comparative development
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Nemţoi ◽  

Private life it is essential is a right, along with other rights, shapes the human being, giving it value and identity. In this consensus, the legislator through the Romanian civil code sought to impose a series of deeds aimed at infringing on private life. Thus, the listed facts can be considered as violations of private life only subject to the presented of Civil Code (Romanian Civil Code, 2009). This means that the facts indicated in art. 74 of Civil Code they cannot be qualified under any circumstances as violations of private life, but only if they are not among the violations allowed by the international conventions and pacts ratified by Romania. More specifically, those acts do not attract civil liability (payment of compensation, etc.) if they have infringed the particular life allowed under the Convention and the jurisprudence of the ECHR. The private life must be protected and guaranteed by establishing and identifying actions that are prejudicial. The article is a study that in of regulations standards demonstrate violations of the right to life. Comparative development of ECHR case law pointed out that although there is a solid legislative framework, the right to life can be violated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raul E. Diaz ◽  
Elizabeth A. Taylor‐Diaz ◽  
Paul A. Trainor ◽  
Rui Diogo ◽  
Julia L. Molnar

Author(s):  
Carl-Johan Dalgaard ◽  
Jakob B. Madsen ◽  
Holger Strulik

AbstractIt is a well known fact that economic development and distance to the equator are positively correlated variables in the world today. It is perhaps less well known that as recently as 1500 C.E. it was the other way around. The present paper provides a theory of why the ‘latitude gradient’ changed sign in the course of the last half millennium. In particular, we develop a dynamic model of economic and physiological development in which households decide upon the number and nutrition of their offspring. In this setting we demonstrate that relatively high metabolic costs of fertility, which may have emerged due to positive selection towards greater cold tolerance in locations away from the equator, would work to stifle economic development during pre-industrial times, yet allow for an early onset of sustained growth. As a result, the theory suggests a reversal of fortune whereby economic activity gradually shifts away from the equator in the process of long-term economic development. Our empirical results give supporting evidence for our hypothesis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 480 ◽  
pp. 118688
Author(s):  
Stephen C. Sillett ◽  
Russell D. Kramer ◽  
Robert Van Pelt ◽  
Allyson L. Carroll ◽  
Jim Campbell-Spickler ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ideen A Riahi

Abstract This paper revisits the macro-level relationship between human genetic variation (genetic distance and diversity) and economic development. If other continents were biogeographically more similar to Eurasia, their populations’ capacities to ward off the adverse effects of European colonization would have been much higher and, thus, their economies considerably more prosperous today. At the continental scale, genetic differences between people do not matter for comparative development.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (16) ◽  
pp. 3223-3230.e4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna R. Ryba ◽  
Sean K. McKenzie ◽  
Leonora Olivos-Cisneros ◽  
E. Josephine Clowney ◽  
Peter Mussells Pires ◽  
...  

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