scholarly journals The road to federalism : finding the middle ground in Nepal, Myanmar and Sri Lanka

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Michael Gerard Breen
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Kurt Sylvan ◽  
Ernest Sosa

This chapter defends a middle ground between two extremes in the literature on the place of reasons in epistemology. Against members of the “reasons first” movement, we argue that reasons are not the sole grounds of epistemic normativity. We suggest that the virtue-theoretic property of competence is rather the key building block. To support this approach, we note that reasons must be possessed to ground central epistemic properties, and argue that possession is grounded in competence. But while we here diverge with reasons-firsters, we also distance ourselves from those who deem reasons unimportant. Indeed, we hold that having sufficient epistemic reasons is necessary and sufficient for propositional justification, and that proper basing on them yields doxastic justification. But since possession and proper basing are grounded in competence, reasons are not the end of the road: competence enables them to do their work, putting them—and us—in the middle.


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 387-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Rose

The day I leave Ampara on Sri Lanka's east coast, a wild elephant kills a woman and severely injures two others on the road near my house. This is the second fatal attack in town this year and, as before, the animal is rounded up and bundled back to the jungle in a truck. The incident seems to encapsulate something important about the nature of Sri Lanka: dark forces coiled beneath an appearance of calm. In the past month, for example, three security guards have been gunned down at hospitals in Ampara, Batticaloa and Sammanthurai. Yet the world of crisp nursing bonnets and clinical order remains intact throughout. No one knows who the killers were or how they chose their victims, but in this smoke and mirror conflict, rumours are fuelled of a final push by one side or the other. Then nothing happens, just more of the same, daily isolated encounters, as if it were in no one's interest to go for all-out war. Meanwhile the world's attention moves on to Lebanon.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thangamani Bhavan

The purpose of this study is to disclose accident-related indices and investigate the extent to which the road accidents impact on the economic performance of Sri Lanka during the period from 1977 to 2016. Annual time-series data are used to evaluate the accident indices for econometric analysis. Augmented Dickey–Fuller (ADF) unit root analysis and Johansen’s maximum likelihood estimator of the parameters of a cointegrating vector error correction model (VECM) are employed to test the stationary properties of the time series and to examine the long-run relationship between the variables, respectively. The results derived from the analysis confirm the existence of long-run relationship between the accident-related indices and macroeconomic indicators. The long-run elasticity values imply the signs and magnitude of impact of the accident indices on macroeconomic indicators. JEL: R41, H510, I310, I32


2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadira D Karunaweera ◽  
Gawrie NL Galappaththy ◽  
Dyann F Wirth

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
P.K. Nalaka ◽  
M. S. R. Akther ◽  
G. Naveendrakumar

In this study, the southern expressway, which is the first and lengthiest E class highway (126 km) in Sri Lanka, was analysed for roadside accident incidences. The primary objective of this paper is to identify the best-fit interpolation techniques for the hotspots' most distinctive causes of vehicular crashes. The accident details were collected from the Police Headquarters consisting of 966 accidents that took place during the period from 2015 to 2017. To identify accident hotspots, GIS-based interpolation techniques such as Ordinary Kriging, Kernel Density Estimation (KDE), Inverse Distance Weighting (IDW), and Nearest Neighbour Interpolation methods were used. The spatial interpolation outcome of the four methods was compared based on the standard Prediction Accuracy Index (PAI). The analysis was executed using QGIS and GeoDa. Results of PAI revealed that an IDW and KDE outperformed the other two interpolation methods. The left and right lanes of the expressway, spotted with 11 and 20 hotspots, respectively, indicate the right lane was 50% more prone to accidents than the left lane. Notably, nearly 5% of the entire road stretch is estimated as accident-prone spots in both lanes. Peak accidents were recorded during afternoon and evening hours, and buses were the most active vehicle type. Uncontrolled speeding was the primary reason for more than 50% of the accidents, while unsuccessful overtake accounted for more than 20% of the accidents on the highway. The road design modifications and warning sign placements at appropriate places may be recommended as countermeasures.


Author(s):  
Shameen Randika Dharmasena ◽  
Edirisooriya Arachchige Tharanga Suresh

The Road Landscape creates the character and the spatial quality for safe driving. It is evident that the spatial qualities of the road landscape have impacted on road accidents once the field data is analyzed. Identification of accident-prone areas (Black-Spots) is the vital factor for road safety management process. The study focused on to developing a methodology to visually analyze road landscape with using identified Black-Spots in Southern Expressway, Sri Lanka. Data is collected and analyzed as two phases; one is from recorded accidents data and other from a live recording of the expressway driving stretch. This study highlighted the possibilities of analyzing the identified ‘Black-spots’ by using Photo-Fixation method. In conclusion, the study emphasizes the possibility of using a qualitative methodology to analyze the road landscape through spatial characteristics; which can be developed up to a more advanced level to identifying driving behavior related accidents and to take migratory actions.


1996 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 416
Author(s):  
J. E. (Ted) Fulcher

The article examines the judicial development of the Charter's equality provision. The author proposes a "middle-of-the-road" or contextual approach as the most preferable path for this development. He canvasses the approaches to either side of the "middle ground," those of the democrats and the civil libertarians. He argues that both of these more extreme positions should be discouraged in favour of the more "equivocal" contextual approach. After explaining how the contextual approach has arisen and been developed in recent Supreme Court cases, the author examines this methodology with respect to the interpretation of the Income Tax Act He then utilizes the methodology to resolve some difficult factual situations arising from application of the Income Tax Act.


Author(s):  
Bernadette C. Hayes ◽  
John D. Brewer
Keyword(s):  

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