores the interaction between two powerful global dynamics that have affected educational institutions and society at large: one is neoliberalism, with its attendant notions of marketization and managerialism; the other is the resurgence of ethnic and religious, often fundamentalist, communities in the search for identity. The essay is based on a larger research project that explores the profound effects of the ideological and managerial restructuring process in Johannesburg’s Jewish community schools, the broader context (...)
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  19.  12
    Global connectedness of local NGOs: do different types of funding create barriers for cooperation?Adil Rodionov, Darkhan Medeuov & Kamilya Rodionova - 2021 - Theory and Society 50 (3):393-416.
    How does international financial aid affect the cooperative behavior of local non-governmental organizations (NGOs)? Can NGOs, while turning global, preserve peer connections with local actors and be engaged in local issues? The civil society literature contains competing perspectives on and reports of how international financial aid may restructure local civic networks. Some scholars argue that international support comes at the expense of local integration as inclusion in global networks takes local NGOs out of the local context, while others (...)
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  20.  68
    The Cosmopolitan Imperative: Global Justice Through Accountable Integration.Luis Cabrera - 2005 - The Journal of Ethics 9 (1-2):171-199.
    Cosmopolitan political theorists hold that our obligations to distribute resources to others do not halt at state borders, but most do not advocate a restructuring of the global system to achieve their distributive aims. This article argues that promoting democratically accountable economic and political integration between states would be the most effective way to enable cosmopolitan, or routine, tax-financed, trans-state distributions. Movement toward a more integrated global system should encourage the view that larger sets of persons have (...)
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  21.  15
    Local Management Response to Corporative Restructuring: A Case Study of a Company Town.Agneta C. Sundström & Akmal S. Hyder - 2008 - Business and Society Review 113 (3):375-402.
    This is a case study of top management in a Swedish pulp industry at Skutskär. After decades of proactive response to change, starting in 1976 the pulp industry experienced a rapid and significant restructuring. In 1992, and after a prolonged hold on local investments, came a large‐scale investment with major labor reductions, which created a local crisis. The aim of this study is to analyze how top managers of a local business plant perceive and explain their citizenship relationship to (...)
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  22.  33
    Governance in the Global Agro-food System: Backlighting the Role of Transnational Supermarket Chains.Jason Konefal, Michael Mascarenhas & Maki Hatanaka - 2005 - Agriculture and Human Values 22 (3):291-302.
    With the proliferation of private standards many significant decisions regarding public health risks, food safety, and environmental impacts are increasingly taking place in the backstage of the global agro-food system. Using an analytical framework grounded in political economy, we explain the rise of private standards and specific actors – notably supermarkets – in the restructuring of agro-food networks. We argue that the global, political-economic, capitalist transformation – globalization – is a transition from a Fordist regime to a (...)
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  23.  34
    Greenhouse Effects in Global Warming based on Analogical Reasoning.Jun-Young Oh & Eui Chan Jeon - 2017 - Foundations of Science 22 (4):827-847.
    Using an analogy in science and everyday life is a double-edged sword because they are accompanied by alternative ideas, in addition to scientific concepts. Schools and public education explain global warming by making a common analogy between this phenomenon and greenhouse effects. Unfortunately, this analogy sometimes produces various incorrect explanatory mental models. To construct a correct understanding of global warming, it is necessary: first, to investigate the attributes of analogical reasoning; second, to understand these features by restructuring (...)
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  24.  52
    National, Regional and Global Perspectives of Higher Education and Science Policies in the Arab Region.Samia Satti Osman Mohamed Nour - 2011 - Minerva 49 (4):387-423.
    In this paper we discuss the interaction between science policies (and particularly in the area of scientific research) and higher education policies in Gulf and Mediterranean Arab countries. Our analysis reveals a discrepancy between the two sub-regions with respect to integration in the global market, cooperation in scientific research and international mobility of students. The paper discusses the implications of the analysis of reform policies and higher education restructuring.
