Literatura académica sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

Crea una cita precisa en los estilos APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard y otros

Elija tipo de fuente:

Consulte las listas temáticas de artículos, libros, tesis, actas de conferencias y otras fuentes académicas sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights".

Junto a cada fuente en la lista de referencias hay un botón "Agregar a la bibliografía". Pulsa este botón, y generaremos automáticamente la referencia bibliográfica para la obra elegida en el estilo de cita que necesites: APA, MLA, Harvard, Vancouver, Chicago, etc.

También puede descargar el texto completo de la publicación académica en formato pdf y leer en línea su resumen siempre que esté disponible en los metadatos.

Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

1

Mujuzi, Jamil Ddamulira. "The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights and the Admissibility of Evidence Obtained as a Result of Torture, Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights and Interights v Arab Republic of Egypt". International Journal of Evidence & Proof 17, n.º 3 (julio de 2013): 284–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1350/ijep.2013.17.3.431.

Texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Kamal, Hala. "Inserting women’s rights in the Egyptian constitution: personal reflections". Journal for Cultural Research 19, n.º 2 (13 de marzo de 2015): 150–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14797585.2014.982919.

Texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

Alkhaled, Mohamad. "The Survival of Sharia Islamic Divorce Law in the Syrian and Egyptian Personal Status Laws". DÍKÉ 5, n.º 1 (1 de septiembre de 2021): 190–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.15170/dike.2021.05.01.13.

Texto completo
Resumen
The family law was not codified in both Syria and Egypt until 1917 when the Ottomans issued the Ottoman Family Rights Law, which applied to Muslims, Christians, and Jews each according to its provisions. This Ottoman Family Rights Law and the book of the Egyptian scholar Muhammad Qadri Pasha (‘Legal Ruling on Personal Status’) formed the first core of personal status laws in both Egypt and Syria, which s explains the survival of Islamic law to this day in personal status laws, in contrast to other branches of law. This paper presents a comparative study between the Egyptian Personal Status Law No. 25 of 1920, and the Syrian Personal Status Law No. 59 of 1953, regarding divorce provisions.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

Committee for Justice-Geneva. "Stand by lives: depoliticizing families of political prisoners in post-revolution Egypt". Deusto Journal of Human Rights, n.º 10 (30 de diciembre de 2022): 211–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.18543/djhr.2611.

Texto completo
Resumen
Since 2017, Committee for Justice has been working on monitoring and verifying human rights violations inside Egyptian prisons and places of detention under its project «Detention Watch». Based on findings of in-depth interviews with 10 relatives of political prisoners during March and September 2022, this article presents the cases of families who are active and inactive social and economic agents representing different groups of the Egyptian population. It focuses on the impact of human rights violations on depoliticizing relatives of political prisoners –wives, parents, and children– and how this affected their efforts to over the economic hardship, as well as their attitudes regarding migration, protesting, and political reconciliation with the regime. In doing so, the article mires to explore the personal, economic, social, and political results of repression and how these have led to increased depoliticization among individuals who are affected indirectly by human rights violations. Received: 20 May 2022 Accepted: 16 November 2022
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Jamil, Badar y Muhammad Tahir. "Facts and Figures: Minorities, Human Rights Violation in Pakistan, and Government Initiative to Counter Such Violations". Global Political Review IX, n.º I (30 de marzo de 2022): 37–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gpr.2024(ix-i).05.

Texto completo
Resumen
In the instant Article, we will analyze the reports, articles, and surveys conducted in Pakistan regarding Human Rights Violation to the Minorities groups, although Pakistan is known for its liberal thoughts and cultural diversity, some extremist groups all over Pakistan target minority group some time due to religious sentiments, some time due to political reason and some time for their own personal needs. Human Rights Watch and HRCP highlighted the Rights violations of such individual groups in their yearly reports each year. We have mentioned the recommendation with figures, wherein it was seen that the High Numbers of Population group is fleeing away from the country, whereas the role of Government in tackling the issue is also commendable by various press releases, they have made their positive contribution in fighting against violations.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Martín-Gutiérrez, Ángela, Elisabet Montoro-Fernández y Ana Dominguez-Quintero. "Towards Quality Education: An Entrepreneurship Education Program for the Improvement of Self-Efficacy and Personal Initiative of Adolescents". Social Sciences 13, n.º 1 (26 de diciembre de 2023): 23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci13010023.

