منابع مشابه
Bosnia - War - Democracy - Information
United Europe vs. fragmented Bosnia and Herzegovina; Free travel, mobility of people, goods, money vs. ghetto, siege and divided cities; Human rights, especially minority rights issues vs. genocide and ethnical cleansing; Information highways vs. total collapse of basic telecommunications infrastructure; Revival of multicultural vs. the killing of traditionally the only multicultural ...
متن کاملEnfranchising Displaced Voters: Lessons from Bosnia-Herzegovina
How can the designers and administrators of election rules balance the need to enfranchise voters with the need to ensure the integrity of the vote? This tension is particularly acute when large numbers of voting-age citizens are displaced from their permanent residences due to war, natural disaster, or other conditions. Our article addresses the challenges of enfranchising refugees and interna...
متن کاملFifty years of violent war deaths from Vietnam to Bosnia: analysis of data from the world health survey programme.
OBJECTIVE To provide an accurate estimate of violent war deaths. DESIGN Analysis of survey data on mortality, adjusted for sampling bias and censoring, from nationally representative surveys designed to measure population health. Estimated deaths compared with estimates in database of passive reports. SETTING 2002-3 World health surveys, in which information was collected from one responden...
متن کاملBombing the Way to State-Building? Lessons from the Vietnam War∗
This study uses discontinuities in U.S. strategies employed during the Vietnam War to estimate their causal impacts on security, governance, civic society, and economic outcomes. It identifies the impacts of bombing civilian population centers in South Vietnam by exploiting discontinuities in an algorithm used to target air strikes. Hamlets just barely below the algorithm’s rounding thresholds ...
متن کاملNeurology in the Vietnam War.
Between December 1965 and December 1971, the United States maintained armed forces in Vietnam never less than 180,000 men and women in support of the war. At one time, this commitment exceeded half a million soldiers, sailors, and airmen from both the United States and its allies. Such forces required an extensive medical presence, including 19 neurologists. All but two of the neurologists had ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: BMJ
سال: 1993
ISSN: 0959-8138,1468-5833
DOI: 10.1136/bmj.307.6908.872-c