The New Permanent Court of Arbitration Optional Rules
In: ICSID review: foreign investment law journal, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 237-240
ISSN: 2049-1999
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In: ICSID review: foreign investment law journal, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 237-240
ISSN: 2049-1999
In: Intelligence and Security Informatics; Lecture Notes in Computer Science, S. 387-387
In: ECA: Estudios Centroamericanos, Band 47, Heft 528, S. 889-893
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ECA Estudios Centroamericanos, Vol. 47, No. 528, 1992: 889-893.
In: National municipal review, Band 8, Heft 10, S. 726-727
Rationing healthcare is a difficult task, which includes preventing patients from accessing potentially beneficial treatments. Proponents of implicit rationing argue that politicians cannot resist pressure from strong patient groups for treatments and conclude that physicians should ration without informing patients or the public. The authors subdivide this specific programme of implicit rationing, or "hidden rationing", into local hidden rationing, unsophisticated global hidden rationing and sophisticated global hidden rationing. They evaluate the appropriateness of these methods of rationing from the perspectives of individual and political autonomy and conclude that local hidden rationing and unsophisticated global hidden rationing clearly violate patients' individual autonomy, that is, their right to participate in medical decision‐making. While sophisticated global hidden rationing avoids this charge, the authors point out that it nonetheless violates the political autonomy of patients, that is, their right to engage in public affairs as citizens. A defence of any of the forms of hidden rationing is therefore considered to be incompatible with a defence of autonomy.
BASE
In: NATO Science Series, Series 2: Environmental Security 57
The protection of the environment is one of the most important problems facing us today. Reliable and robust strategies for keeping pollution caused by harmful chemicals under safe levels have to be developed and used routinely. Large mathematical models, incorporating all important physical and chemical processes, can solve this task, but the computational burden is huge. The papers presented here describe some of the difficult problems that have to be solved during the development of large scale air pollution models, and different ways to solve them. The work involves combined research by specialists in the fields of environmental modelling, numerical analysis and scientific computing. Further, if models are to run in real time (which may be vital in the case of accidental hazardous releases), then new and efficient methods that harness the potential power of parallel supercomputers must be developed, so that actual computing speed starts to approach the maximum available performance. The articles are understandable by specialists in the field of air pollution modelling, as well as specialists in the many other related areas