Texto completo
Resumen
In recent decades, youth unemployment has been the focus of attention of international and community bodies in the area of social rights. Specifically, there is a need to promote attitudes and skills to access employment, decent work, and entrepreneurship. The measures implemented have not been effective. In 2023, Spain had the highest youth unemployment rate in the European Union (29.6%). An improvement in the level and quality of education and training of young people would reduce their level of unemployment. Entrepreneurship education is, therefore, a necessary value in the society of the 21st century since it is a tool for the development and growth of the younger population. In the entrepreneurship education model proposed in this study for adolescents, we focus on the capacities of self-efficacy and personal initiative as precursors of entrepreneurial behavior. This paper analyzes the differences between the mean values of the variables before and after the implementation of the educational program and the influence or correlation between the variables. The main results are threefold: (i) the educational program implemented improves the mean values of the two variables analyzed; (ii) self-efficacy exerts a positive or direct influence on personal initiative, and (iii) the educational program improves or reinforces the positive influence of self-efficacy on personal initiative.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
7

Wilson, Christopher y Alexandra Dunn. "Contingency and Hybridity in the Study of Digital Advocacy Networks". International Journal of Information Communication Technologies and Human Development 4, n.º 2 (abril de 2012): 61–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jicthd.2012040105.

Texto completo
Resumen
This article proposes an analytic approach for the study of ICTs in contentious politics and human rights advocacy. By applying the analytical frames of contingency and hybridity to study design, this approach promotes empirical analyses, strengthens data comparability, and improves understanding into how human rights activists strategically combine digital and grounded communications to respond to complex and changing environments. The authors explore this analytic approach and its implications through a close analysis of the Front to Defend Egyptian Protesters (FDEP), a Cairo-based initiative utilizing multiple digital media to mobilize support teams for arrested protesters and work toward their release. By applying the analytical frames of contingency and hybridity to FDEP activities in 2010, prior to the uprisings now commonly referred to as the Arab Spring, the authors observe a number of opportunities for targeted data collection. The authors close by observing the challenges and opportunities this poses to the contemporary study of digital activism.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
8

Hurter, Eddie. "The New .Africa Top Level Domain: An African Initiative in Ensuring Africa's Rightful Place on the Global Network". Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal/Potchefstroomse Elektroniese Regsblad 17, n.º 3 (24 de abril de 2017): 1108. http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2014/v17i3a2280.

Texto completo
Resumen
The new gTLD programme of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is the single most important development since the privatisation of the DNS in 1998. The management of the Domain Name System (DNS) has developed from a modest undertaking to its current explosive expansion through the new gTLD programme. Africa has boldly entered the arena through the delegation of the .Africa gTLD.This new development heralds an innovative era in the management of the DNS, especially for Africa. The dotAfrica gTLD launch strategy offers several advantages to African governments and traders alike. One of the innovative features of the management of dotAfrica is the fact that a broader set of rights including commercial, cultural, linguistic, religious and personal rights will be protected. Furthermore, African trade mark proprietors and other rights holders are protected, initially at least, by various innovative rights-protection mechanisms. This development is important for African governments and it should form an integral part of right holders' intellectual property management strategy.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
9

Orel, H. P. "LEGAL ENVIRONMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE CONDITIONS OF DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIAL NETWORKS". Constitutional State, n.º 43 (26 de octubre de 2021): 9–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.18524/2411-2054.2021.43.240942.

Texto completo
Resumen
This article is devoted to the consideration of the components of the legal provision ofhuman rights in the development of social networks. The issue of the legal status of persons –participants of Internet communication is considered. Such rights include: the right to association;the right to freedom of thought and speech; information rights related to the dissemination,transmission, receipt and use of information. Also, this article covers the issue of illegalmanifestations that entail violations of legal rights and interests. For an individual user, this isillegal access to personal data, disclosure of confidential information; defamation; copyrightinfringement; fraud, misuse of bank data, etc. Covers the security of personal data of users ofsocial networks. The main legal act in force today in the field of personal data protection onthe Internet is the Council of Europe Convention for the Protection of Individuals with regardto Automatic Processing of Personal Data. It is determined that social networks strengthen theright to participate in the management of state affairs, including through free elections, providingadditional opportunities for public debate, improving their quality, stimulating democraticprocesses, activity, initiative, awareness and involvement of citizens in issues related to relatedto public administration. It is stated that due to the potential threats arising in connectionwith the functioning of social networks and other institutions of Internet communication, apromising direction is the creation of legal regimes of human rights in terms of regulatingInternet relations to disseminate information while ensuring the balance of interests of allparticipants. and their harmonization with the basics of public order. At the same time, certainproblems, such as reputation protection, protection of intellectual property, should be solvedin line with the already established sectoral regulation, developing it taking into account thespecifics of Internet communication.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
10

