scholarly journals The review about the procedural problem of the governor of Jeju case

2009 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 455-476
Author(s):  
이주일
Keyword(s):  
1979 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howard S. Adelman

As the diagnosis of learning disabilities has become widespread and commonplace, considerable debate has raged over the issue of labeling. Since the polemics have generated some confusion, it is important that professionals not lose sight of the major purposes and serious concerns related to diagnostic practices. In a two-part series, Adelman will (1) highlight why diagnostic procedures are necessary and why it is difficult to arrive at a valid diagnosis and (2) offer some perspectives on research and ethical considerations related to current LD diagnostic practices. In this first article, discussion of purposes and problems involved in diagnosing LD focuses on three topics: (a) how diagnosis relates to other assessment activity, (b) the objectives of diagnostic classification, and (c) specific conceptual concerns regarding the LD label.


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2415 (1) ◽  
pp. 54 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDRE P. AGUIAR ◽  
GARY A. P. GIBSON

A significant procedural problem in describing the leg surfaces of Hymenoptera, which has not been explicitly treated in the literature before, is identified and a mitigating solution is proposed. The first accurate, three-dimensional illustrations of the surfaces of the three pairs of legs are also provided to illustrate the problem and the proposed solution. In Hymenoptera, the orientation of the front, middle and hind pairs of legs relative to the body can and often do differ in direction by up to 180º between the front and hind legs. Furthermore, the tibiae and tarsi are usually held at an abrupt angle relative to the femora. Because of this, the terms anterior, posterior, lateral, outer, mesal, inner, dorsal, and ventral, when applied to surfaces of different parts of different legs will frequently refer to non-homologous areas depending on whether the terms are interpreted or used in an anatomic sense or based on the specific direction and orientation of the part of the leg being described (vernacular sense). Authors often use the vernacular interpretation, but we show that such usage makes the terminology on average 53.1% incompatible for the same anatomical surfaces of the femora, tibiae and tarsi of the three sets of legs. To create equivalence between anatomical and vernacular senses, four intuitive vernacular terms are proposed as explanatory or auxiliary terms for the anatomical terms “dorsal”, “ventral” “anterior”, and “posterior”, respectively, kickface, gripface, foreface, and backface. The terms are proposed as auxiliary or explanatory terms and not as substitutes for the anatomical terms.


1981 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Z. Feller

1. General: The topic under discussion relates to the incidence of the criminal laws of more than one state applying to the same offence, committed by the same person, and the question with which we are confronted is how—if at all—this phenomenon may be prevented, and, if it is inevitable, and if remedies are called for, what are the available remedies.The topic falls within the orbit of international criminal law as a branch of law comprising the system of norms of domestic criminal law, which regulates matters containing a foreign element, and of international law, which regulates matters containing a criminal element. And indeed, concurrent incidence of criminal laws as aforesaid is the fruit of the regulation by norms of this nature.In order to provide answers to the questions concerning concurrent jurisdiction as a consequence of the concurrent incidence of the criminal laws of several states, it is necessary to answer a preliminary question, i.e., is the problem of concurrent jurisdiction a procedural problem of distribution of the judicial functions amongst the courts of a number of states, or, rather, is it a fundamental, substantive problem, of which judicial competence is only the result?


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document