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NCHS Courant - 0 views

shared by Kristine Goldhawk on 29 Oct 09 - Cached
  • . We made the designated areas for the lounge decorations smaller, but we kept it up all day.
    • Kristine Goldhawk
       
      I thought this was an awesome idea and want to see it happen next year.

Tagging - 4 views

started by Kristine Goldhawk on 12 May 09 no follow-up yet
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American Model United Nations - Sample Position Papers - 0 views

  • Sample Position Paper #1 Sample Position Paper #2 Sample Position Paper #3
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    Sample Position Papers
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Melbourne Declaration to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers - 0 views

  • Being determined to see an end to the use of children as soldiers, this Australian Conference:
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Australia and child soldiers | Peace Organisation of Australia - 3 views

shared by Ryan Stiffelman on 04 May 09 - Cached
  • The Peace Organisation of Australia calls on the Australian Government to end the recruitment of children under 18 to our armed forces. This would put Australia in line with the emerging international consensus that children should play no role in militaries.
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FileContent (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    pg 20 of 24 south American policies
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Coalition to stop the use of child soldiers: Children: invisible soldiers in the Middle... - 1 views

  • In recent years, children have been actively engaged in fighting with armed opposition groups in Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Sudan, Turkey and Yemen.
    • A Redman
       
      Allow...?
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Nicaragua | Child Soldiers Global Report 2008 - 0 views

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    child soldiers report
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Nuclear Energy in Italy : WNA - 1 views

  • Italy is party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) since 1975 as a non-nuclear weapons state. It is a member of both Euratom and the Nuclear Suppliers' Group. In 1998 it signed the Additional Protocol in relation to its safeguards agreements with the IAEA.
    • Taylor Parsons
       
      treaty signed by Italy on nuclear safety
  • In 1964 CNEN was confirmed as the regulatory body for Italy's nuclear power, using safety criteria from UK and USA. It was later split into ENEA - responsible for research and promotion of nuclear energy, and ENEA/DISP as the independent regulatory body. This then became APAT, the Agency for Environmental Protection & Technical Services, as the regulatory body in charge of safety and licensing.  This in turn later became the nuclear department of the environmental protection institute - ISPRA. In 2008 parliament was considering legislation to set up an independent Agency for Nuclear Security (ASN) as the new regulator, with staff drawn from ISPRA and ENEA.
    • Taylor Parsons
       
      More info. on Italy and its nuclear regulation and safety precautions
  • Italy has had four operating nuclear power reactors but shut the last two down following the Chernobyl accident. Over 10% of its electricity is now from nuclear power - all imported. The government intends to build new nuclear power plants by 2013.
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  • Italy was a pioneer of civil nuclear power and in 1946 established the first scientific body to pursue this. In 1952 it established an agency to develop and promote nuclear power, and this was reorganised in 1960 to become CNEN (National committee for nuclear energy).
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Search results [Coalition to stop the use of Child Soldiers] - 0 views

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    The Official Coalition against Child Soldiers Website
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ATTACKS IN EGYPT: TERRORISM; Death Toll Rises in Egyptian Bombings - New York Times - 0 views

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    Terrorism in Egypt
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Position Paper - Italy - 0 views

  • Recalling Article I of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, the Republic of Italy commends the international community and expresses its appreciation for steps taken toward the abolition of nuclear weapons. Italy recognizes the establishment of Nuclear-Free Zones as codified in Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones–Challenges and Opportunities (1999) as confidence and peace building measures crucial for maintaining international security, and proudly notes the declaration that five of our Northern states are NWFZs. We reaffirm the Antarctic Treaty and Article IV of the Outer Space Treaty, declaring the respective regions to be Nuclear Weapons Free Zones (NWFZs). We also draw attention to the Treaty on the Prohibition of the Emplacement of Nuclear Weapons and of Other Weapons of Mass Destruction on the Sea-Bed and the Ocean Floor and in the Subsoil Thereof, particularly Article I declaring the sea-bed as a NWFZ. Taking note of A/RES/58/34, Italy recognizes the importance of the creation of a NWFZ in the Middle East and cordially invites countries to take action in furtherance of this goal. We urge signatory states of the aforementioned treaties to abide by the agreements they entered into voluntarily for the stability and peace of the international community. —James Knupp, Wright State University, 2004
    • Taylor Parsons
       
      Italy on Nuclear free zones.
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    Italy on nuclear free zones. following acts
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A-63-PV16.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    pg 13 of 53 Bolivia representative speach
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gc47inf-14-rev1_en.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    Counter- Terrorism Conference
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Sierra Leone: Child Soldiers - 0 views

  • Child Soldiers
  • The camp director said that when the youths had been given drugs-most likely, amphetamines-while soldiering, they "would do just about anything that was ordered." Some, he added, were proud of having been effective killers.
  • Many of the boys, ranging from nine to 16 years of age, had killed people as they fought in a civil war that paused with a fragile cease-fire in 1995.
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  • shortly before been willing to kill and who had never received an adequate foundation of moral development,
  • end of the Cold War ushered in an era of ethnopolitical conflicts that are seldom fought on well-defined battlefields
  • increasingly internal,
  • characterized by butchery; violence against women, and atrocities sometimes committed by former neighbors.
  • 80 percent of the victims are noncombatants, mostly women and children.
  • children serve as combatants or as cooks, informants, porters, bodyguards, sentries, and spies.
  • children participate in relatively unstructured but politically motivated acts of violence, such as throwing stones or planting bombs.
  • far greater problem than suggested by the scant attention it has received.
  • found from Central America to the Great Lakes region of Central Africa, and from Belfast in the north to Angola in the south.
  • The problem defies gender boundaries.
  • Typically, sexual victimization is a part of soldiering for girls, many of whom are forced to become "soldiers' wives." After the conflict ends, families and local communities may reject the girls as impure or unsuitable for marriage. Desperate to survive, many former girl soldiers become prostitutes.
  • The use of child soldiers violates international norms. The U. N. Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), signed in 1989 and ratified by more than 160 nations, establishes 15 years as the minimum recruitment age. In fact, most countries have endorsed an optional protocol that boosts the minimum recruitment age to 18 years.
  • Yes," he said. He would have done "what he had to do." When asked what he wanted for the future, he said, "I only want to go to school."
  • in developing countries, in which children constitute nearly half the population and in which children are often reared in a system that mixes war, poverty, violence, hunger, environmental degradation, and political instability.
  • Many Angolan children report nightmares and flashbacks, display heightened aggressiveness, and suffer from hopelessness. Thousands of children-defined as people under 18 years of age-entered the military. For both parents and children, war had become normal.
  • Violent youths, however, may yet sabotage the cease-fire.
  • How widespread is child soldiering? Numbers are hard to come by. The destruction and turmoil of war make it difficult to create and preserve accurate records. Particularly in Africa, many countries have no history of keeping precise birth records.
  • military groups, governmental and rebel, make no attempt to document or accurately report the ages of the children they recruit.
  • The best estimate-which is admittedly soft-is that in the mid-1990s, there were about a quarter of a million child soldiers, current or recently demobilized.
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    more stuff on child soldiers
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report.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    dates of acts ratified on child soldiers (per country)
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    dates that each country ratified the child soldier laws
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Bolivia.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    Bolivia laws on nuclear and bio weapons
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