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Miozzo MC Pacharoni CM Mutal SA Maxzud MK Casanova AE Modesti NM 《Forensic science international》2003,131(2-3):214-217
Allele and genotype frequencies for nine STRs loci included in the AmpFlSTR Profiler Plus kit (D3S1385, vWA, FGA, D8S1179, D21S11, D18S51, D5S818, D13S317 and D7S820), were determined from urban and countryside population of Córdoba (Argentina). All loci meet the Hardy-Weinberg expectation, and there is little evidence for alleles association between these nine loci. The results demonstrate that these loci can be useful for databasing purposes in human identification and parentage testing in the population of Córdoba (Argentina). 相似文献
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This paper serves as a preliminary study for an analysis of the public role which the American Catholic Bishops assumed in the 1980s. The analysis is part of a broader, forthcoming study,Public Religions in the Modern World, which includes also studies of Catholicism in Spain, Poland, and Brazil, and a study of Protestant Fundamentalism. 相似文献
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Miozzo MC Maxzud MK Casanova AE Mutal SA Pacharoni C Modesti NM 《Journal of forensic sciences》2004,49(2):407-408
POPULATION: Urban and countryside population of Córdoba (Argentina). 相似文献
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This study examines regional differences in the legal status of forest workers in the Pacific Northwest and Southeastern United
States, using United States Department of Labor data and qualitative fieldwork in Alabama and Oregon. The authors find that
there are significantly fewer H-2B guest workers on federal lands in Oregon than on privately owned forest plantations in
Alabama, and the Southeast more generally. By contrast, numerous workers on federal lands in Oregon are undocumented. This
difference may largely be explained by variations in the economies of scale in forest work in the Pacific Northwest (federal
lands) and the Southeast (mainly private lands). The study also finds that there is no real difference in the working conditions
of undocumented immigrants and guest workers—both groups face labor exploitation. Guest workers in the forest industry, many
of whom have no previous work experience or access to social networks in the United States, face extreme isolation at worksites,
are beholden to contractors, fear losing their jobs if they complain, and are generally unaware of their basic rights. By
contrast, many undocumented forest workers in Oregon belong to established social networks through which they are recruited
onto forest labor crews. However, unauthorized workers are also vulnerable to labor exploitation because they fear deportation
and are obliged to their kin-employers. Policy recommendations to improve labor conditions and enforce existing labor laws
for all forest workers include: better tracking of workers across states to monitor labor abuses, allocating more resources
to state labor departments to facilitate worker outreach and worksite inspections, and better communication among land management
officials and the Department of Labor.
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Vanessa CasanovaEmail: |
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