scholarly journals Family law aspect of biomedically assisted conception in Serbian and European law

2010 ◽  
pp. 415-430
Author(s):  
Gordana Kovacek-Stanic

Free access to biomedically assisted conception for the couples of less than 40 years of age has been introduced in Serbia recently, while in 2009 the Act on curing infertility by biomedically assisted conception was adopted. In this paper the following issues are discussed: notion of biomedically assisted conception, participants in the process, donors, motherhood and fatherhood, status of spare embryos. The author concludes that even though Serbia is one of the last European countries to adopt the Act on biomedically assisted conception and there was an opportunity to use the experiences of other countries in this field and to adopt an act which would be theoretically meaningful and clear, unfortunately this opportunity was not taken. The author expresses hope that the Act would be changed in a near future, in order to clear the lack of clarity and contradictions and harmonize legal solutions with theoretical legal principles in this field. In this paper the author uses comparative method comparing Serbian legislation and legislation of different European countries. .

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Per Egil Kummervold ◽  
Rolf Wynn

The aim of this study was to summarize and analyse findings from four prior studies on the use of the Internet as a source of health information in five European countries (Norway, Denmark, Germany, Greece, and Portugal). A cross-study comparison of data was performed. All the studies included fit with a trend of a sharp and continuous growth in the use of the Internet for health information access in the major part of the last decade. Importantly, the Internet has become an important mass media source of health information in northern Europe. While the use of the Internet for health information is somewhat less common in the south European countries, its use is also clearly increasing there. We discuss the advantages of cross-study comparisons of data and methodological challenges. As the use of the Internet for health information is likely to peak in some countries in the near future, new population surveys on health information access should focus more on the details of information that is accessed and which sites that are most used and trusted.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 50-69
Author(s):  
M.Yu. LEBEDEV

In the presented article the problems of interaction between the various branches of Russian law on the basis of legal principles are considered. The author, examining such concepts as “interaction” and “interrelation” states the fact that the issue of interaction of branches of law is considered by almost all researchers only from the position of listing those branches with which their branch of law interacts. At the same time, the construction of branch norms without taking into account the principles of the branch, where and the branch, from which the legal institute is implemented, leads to conflicts. Separate attention in the work is paid to the views of V.A. Riazanovskii and other scholars on the concept of “unity of process” in the context of interaction between the principles of various branches of law. The author examines the interaction of such branches of law as civil procedural law with civil, family law, arbitration and administrative process. The article draws attention to the cases of free treatment of the legislator with the category of “principles of law”, which, in the author’s opinion, leads to significant distortions of the entire branch of law, where principles not inherent in this branch are wrongly implanted. Studying institutes of law as the main mechanism of inter-branch interaction, the author comes to the conclusion about the need for legal regulation of interaction precisely through the principles of a branch of law.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 181-191
Author(s):  
Beata Sadowska ◽  
Zimon Grzegorz ◽  
Nina Stępnicka

A defined forested area performs various functions such as economic, protective and social. Regardless of the level of civilization development and human knowledge, it cannot be stated that humans have full control over the phenomena occurring in forests or their surroundings. Forest hazards, including fire hazards, constitute a direct or indirect factor of human activity that has an effect on nature. Forest fires cause specific losses and generate costs, thus affecting a financial result. The research area of the study is forest fires and losses caused by them, i.e. determining the financial and non-financial effects of fires. The main aim of the study is to present the problem of forest fires in selected European countries, including Poland, and to determine the level of losses caused by them. The research hypothesis is: "Forest fires occurring in European countries, including Poland, cause significant losses in the natural and social environment, which forces organizations to incur costs of implementing measures to protect forest areas against fires". In the case of Poland, the area of interest is public forests managed by the State Forests National Forest Holding. The following research methods were used: critical analysis of the literature, comparative method, desk research, the method of induction and synthesis. In the field of empirical research, the current research results and studies of the Central Statistical Office and the reports of the State Forests were used.


2018 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-120
Author(s):  
Dariusz Felcenloben

The paper outlines the history of land cadastres and land and mortgage registers in Poland from the earliest times until the fi rst Partition. Against the background of the changing principles of establishing ownership, transferring or encumbering it with rights in rem or creating obligations over it, the paper describes how land and mortgage registers developed. They were modern public registers, which introduced the Polish mortgage into the legal system. Its design was far ahead of the legislation of most European countries at that time. The novelties included the principles of free access to, and reliability of, a mortgage, its legality, freedom of encumbrance, detailed character, priority of entry and, fi nally, the principle of good faith of registers.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-332
Author(s):  
Khiyaroh Khiyaroh

