Legal Enforcement of Morality*
In: From the Bottom Up, S. 135-148
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In: From the Bottom Up, S. 135-148
In: Christian B. Miller and Ryan West (eds.), Integrity, Honesty, and Truth-Seeking, Forthcoming
SSRN
Working paper
In: Canadian public policy: Analyse de politiques, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 416
ISSN: 1911-9917
In: Journal of economics, Band 116, Heft 3, S. 247-270
ISSN: 1617-7134
In: Theory and society: renewal and critique in social theory, Band 43, Heft 6, S. 589-615
ISSN: 1573-7853
Indonesia is geographically located in a strategic position between two continents, Asia and Australia, and two oceans,the Pacific and Indian Ocean. This factor allows many foreign ships to pass or anchor within Indonesian waters for trade and military purposes. Right of innocent passage applies to foreign ships and aircraft within the territorial sea. Foreign ships and aircraft are not allowed to engage in activities or crimes endangering the sovereignty of a nation or perform any violations towards the right of innocent passage. The legal purpose of this research is to know whether innocent passage endangers national sovereignty and learn how the law enforcements protect Indonesian territorial sea from foreign ships. The use of normative legal research reveals that the right of innocent passage in Indonesian waters is regulated in Law No. 17 of 1985 made as a ratification for the 1982 UNCLOS and the Institutions authorized to perform law enforcement in the sea through the employment of patrol task forces, namely Indonesian Naval force, Directorate of Water Police, Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries and Indonesian Maritime Security Board.
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SSRN
In: European Financial Management, forthcoming
SSRN
SSRN
Working paper
In: Journal of contemporary China, Band 22, Heft 79, S. 93-108
ISSN: 1067-0564
Successive governments have sought to address the enduring problem of corruption in Macao. Yet the institutional framework for dealing with corrupt practices has singularly failed to live up to political promises and public expectations of clean government. The Ao Man-long case, in which a former Secretary for Transport and Public Works was found guilty of corrupt practices involving an estimated $800 million (about US$100 million), rocked public confidence in the anti-corruption institutions and gave credence to the widely-held view that an expanded gaming industry had provided more opportunities for illicit behavior. Diagnosing the causes of failure suggests that neither a lack of resources nor the absence of rules serves to explain the continuing high levels of bureaucratic corruption. Rather the explanation for the failure of the institutional framework lies in the content of the rules and the way in which they are implemented. While this situation continues to persist, it is unlikely that the problem of bureaucratic corruption will be resolved or that its wider impact on the government's legitimacy will be reduced. (J Contemp China/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of contemporary China, Band 22, Heft 79, S. 93-108
ISSN: 1469-9400
In: Freedom of Artistic Expression : Essays on Culture and Legal Censure
Bio medical is generated by the hospital during the diagnosis, treatment of human beings or animals. The form of biomedical waste is solid as well as liquid form. The basic components of bio medical waste consist of human anatomical waste, micro biology and bio technology waste, waste sharps, discarded medicines and cytotoxic drugs, soiled waste, solid waste, liquid waste generated from any of the infected areas, animal waste, incineration ash, chemical waste etc. The bio medical waste generated by the hospital is very dangerous and affects the human health and to the environment there to. Even though there are Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules implemented in India, but it"s not able to manage the bio medical waste management effectively. It has its own loop holes to control the mishandling of Bio Medical waste generated by the private as well as government hospital. The bio medical waste management follows the four essential steps: Biomedical waste generation, biomedical waste segregation, collection and storage, biomedical waste handling and transportation, biomedical waste treatment and disposal. The hospital must give all the required effluent treatment to disinfect before disposing of the bio medical waste. This study mainly highlights on the health related issues of bio medical waste, sources of biomedical waste, the role of private and government hospital while handling the bio medical waste, existing law in India and its limitation as well as the socio-economic implementation of bio medical waste management rules in India
BASE
Bio medical is generated by the hospital during the diagnosis, treatment of human beings or animals. The form of biomedical waste is solid as well as liquid form. The basic components of bio medical waste consist of human anatomical waste, micro biology and bio technology waste, waste sharps, discarded medicines and cytotoxic drugs, soiled waste, solid waste, liquid waste generated from any of the infected areas, animal waste, incineration ash, chemical waste etc. The bio medical waste generated by the hospital is very dangerous and affects the human health and to the environment there to. Even though there are Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules implemented in India, but it's not able to manage the bio medical waste management effectively. It has its own loop holes to control the mishandling of Bio Medical waste generated by the private as well as government hospital. The bio medical waste management follows the four essential steps: Biomedical waste generation, biomedical waste segregation, collection and storage, biomedical waste handling and transportation, biomedical waste treatment and disposal. The hospital must give all the required effluent treatment to disinfect before disposing of the bio medical waste. This study mainly highlights on the health related issues of bio medical waste, sources of biomedical waste, the role of private and government hospital while handling the bio medical waste, existing law in India and its limitation as well as the socio-economic implementation of bio medical waste management rules in India.
BASE
Bio medical is generated by the hospital during the diagnosis, treatment of human beings or animals. The form of biomedical waste is solid as well as liquid form. The basic components of bio medical waste consist of human anatomical waste, micro biology and bio technology waste, waste sharps, discarded medicines and cytotoxic drugs, soiled waste, solid waste, liquid waste generated from any of the infected areas, animal waste, incineration ash, chemical waste etc. The bio medical waste generated by the hospital is very dangerous and affects the human health and to the environment there to. Even though there are Bio-Medical Waste Management Rules implemented in India, but it"s not able to manage the bio medical waste management effectively. It has its own loop holes to control the mishandling of Bio Medical waste generated by the private as well as government hospital. The bio medical waste management follows the four essential steps: Biomedical waste generation, biomedical waste segregation, collection and storage, biomedical waste handling and transportation, biomedical waste treatment and disposal. The hospital must give all the required effluent treatment to disinfect before disposing of the bio medical waste. This study mainly highlights on the health related issues of bio medical waste, sources of biomedical waste, the role of private and government hospital while handling the bio medical waste, existing law in India and its limitation as well as the socio-economic implementation of bio medical waste management rules in India
BASE