In our first issue, we included a comparative review that comparedhow the Prospectus Directive had been implemented in variousEuropean Economic Area (EEA) Member States. That Directive setsout the requirements for initial disclosure, through a prospectus,of the information an investor requires to make its initialinvestment decision, when transferable securities are offeredto the public or admitted to an EEA-regulated market. Some 18months later, we turn to the legislative companion piece—theTransparency Obligations Directive or Directive 2004/109/EC(known familiarly as the ‘TD’ or sometimes, butonly outside Germany, as ‘TOD’—in this articlethe abbreviation ‘TD’ will be used throughout).This is an important Directive that is designed to achieve anumber of objectives. First, it recognizes that markets depend on information. Itis not enough that issuers describe their business and financialposition to the market only when they ask for new money by issuingsecurities. . . . [Full Text of this Article]   1. Introduction2. Regulated informationRegulated information under French lawLanguage of the regulated informationEffective and complete distribution3. Periodic informationReports on financial informationOther information4. Ongoing informationInformation about major holdingsInformation for holders of securities   1. Introduction2. State of origin concept and domestic issuer concept3. Periodic information requirementsGeneralResponsibility and liability for periodic information4. Ongoing information requirements5. Summary   1. Introduction: the legal context2. Key points of implementation in ItalyThe Italian liability regime for market disclosure3. Concluding summary   1. Introduction2. Competent authority3. Liability4. Jurisdictional scope of liability5. Responsibility6. Major shareholdings   1. Introduction2. Periodic information requirementsAnnual financial statementsHalf-yearly financial statementsInterim management statements and quarterly financial statementsLiability3. Ongoing information requirementsImportant participations notificationVoting rights modification notificationNotification and publication procedureOwn sharesAdditional (general) information obligations of issuers of shares4. Competent authorityNotification of the CSSFAdditional information and sanctionsThird country exemption5. Language and media6. Timing7. Conclusion   1. Introduction2. Super-equivalent rules3. Periodical information4. LiabilityIssuerDirectors5. Rules on disclosure of major shareholdings6. Conclusion   1. Introduction2. Law 6/20073. RD 1362Periodic informationResponsibility and liabilityContent of financial reportsInformation on major holdings and own sharesNotification of the acquisition or disposal of major holdingsAcquisition or disposal of a major proportion of voting rightsProcedures for notificationOwn sharesGeneral provisionsAccess to regulated informationLanguagesOther information obligationsRemuneration schemes4. Summary   1. Introduction2. Periodic financial reporting requirementsSuper equivalent applicationOther points to notePeriodic financial reporting and non-UK issuers3. Major shareholding notification regimeSuper equivalent applicationContracts for differenceOther points to noteMajor shareholding notification and non-UK issuers4. Summary  相似文献   
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The experience of stress for correction officers: A double-bind theory of correctional stress     
Frances E. Cheek  Marie Di Stefano Miller 《Journal of criminal justice》1983,11(2):105-120
This study investigated the experience of stress for 143 mostly male New Jersey correction officers, including officers from both state and county, of all ranks, and with varying lengths of service. Each filled in a questionnaire eliciting information regarding perceptions of stress in themselves and others, situational and temporal experience of correctional stress, consequences in terms of physical health, emotional and interpersonal relations, and job performance, perceptions of sources of correctional stress, and coping techniques utilized. While objective indicators such as physical illnesses and high divorce rates suggested that the job was indeed a stressful one, the correction officers presented a tough, “macho” image, denying their stress and its consequences, although they were more willing to report stress-related problems in their fellow workers. While they identified officer-inmate interaction as their major situation of stress, they attributed their problems in this area to administrative malfunctions which place them in a classic double-bind predicament in relation to rule enforcement. Their powerlessness in this situation is rendered especially stressful by the macho working personality which the job requires of them.  相似文献   
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Sex assessment from carpals bones: discriminant function analysis in a contemporary Mexican sample     
Mastrangelo P  De Luca S  Sánchez-Mejorada G 《Forensic science international》2011,209(1-3):196.e1-196.15
Sex assessment is one of the first essential steps in human identification, in both medico-legal cases and bio-archaeological contexts. Fragmentary human remains compromised by different types of burial or physical insults may frustrate the use of the traditional sex estimation methods, such as the analysis of the skull and pelvis. Currently, the application of discriminant functions to sex unidentified skeletal remains is steadily increasing. However, several studies have demonstrated that, due to variation in size and patterns of sexual dimorphism, discriminant functions are population-specific. In this study, in order to improve sex assessment from skeletal remains and to establish population-specific discriminant functions, the diagnostic values of the carpal bones were considered. A sample of 136 individuals (78 males, 58 females) of known sex and age was analyzed. They belong to a contemporary identified collection from the Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, Faculty of Medicine, UNAM (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City). The age of the individuals ranged between 25 and 85 years. Between four and nine measurements of each carpal bone were taken. Independent t-tests confirm that all carpals are sexually dimorphic. Univariate measurements produce accuracy levels that range from 61.8% to 90.8%. Classification accuracies ranged between 81.3% and 92.3% in the multivariate stepwise discriminant analysis. In addition, intra- and inter-observer error tests were performed. These indicated that replication of measurements was satisfactory for the same observer over time and between observers. These results suggest that carpal bones can be used for assessing sex in both forensic and bio-archaeological identification procedures and that bone dimensions are population specific.  相似文献   
