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Zackery.WhiteAnnotation of
- "Most organizations have their own definitions and categories for reporting incidents, which makes comparative research difficult"
- "There are also often inconsistencies in the categories used to describe perpetrators e e.g. terrorist, state actors, non-state actor e and these categories have legal ramifications under both International Humanitarian Law and in national legal frameworks. Although a standardizing of terminology and scope of study would be welcome, this has proven difficult."
- "Although violence directly affecting health service delivery in complex security environments has received a great deal of media attention, there is very little publically available research, particularly peer-reviewed, original research."
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Zackery.WhiteIn response to
- Essays and data published from the Doctors without Borders or MSF
- Critical analisys of current humanitarian laws and policies
- Past humanitarian efforts, such as Congo, were studied and discussed about how aid efforts could've been improved.
pece_annotation_1481682741
Zackery.WhiteAnnotation of
In response to
The app is funded throgh partnerships with medical associations such as DynaMed Plus, MUSC Health, and many more.
pece_annotation_1473264672
Zackery.WhiteIn response to
The article uses Fukushima as a catalyst to progress the discussion of creating a effective Nuclear Emergency Response Team. Schmid uses the examples of the unexpected flow of events to support the unprecedented need for a diverse group of individulals, not just "Scientific Elites". She compares the responses fromthe 1979 Three Mile Island incident to the current state of respond to show how little has changed dispite the short lived boost in attention.
This timeline tracks how California state and local governments tackled the evolving COVID-19 crisis since the first case was detected.