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  25.  2
    Literature and Philosophy in Global Dialogue: The Educational Encounter.Natalie Chamat - 2020 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2020 (5):273-286.
    Literature-Philosophy apprehends the encounter of literature and philosophy as an open dialogue, where the commonality of a specific distance with regard to ἐπιστήμη serves to open up discourse beyond knowledge and epistemology. This article serves the purpose to argue for reading in translation as a core element of the methodological toolkit and part of a study-focus on Literature-Philosophy in a curriculum of Global Philosophy. It will therefore start by sketching a contextualization of Tschuang-Tse. Reden und Gleichnisse, Martin Buber’s poetic (...)
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  26.  5
    Literature and Philosophy in Global Dialogue: The Educational Encounter.Natalie Chamat - 2022 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 5 (1):273-286.
    Literature-Philosophy apprehends the encounter of literature and philosophy as an open dialogue, where the commonality of a specific distance with regard to ἐπιστήμη serves to open up discourse beyond knowledge and epistemology. This article serves the purpose to argue for reading in translation as a core element of the methodological toolkit and part of a study-focus on Literature-Philosophy in a curriculum of Global Philosophy. It will therefore start by sketching a contextualization of Tschuang-Tse. Reden und Gleichnisse, Martin Buber’s poetic (...)
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  27.  10
    The institutionalization of global strategies for the transformation of society and education in the context of critical theory.Viktor V. Zinchenko - 2015 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 7:50-66.
    The purpose. Critical social philosophy of education strives to provide a radical critique of existing models of education in the so-called Western models of democracy, creating progressive alternative models. In this context, the proposed integrative metatheory, which is based on classical and modern sources, concepts, aims for a comprehensive understanding and reconstruction of the phenomenon of education. One of the main tasks in the sphere of education’s democratization today, therefore, is to bring to education the results of restructuring and (...)
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  28.  10
    The institutionalization of global strategies for the transformation of society and education in the context of critical theory.Viktor V. Zinchenko - 2015 - Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research 7:50-66.
    The purpose. Critical social philosophy of education strives to provide a radical critique of existing models of education in the so-called Western models of democracy, creating progressive alternative models. In this context, the proposed integrative metatheory, which is based on classical and modern sources, concepts, aims for a comprehensive understanding and reconstruction of the phenomenon of education. One of the main tasks in the sphere of education’s democratization today, therefore, is to bring to education the results of restructuring and (...)
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  29. From Financial Crisis to World-Slump: Accumulation, Financialisation, and the Global Slowdown.David McNally - 2009 - Historical Materialism 17 (2):35-83.
    This paper assesses the current world economic crisis in terms of crucial transformations in global capitalism throughout the neoliberal period. It argues that intense social and spatial restructuring after the crises of 1973–82 produced a new wave of capitalist expansion that began to exhaust itself in the late-1990s. Since that time, new problems of overaccumulation and declining profitability have plagued global capitalism. Interconnected with these problems are contradictions related to a mutation in the form of world-money, as (...)
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  30. lhe Ethics of Organizational Transformation: Mergers, Takeovers and.Corporate Restructuring - forthcoming - Business Ethics.
     
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  31.  30
    Health as freedom: Addressing social determinants of global health inequities through the human right to development.F. O. X. M. & BENJAMIN MASON MEIER - 2009 - Bioethics 23 (2):112-122.
    In spite of vast global improvements in living standards, health, and well-being, the persistence of absolute poverty and its attendant maladies remains an unsettling fact of life for billions around the world and constitutes the primary cause for the failure of developing states to improve the health of their peoples. While economic development in developing countries is necessary to provide for underlying determinants of health – most prominently, poverty reduction and the building of comprehensive primary health systems – inequalities (...)
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  32.  70
    Health as Freedom: Addressing Social Determinants of Global Health Inequities Through the Human Right to Development.Ashleym Fox - 2009 - Bioethics 23 (2):112-122.