Hatem, Mervat. "THE NINETEENTH CENTURY DISCURSIVE ROOTS OF THE CONTINUING DEBATE ON THE SOCIAL-SEXUAL CONTRACT IN TODAY'S EGYPT". Hawwa 2, n.º 1 (2004): 64–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156920804322888257.

Texto completo
Resumen
AbstractThis paper begins with an examination of the recent debate between active women's groups in Egypt who wanted to change the format of the marriage contract and the state functionaries who had claimed to better serve women's rights in the change of personal status laws. Next, it uses the work of Carole Pateman on the "sexual contract" in the West and its impact on the development of civil society to look back on the important Egyptian debate which took place in the 1890s and defined women's rights in modern society. The paper recovers the contributions made by 'A'isha Taymur and Zaynab Fawwaz to this discussion. It also examines shaykh Abdallah al-Fayumi's polemical response to Taymur and the views of the women's journals on the subject. It also shows how Qasim Amin borrowed heavily from these women in the development of a hegemonic fraternal discourse on women's rights that survives until today.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Libros sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

1

تقرير موقف الحكومة المصرية من انشاء مجلس حقوق الانسان بالامم المتحدة، اغسطس 2005. al-Qāhirah: al-Mubādarah al-Miṣrīyah lil-Ḥuqūq al-Shakhṣīyah, 2005.

Buscar texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Freedom of belief and the arrests of Shi'a Muslims in Egypt: A report of the Egyptian initiative for personal rights. Cairo: The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, 2004.

Buscar texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

الحقوق الشخصية في خطر: Al-taʻdīl al-dustūrī bi-shaʼn mukāfaḥat al-irhāb wa-khaṭaruh ʻalá al-ḥimāyah al-qānūnīyah lil-ḥurrīyāt fī Miṣr. al-Qāhirah: al-Mubādarah al-Miṣrīyah lil-Ḥuqūq al-Shakhṣīyah, 2007.

Buscar texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

Cate, Fred H. y James X. Dempsey, eds. Bulk Collection. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190685515.001.0001.

Texto completo
Resumen
In June 2013, Edward Snowden revealed a secret US government program that collected records on every phone call made in the country. Further disclosures followed, detailing mass surveillance by the UK as well. Journalists and policymakers soon began discussing large-scale programs in other countries. Over two years before the Snowden leaks began, Cate and Dempsey had started researching systematic collection. Leading an initiative sponsored by The Privacy Projects, they commissioned a series of country reports, asking national experts to uncover what they could about government demands that telecommunications providers and other private-sector companies disclose information about their customers in bulk. Their initial research found disturbing indications of systematic access in countries around the world. These programs, often undertaken in the name of national security, were cloaked in secrecy and largely immune from oversight, posing serious threats to personal privacy. After the Snowden leaks, the project morphed into something more ambitious: an effort to explore what should be the rules for government access to data and how companies should respond to those demands within the framework of corporate responsibility. This volume concludes the nearly six-year project. It assembles 12 country reports, updated to reflect recent developments. One chapter presents both descriptive and normative frameworks for analyzing national surveillance laws. Others examine international law, human rights law, and oversight mechanisms. Still others explore the concept of accountability and the role of encryption in shaping the surveillance debate. In their conclusion, Cate and Dempsey offer recommendations for both government and industry.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Levy, Helton. Globalized Queerness. Editado por Katherine Byrne, Marianne Kac-Vergne, Helen Davies, David Roche, Julie Anne Taddeo, James Leggott, Julie Assouly, Claire O’Callaghan y Cristelle Maury. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350292819.