The Plenary Meeting of the Supreme Court is a system established to maintain the unity of the application of the law and the consistency of the judge's decision. This system is carried out every year and starts in 2011. In the plenary meeting of the Supreme Court there is a division of rooms according to the abilities of each judge divided into five rooms. Namely the criminal chamber, civil chamber, state administration room, religious chamber, and military room. In the case of the plenary chambers of religion there are a number of things that are regulated every year and there are some rules that have been reformulated. With the existence of the plenary chamber of the Supreme Court of Religion, the rules in it partly reflect the purpose of family law legislation. But there are rules that are actually on the contrary to the goals of family law legislation. This paper aims to find out how the role of SEMA as a result of the Plenary Meeting of the Supreme Court of the Supreme Court has been in accordance with the objectives of Law No.1 of 1974 concerning marriage. This research is a library research with a juridical approach by looking at the legal rules and legal principles, and is analytic descriptive. The results obtained are the rules in the SEMA as the results of the plenary meeting of religious chambers are not all in line with the objectives of the Indonesian marriage law.  Keywords: Supreme Court, Plenary Chamber, Purpose of Family Law.


2019 ◽  
pp. 113-129
Author(s):  
Edyta Kogut

The subject connected with the legal representation of a child by a parent in Poland and with the limitation of parental responsibility has become a significant issue in the area of family law. This field has long remained beyond the scope of both research and reflection. The article raises the issue of rights and obligations towards a child arising from being a parent. It also shows how the institution of limitation and deprivation of parental responsibility works. The aim of this paper is not only to analyze such a difficult subject, that is the imitation of parental authority, but the effects it has on a child as well. A comparative method and descriptive technique have been used in this study. 


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Darya Chumachenko ◽  
Tatyana Derkach ◽  
Vitalina Babenko ◽  
Marharyta Krutko ◽  
Sergey Yakubovskiy ◽  
...  

This study examines banking transformations in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) under conditions of economic liberalization, dependence between economic development of countries and efficiency of their banking systems. The comparative method and methods of economic-mathematical modeling were applied. Considering the positive correlation between financial structure and economic growth, confirmed by literature findings, the development of the financial sector can become a crucial factor in convergence for the new EU members. Analysis revealed lower depth of financial sector in Central and Eastern European countries region in comparison to the Eurozone, but higher efficiency and growth rates. Regression models confirmed the significant causality between financial sector expansion and economic growth of CEE countries, but extremely high foreign market shares in the banking sector of region create prerequisites for financial shocks transmission through contagion channel in case of economic instability in the countries of banks’ origin.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Sauvion ◽  
Jean Peccoud ◽  
Christine Meynard ◽  
David Ouvrard

Cacopsylla pruni is a psyllid that has been known since 1998 as the vector of the bacterium ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum’, responsible for the European stone fruit yellows (ESFY), a disease that affects species of Prunus. This disease is one of the major limiting factors for the production of stone fruits, most notably apricot (Prunus armeniaca) and Japanese plum (P. salicina), in all EU stone fruit-growing areas. The psyllid vector is widespread in the Western Palearctic and evidence for the presence of the phytoplasma that it transmits to species of Prunus has been found in 15 of the 27 EU countries. Recent studies showed that C. pruni is actually composed of two cryptic species that can be differentiated by molecular markers. A literature review on the distribution of C. pruni was published in 2012, but it only provided presence or absence information at the country level and without distinction between the two cryptic species. Since 2012, numerous new records of the vector in several European countries have been published. We ourselves have acquired a large amount of data from sampling in France and other European countries. We have also carried out a thorough systematic literature review to find additional records, including all the original sources mentioning C. pruni (or its synonyms) since the first description by Scopoli in 1763. Our aim was to create an exhaustive georeferenced occurrence catalogue, in particular in countries that are occasionally mentioned in literature with little detail. Finally, for countries that seem suitable for the proliferation of C. pruni (USA, Canada, Japan, China etc.), we dug deeper into literature and reliable sources (e.g. published checklists) to better substantiate its current absence from those regions. Information on the distribution ranges of these vector psyllids is of crucial interest in order to best predict the vulnerability of stone fruit producing countries to the ESFY threat in the foreseeable future. We give free access to a unique file of 1975 records of all occurrence data in our possession concerning C. pruni, that we have gathered through more than twenty years of sampling efforts in Europe or through intensive text mining. We have made every effort to retrieve the source information for the records extracted from literature (1201 records). Thus, we always give the title of the original reference, together with the page(s) citing C. pruni and, if possible, the year of sampling. To make the results of this survey publicly available, we give a URL to access the literature sources. In most cases, this link allows free downloads of a PDF file. We also give access to information extracted from GBIF (162 exploitable data points on 245 occurrences found in the database), which we thoroughly checked and often supplemented to make the information more easily exploitable. We give access to our own unpublished georeferenced and genotyped records from 612 samples taken over the last 20 years in several European countries (Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain etc.). These include two countries (Portugal and North Macedonia), for which the presence of C. pruni had not been reported before. As our specimens have been genotyped (74 sites with species A solely, 202 with species B solely and 310 with species A+B), our new data enable a better overview of the geographical distribution of the two cryptic species at the Palaearctic scale.


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