    ABSTRACT In spite of vast global improvements in living standards, health, and well‐being, the persistence of absolute poverty and its attendant maladies remains an unsettling fact of life for billions around the world and constitutes the primary cause for the failure of developing states to improve the health of their peoples. While economic development in developing countries is necessary to provide for underlying determinants of health – most prominently, poverty reduction and the building of comprehensive primary health systems – (...)
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  33.  30
    Substituting 'H2 for C' and reducing global inequalities in health.Paul Bellaby, Rob Flynn & Miriam Ricci - 2011 - Journal of Global Ethics 7 (1):91 - 103.
    Life expectancy and health differ greatly between emerging and developed countries and within countries. Global dependence on fossil fuels contributes to health inequalities through air pollution, the geopolitics of scarce resources and probable climate change arising from global warming. Substituting for fossil fuels (C), hydrogen (H2), as vector and store of energy produced from low-carbon and/or renewable sources could reduce health inequalities by improving the environment. It is unlikely that the global market would initiate such a change. (...)
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  34.  36
    Achieving Health Equity on a Global Scale through a Community-Based, Public Health Framework for Action.Laura Anderko - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (3):486-489.
    Despite good intentions and decades of discussion addressing the need for transformative changes globally to reduce poverty and improve health equity, little progress has been made. A fundamental shift in framing the current conversation is critical to achieve “health for all,” moving away from the traditional approaches that use the more narrowly focused medical model, which is intent on treating and curing disease. A public health framework for action is needed, which recognizes and confronts the complex, and often-times difficult-to-achieve social (...)
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  35.  8
    Religion, the Enlightenment, and the New Global Order.John M. Owen Iv & J. Judd Owen (eds.) - 2011 - Columbia University Press.
    Largely due to the cultural and political shift of the Enlightenment, Western societies in the eighteenth century emerged from sectarian conflict and embraced a more religiously moderate path. In nine original essays, leading scholars ask whether exporting the Enlightenment solution is possible—or even desirable—today. Contributors begin by revisiting the Enlightenment's restructuring of the West, examining its ongoing encounters with Protestant and Catholic Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Hinduism. While acknowledging the necessity of the Enlightenment emphasis on toleration and peaceful religious (...)
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  36.  25
    Global climate change triggered by global warming.Triggered by Global Warming - 2009 - In Kendrick Frazier (ed.), Science Under Siege: Defending Science, Exposing Pseudoscience. Prometheus.
  37.  66
    Noble goals and challenging terrain: Organic and fair trade coffee movements in the global marketplace. [REVIEW]Robert A. Rice - 2001 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 14 (1):39-66.
    Social relations associated with conventional agricultural exports find their origins in long term associations based on business, family, and class alliances. Working outside these boundaries presents a host of challenges, especially where small producers with little economic or political power are concerned. Yet, in many developing countries, alternative trade organizations (ATOs) based on philosophies of social justice and/or environmental well-being are carving out spaces alongside traditional agricultural export sectors by establishing new channels of trade and marketing. Coffee provides a case (...)
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  38. Russo Giovanni.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (4-2001).
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  39. Willy Weyns.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (1-2001).
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  40. Whitehouse Peter J.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (4-2001).
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  41. Mauro Tognon1 and Paolo Carinci2.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (2-2001).
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  42. Potter VR.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (4-2001).
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  43. Williams Erin D.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (4-2001).
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  44. János I. Tóth.Global Bioethics - 2000 - Global Bioethics 13 (3-4).
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  45. Sakamoto Hyakudai.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 15 (3-2002).
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  46. Lower GM Jr.Global Bioethics - unknown - Global Bioethics 14 (4-2001).
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  47. Henri JM Claessen.Global Bioethics - 2000 - Global Bioethics 13 (1-2).
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  48. Elliott P. Skinner.Global Bioethics - 2000 - Global Bioethics 13 (1-2).
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  49. Magdolna Szente.Global Bioethics - 2000 - Global Bioethics 13 (3-4).
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  50. Milani-Comparetti M.Global Bioethics - 1999 - Global Bioethics 12 (1-4):65-76.
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