Texto completo
Resumen
Has a global queer popular culture emerged at the expense of local queer artists? In this book, Helton Levy argues that global queer culture is indebted to specific, local references that artists carry from their early experiences in life, which then become homogenized by contemporary media markets. The assumption that queer publics live and consume only through a global set of references, including gay parades and rainbow flags, for example, erases many personal complexities. Levy revisits media characters that have caught the attention of the broader public – such as Calamity Jane (1953), the Daffyd Thomas character from the BBC comedy Little Britain (2003-2007), Brazilian drag queen Pabblo Vittar, French singer Christine and the Queens, and the Italian-Egyptian rapper Mahmood – and argues that they have gradually blended in the public's perception. This has often obscured the individual struggles faced by these characters, such as immigration, homophobia, poverty and societal exclusion. Levy also questions what happens when global media flows take queer culture to regions wherein the notion of LGBTQ+ rights are not entirely acceptable. Utilizing insights from media reports published across the world's ten biggest media markets, Levy argues that there are a series of conditions which artists and cultural actors negotiate once they achieve any kind of success in mainstream media, while local queer references remain unseen in the wider media world. For that reason, he argues for stronger incentives for communities to accept and acknowledge the work of queer people before and after commoditization.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Taking Stock of Global Democratic Trends Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31752/idea.2020.66.

Texto completo
Resumen
This GSoD In Focus provides a brief overview of the global state of democracy at the end of 2019, prior to the outbreak of the pandemic, and assesses some of the preliminary impacts that the pandemic has had on democracy globally in 2020. Key findings include: • To address the COVID-19 pandemic, starting in March 2020, more than half the countries in the world (59 per cent) had declared a national state of emergency (SoE), enabling them to take drastic temporary (and in most cases necessary) measures to fight the pandemic. These measures have included in most cases temporarily curbing basic civil liberties, such as freedom of assembly and movement, and in some cases postponing elections. • International IDEA’s Global Monitor of COVID-19’s Impact on Democracy and Human Rights finds that more than half the countries in the world (61 per cent) had, by the end of November 2020, implemented measures to curb COVID-19 that were concerning from a democracy and human rights perspective. These violated democratic standards because they were either disproportionate, illegal, indefinite or unnecessary in relation to the health threat. • Concerning developments have been more common in countries that were already non-democratic prior to the pandemic (90 per cent) and less common, although still quite widespread, in democracies (43 per cent). • The democracies that have implemented democratically concerning measures are those that were already ailing before the pandemic. More than two-thirds were democracies that were either backsliding, eroding or weak prior to the pandemic. • Almost a year since the first outbreak of COVID-19, the pandemic seems to have deepened autocratization in most of the countries that were already non-democratic. However, in at least 3 of those countries (Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Thailand), the pandemic has also tapped into existing simmering citizen discontent and may have been the tipping point in unleashing massive protest waves demanding democratic reform. The pandemic has also seemingly deepened democratic backsliding processes and exposed the democratic weakness and fragility of new or re-transitioned democracies (Malaysia, Mali, Myanmar, Sri Lanka). In a few cases, the pandemic has also exposed countries that showed no apparent sign of democratically ailing prior to the pandemic, but where concerning democratic developments have occurred during the pandemic and which risk seeing a significant deterioration in their democratic quality as a result (i.e. Argentina, El Salvador). • The aspects of democracy that have seen the most concerning developments during the pandemic are freedom of expression, media integrity, and personal integrity and security. However, the freedoms that have been restricted across most countries are freedom of movement and assembly. Another core democratic process that has been heavily affected by the pandemic is the electoral, with half the elections scheduled between February and December 2020 postponed due to the pandemic. • The pandemic has also shown democracy’s resilience and capacity for renovation. Innovation through accelerated digitalization has occurred across most regions of the world. And democratic institutions, such as parliaments, courts, electoral commissions, political parties, media and civil society actors, have fought back against attempts at executive overreach and democratic trampling or collaborated to ensure effective responses to the pandemic. The review of the state of democracy during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 uses qualitative analysis and data of events and trends in the region collected through International IDEA’s Global Monitor of COVID-19’s Impact on Democracy and Human Rights, an initiative co-funded by the European Union.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

1

Davis-Floyd, Robbie. "The International Childbirth Initiative: An Applied Anthropologist’s Account of Developing Global Guidelines". En Global Maternal and Child Health, 179–97. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84514-8_10.

