scholarly journals The Brussels convention: a still-born child

2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-252
Author(s):  
Maria O'Neill

N/A

1999 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 302-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerry Maher ◽  
Barry J. Rodger

It is a well-known facet of litigation that the first step is often more important than any to follow. Virtually all legal systems bestow on litigants a variety of interim and provisional remedies. These remedies have a number of different functions and rationales but two in particular are thought to be fundamental.1 First, protective remedies provide a litigant with a degree of protection by ensuring that the status quo is preserved while the litigation is proceeding; second, these remedies secure the position of a litigant not only during the course of an action but also once it is over and he has judgment in his favour. This second function is usually achieved, in one way or another, by tying up and freezing the property of the other party to the action.2 However, protective remedies also serve other functions. Some remedies exist to promote the interest of a party in the advancement of his case (e.g. orders for disclosure of evidence), whereas others provide a litigant with part of the overall final remedy or judgment that he is seeking to gain from the action (e.g. interim payment or interim damages).


Author(s):  
Inesa Shumilo ◽  
◽  
Mirra Blyzniuk ◽  

The article is devoted complex research of problem of defence of rights for children, bear as a result of application of auxiliary genesial technology – substitute maternity. In research the basic conceptual going is described near determination of origin of bear by a substitute a mother child, the problem of absence of the legislative adjusting of legal status of embryo of man is set, conceived in-vitro and the ways of its decision are offered. Attention is accented on the ambiguousness of the legal adjusting of the phenomenon of substitute maternity in the world. In research the possible risks of unhonesty of medical establishments which give services in auxiliary genesial technologies, and consequences of errors of doctors-reproduktologists, are analysed as subsequent limitation of rights for a child by a foreign country on the example of case of «Paradizo and Kampanelli v. Italy». Pointlessness of the legislative fixing of term, during which a substitute mother must give a consent to registration of persons the parents of child, is set, taking into account possible manipulations from the side of substitute mother and potential loss by the new-born child of parents in the case of death of substitute mother to signing of the proper consent. In research the role of the Ukrainian national courts is analysed in establishment of legal fact of domestic relations between parents and new-born child for confession of state power of birth certificates, given out the Ukrainian organs of state civil registration foreign organs. Concentrated attention on absence of permanent practice of national courts in relation to determination of type of judicial realization as in certain cases a court specifies on the substitution of concepts «establishment of legal fact of domestic relations» and «confession of paternity declarants». As a result of research a conclusion is done about the necessity of development of international convention, which will fasten the standards of defence of rights for children, bear as a result of application of auxiliary genesial technologies, and also outlined tasks which appear before a national legislator and Ukrainian courts, to provide the high-quality legal adjusting of substitute maternity, taking into account rights for a child above all things.


1908 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 368-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph L. Nichols
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 345-367
Author(s):  
Gaëlle Deharo ◽  
Allane Madanamoothoo
Keyword(s):  

Abstract If globalisation has led to a greater mobility of people specific issues have emerged with the current coronavirus pandemic. Consequently, extreme measures have been taken worldwide to flatten the curb of the virus. From lockdowns to several levels of isolation these measures have worked undoubtedly for some situations. Nonetheless, these same measures have sown chaos in other situations. One good example is surrogacy especially when this practice is undergone overseas, revealing the legal insecurity of the use of surrogacy whether for the intended parents, the surrogate born child or the surrogate mother for whom the risks have heightened.


2012 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosella Rettaroli ◽  
Francesco Scalone

A longitudinal, micro-level study of the effect of socioeconomic transformations on fertility mechanisms in the rural hinterland of Bologna between 1818 and 1900 (the beginning of the demographic transition) demonstrates that the premature death of a last-born child reduces the interval between two consecutive childbirths. Thus does it confirm the importance of breast-feeding in determining birth spacing. Women living in complex sharecropping households experienced a significantly higher risk of childbirth than did women in families headed by daily wage earners. In addition, the reproductive behavior of sharecroppers seemed to be substantially invariant to short-term fluctuations in prices, whereas the laborers' group experienced a negative price effect. Both descriptive and multivariate analyses indicate a slight and gradual decrease in fertility levels during the period in question.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
pp. 934-934
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

Nicholas Culpeper (1616-1654) is the author of the first medical book published in the British North American colonies.1 The book, published in Boston in 1708, more than 50 years after the author's death, and titled The English Physician, is a small (approximately 3 x 5 inches) publication of only 94 pages, meant for the lay reader, and contains some of the author's "Choicest Secrets in the Art of Physick."2 Some of Culpeper's prescriptions under Children's Infirmities are these: To prevent the Falling Sickness, and Convulsions Take of red Coral in powder 10 Grains, give it in Breast milk to a new Born Child, for the first Food it takes after its Birth. It mightly strengthens the Brain. To make them Teeth easily Take pure Capons Grease well clarified, as much as a Nutmeg, twice as much Honey, then mix them together three or four times in a day anoint the Gums when they are teething. Against Agues and Fevers, coming by pain in breeding of Teeth, or otherwise. Take one spoonful of Ungent Populeon, two spoonfuls of Oyl of Roses, mix them, then before the Fire anoint the Childs bowing places of his Arms, Legs, soles of its Feet, Fore-head and Temples, twice a Day, Chasing it well with a warm Hand. Against the Worms Take Myrrh and Aloes of each alike, finely powdered; and with a few drops of Chymical Oyl of Wormwood, or Savin, with a little Turpentine, mix them, and make them up for a Plaister for the Childs Navel.


Author(s):  
Thomas Hardy
Keyword(s):  

There was now a distinct manifestation of morning in the air, and presently the bleared white visage of a sunless winter day emerged like a dead-born child. The woodlanders everywhere had already bestirred themselves, rising this month of the year at the far less...


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document