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We analyse the subjective perceptions of poverty in Madagascar in 2001 and their relationship to objective poverty indicators. We base our analysis on survey responses to a series of subjective perception questions. We extend the existing empirical methodology for estimating subjective poverty lines on the basis of categorical consumption adequacy questions. Based on this methodology, we calculate the household-specific, subjective poverty lines. We are able to compare between the results of subjective poverty analysis using several types of subjective welfare questions. Our results show that the aggregate poverty measures derived from consumption adequacy questions accord quite well with the poverty measures based on objective poverty lines. We demonstrate that the subjective welfare analysis can be used in poor developing countries for evaluating socio-economic and distributional impacts of various policy interventions.  相似文献   
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An Italian judge, following earlier suggestions of the national antitrust Authority, has referred to the Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling under Article 234 EC Treaty two questions on the interpretation of Articles 81 and 86 of the EC Treaty. With those questions, raised in an action brought by a self‐employee against the Istituto Nazionale per l'Assicurazione contro gli Infortuni sul Lavoro (INAIL) concerning the actor's refusal to pay for social insurance contributions, the Tribunale di Vicenza has in summary asked the Court of Justice whether the public entity concerned, managing a general scheme for the social insurance of accidents at work and professional diseases, can be qualified as an enterprise under Article 81 EC Treaty and, if so, whether its dominant position can be considered in contrast with EC competition rules. This article takes this preliminary reference as a starting point to consider in more general terms the complex constitutional issues raised by what Ge´rard Lyon‐Caen has evocatively called the progressive ‘infiltration’ of EC competition rules into the national systems of labour and social security law. The analysis is particularly focused on the significant risks of ‘constitutional collision’, between the ‘solidaristic’ principles enshrined in the Italian constitution and the fundamental market freedoms protected by the EC competition rules, which are implied by the questions raised in the preliminary reference. It considers first the evolution of ECJ case law—from Poucet and Pistre to Albany International BV—about the limits Member States have in granting exclusive rights to social security institutions under EC competition rules. It then considers specularly, from the Italian constitutional law perspective, the most recent case law of the Italian Constitutional Court on the same issues. The ‘contextual’ reading of the ECJ's and the Italian Constitutional Court's case law with specific regard to the case referred to by the Tribunale di Vicenza leads to the conclusion that there will probably be a ‘practical convergence’in casu between the ‘European’ and the ‘national’ approach. Following the arguments put forward by the Court of Justice in Albany, the INAIL should not be considered as an enterprise, in line also with a recent decision of the Italian Constitutional Court. And even when it was to be qualified as an enterprise, the INAIL should in any case be able to escape the ‘accuse’ of abuse of dominant position and be allowed to retain its exclusive rights, pursuant to Article 86 of the EC Treaty. This ‘practical convergence’in casu does not, however, remove the latent ‘theoretical conflict’ between the two approaches and the risk of ‘constitutional collision’ that it implies. A risk of a ‘conflict’ of that kind could be obviously detrimental for the European integration process. The Italian Constitutional Court claims for herself the control over the fundamental principles of the national constitutional order, assigning them the role of ‘counter‐limits’ to the supremacy of European law and to European integration. At the same time, and more generally, the pervasive spill over of the EC market and competition law virtually into every area of national regulation runs the risk of undermining the social and democratic values enshrined in the national labour law traditions without compensating the potential de‐regulatory effects through measures of positive integration at the supranational level. This also may contribute to undermine and threaten, in the long run, the (already weak) democratic legitimacy of the European integration process. The search for a more suitable and less elusive and unilateral balance between social rights and economic freedoms at the supranational level should therefore become one of the most relevant tasks of what Joseph Weiler has called the ‘European neo‐constitutionalism’. In this perspective, the article, always looking at the specific questions referred to the Court of Justice by the Tribunale di Vicenza, deals with the issue of the ‘rebalance’ between social rights and economic and market freedoms along three distinct but connected lines of reasoning. The first has to do with the need of a more open and respectful dialogue between the ECJ and the national constitutional courts. The second is linked to the ongoing discussion about the ‘constitutionalization’ of the fundamental social rights at the EC level. The third finally considers the same issues from the specific point of view of the division of competences between the European Community and the Member States in the area of social (protection) policies.  相似文献   
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Dr Axel Gehringer Hengeler Mueller Stefano Cuccia Head of Market Supervision, TLX, Milan David Byers McCann FitzGerald, Solicitors, Dublin Henri Wagner and Anne-Marie Thomas Allen & Overy, Luxembourg Petra Zijp and Matthieu van Straaten NautaDutilh NV, Amsterdam José Manuel Cuenca and Yolanda Azanza Clifford Chance Daniel Bushner and Jonathan Parry Ashurst, London The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.
   Editor's Note    France    Germany    Italy    Ireland    Luxembourg    The Netherlands    Spain    United Kingdom
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