Texto completo
Resumen
AbstractThis chapter describes my personal experiences as an applied anthropologist serving as the lead editor in the development of a set of international guidelines focused on improving quality of maternity care: the International Childbirth Initiative (ICI): 12 Steps to Safe and Respectful MotherBaby-Family Maternity Care (2018). The ICI’s purpose is to encourage global awareness and local implementation of the MotherBaby-Family Model of Care. This is a model based on women’s rights and humane, respectful, family-centered care. The ICI’s creation story is continuous with global movements to improve the quality of maternity care and with a deep history of birth activism by practitioners, public health advocates, and social scientists aimed at decreasing unnecessary medical intervention in childbirth. This narrative is widely relevant for understanding how to develop and implement global guidelines that can flexibly adapt to local contexts. The ICI was developed by the merging of the 2015 FIGO Guidelines to Mother-Baby Friendly Birthing Facilities with the pre-existing International MotherBaby Childbirth Initiative (IMBCI) in an intense and rewarding group process. The chapter discusses factors that contributed to the successful development of clear global guidelines for high-quality maternity care. These include attention to process, alignment with key values of the women’s health and midwifery movements, multilevel collaboration and networking around a clear vision, garnering input from many people with diverse voices and perspectives, and patience with and commitment to the tasks at hand.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
2

Warner, Marina. "Who’s Sorry Now? Personal Stories, Public Apologies". En Sex Rights, 228–59. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192805614.003.0005.

Texto completo
Resumen
Abstract Apology is a kind of language, as well as an area of mentalitéand of sensibility embodied in discourse and in writings of different kinds, and today I am going to probe the apologetic state and the feelings associated with apology, in order to throw light, if possible, on the meaning of public apology in the many distempered areas of the past and the present where human rights are violated. As we go, we shall meet beckoning figures, as if on travelling on some allegorical map of a pilgrim’s progress: Vindication, Confession, Regret, Remorse, Recognition, Exculpation, Retraction, Responsibility, Repentance, and then towards the end of the journey, Expiation/Atonement, Placation, Reconciliation—flanked by two pairs of strong twins, Reform and Redress, Reparation and Restitution, with the angel of Redemption hovering overhead. The prefix that recurs so frequently in these words denotes that these states of mind arise in response to something that has occurred; they respond to a prior act or event and are made in relation to an object, which then bears back on the subject—an apology is in this sense an agreement, a compact between different parties, not a lone initiative. I will be coming back later to this recursive recombining and mutual self-fashioning.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
3

"5. Shari’A Law And The Development Of Egypt’s Personal Status Legislation". En Competing Fundamentalisms and Egyptian Women’s Family Rights, 119–43. Brill | Nijhoff, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004203099.i-300.35.

Texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
4

"8. The Positive Prospects For Personal Status Law Reform: Two Steps Forward". En Competing Fundamentalisms and Egyptian Women’s Family Rights, 211–37. Brill | Nijhoff, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004203099.i-300.49.

Texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
5

Hafez, Sabry. "Badawi: An Academic With a Vision. A Personal Testimony". En Studying Modern Arabic Literature. Edinburgh University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748696628.003.0004.

Texto completo
Resumen
In this chapter, the author offers a personal testimony about his interaction with Mustafa Badawi as well as the latter's contribution to the study of both Arabic and English literature. The author remembers the day he returned to Oxford University to take part in a colloquium commemorating Badawi's life and work; it was also the fortieth anniversary of his arrival in Oxford for the first time in March 1973, thanks to Badawi's insight and initiative. He also cites two Egyptian critics who studied in the West before Badawi's generation, Muhammad Mandur and Luwis ʻAwad. In addition, he discusses Badawi's cultural formation and university education, particularly in Alexandria University, and talks about how Badawi opened new venues for Arabic literary criticism and modern Arabic literature in Oxford, and later in London. Finally, the author shares some of the many lessons he learnt from Badawi.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
6

Eldin, Mohie Eldin I. Alam. "Articles of the Egyptian Civil Code (No. 131 of 1948) Relating to the Contracts: Obligations or Personal Rights". En Arbitral Awards of the Cairo Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration, 249–58. BRILL, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004479906_047.

Texto completo
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
7

Kholoussy, Hanan. "Refashioning the Shari‘a Courts in the Semi-colonial Period". En The Oxford Handbook of Modern Egyptian History, 284–98. Oxford University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190072742.013.15.

Texto completo
Resumen
Abstract This paper uses the recently unearthed Egyptian court registers of the revamped Islamic religious (shari‘a) legal system to explore the ways in which men and women understood their legal rights and duties in marriage, divorce, and the family during a wave of legal reforms between 1897 and 1931. It examines a sample of personal status cases filed in the Cairo Shari‘a Court in order to situate them within the widespread press debates over the role the completely reorganized and revamped—albeit more bureaucratized and hierarchical—Islamic courts should play. This paper argues that they resulted in a comprehensive transformation that centralized, formalized, and enlarged the role these courts played in the familial and national lives of Egyptians. This paper not only reflects on the use of shari‘a records as a source for both legal and social history but also argues that scholars of the courts must transcend the theoretical and methodological divide between academic works that rely primarily on periodicals, and hence marginalize the illiterate masses, and those that make use of court records and rarely situate their litigants and personnel beyond the walls of the courtroom. By merging court records with press sources, this paper aims to produce a more nuanced conceptualization of early twentieth-century Egyptian history while also demonstrating discrepancies as well as convergences between legal practices and social perceptions of marriage and family, on the one hand, and the law, the courts, and the state, on the other hand.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
8

van Deursen, Stijn y Henk Kummeling. "A European Compass for Transporting Personal Data on the New Silk Road". En China and Europe on the New Silk Road, 221–39. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198853022.003.0012.

Texto completo
Resumen
The New Silk Road initiative offers unique opportunities for setting up Sino–European collaborations in higher education and research. Academic cooperation between countries that are rooted in different legal, cultural, and academic backgrounds might, however, also create challenges. Although the European Union is strongly promoting Open Science and—within that framework—open and fair data, it is clear that Open Science is only possible in an open society, in which fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals are protected. In this light, the chapter investigates the implications of the European personal data protection rules (GDPR) for Sino–European collaborations. To what extent are free flows of personal data possible on the New Silk Road? It concludes that the current differences between both regimes create considerable obstacles on the Road. The chapter explores the necessary restrictions, technological solutions, and legal arrangements that might be helpful in facilitating collaborations that comply with the European rules.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Actas de conferencias sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

1

Nashed, Nashaat y Roman Fedorov. "Constitutional pronection of personal data – a case study of data confidentiality in Egyptian banks". En Development of legal systems in Russia and foreign countries: problems of theory and practice. ru: Publishing Center RIOR, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29039/02061-6-201-211.

Texto completo
Resumen
The research paper includes exposure to the constitutional protection of personal data, which is one of the most important peculiarities of legal personality. We will continue to clarify the uses of data in dealing with digital banks to avoid the risks of breaching them, in confirmation of the constitutional texts that protect them. Uses of personal data outside geographical boundaries require specific legislative texts to protect the rights of the customer, and this is what was recently stipulated in Egyptian legislation. Big data is important in decision-making, especially economic decisions. This is why I spoke about its definition, sources, classification and importance in promoting sustainable development goals. The research was divided into two sections as follows: «The first topic: Constitutional protection of data confidentiality in Egyptian law», «Banks compete in big data».
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.

Informes sobre el tema "Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights"

1

Sultan, Maheen y Pragyna Mahpara. Backlash in Action? Or Inaction? Stalled Implementation of the Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Act 2010 in Bangladesh. Institute of Development Studies, junio de 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2023.030.

Texto completo
Resumen
The Bangladesh government adopted the Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Act in 2010. While the formulation and enactment of the Act was an achievement for the government and the coalition that championed it (the Citizens’ Initiative Against Domestic Violence, CIDV), its implementation has been weak. In Bangladesh, dominant social norms have led to stereotyping domestic violence as a trivial, personal matter, which has led to service providers delegitimising and deprioritising the issue. Combined with all the gender biases that operate within the judiciary and other government departments, this has resulted in an unsatisfactory use of the Act for women seeking redress from violence. This paper explores to what extent this lax implementation is due to the weak capacity of implementing agencies versus deliberate/intentional inaction in the form of backlash. It also examines how women’s rights organisations have articulated feminist voices in terms of agenda and framing and used collective agency to counter the pushback.
Los estilos APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, etc.
Ofrecemos descuentos en todos los planes premium para autores cuyas obras están incluidas en selecciones literarias temáticas. ¡Contáctenos para obtener un código promocional único!

Pasar a la bibliografía