... of "Indian Country" in the 21st-century U.S. and the application of this metaphor to the armed conflicts in Iraq and the Middle East. "Indian Country" terminology remains pervasive and appears with ...
... of societal structures. These degraded conditions could contribute to civil strife, and, worse, armed conflict."
In fact, Scheffran said, there's evidence that such dramas are already playing out on ...
... compliance with international humanitarian law, a set of rules that seek to limit the effects of armed conflict for humanitarian reasons).
Francesco Checchi (London School of Hygiene and Tropical ...
... journal Child Development.
Children in about 50 countries worldwide are growing up in the midst of armed conflict and its aftermath. In Colombia, where almost 2 million children have been forcibly ...
... . "Little is known about the efficacy of mental health interventions for children exposed to armed conflicts in low- and middle-income settings. Childhood mental health problems are difficult to ...
... people worldwide complete suicide. Thus, worldwide significantly more people die by suicide than e.g. in armed conflicts or as victims of terror, or tragic natural disasters such ...
... synthesizing ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen, billions of people have been fed, millions have died in armed conflict and a cascade of environmental changes has been set in motion. So suggests an ...
... synthesis of ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen, billions of people have been fed, millions have died in armed conflict and a cascade of environmental changes has been set in motion, suggests a new ...
... of measured cases.
Hicks and Spagat give several examples of DWIs calculated for actual armed conflicts, such as a DWI that measures the proportion of civilian deaths in the Colombian civil conflict ...
... audience to draw the world's attention to the brutality and intolerability of sexual violence in armed conflicts," say the PLoS Medicine editors. "Medical professionals are powerful lobbyists, whose ...
... all the resources and services they provide."
The study found that more than 90 percent of major armed conflicts – defined as those resulting in more than 1,000 deaths – occurred in countries that ...
... as Tanzania — ethnicity was not politically relevant at all. In the rest of the countries, the risk of armed conflict rose in proportion to the degree of ethnic exclusion.
"The odds of having a ...
... not be judged less harshly than physical warfare simply by virtue of the weapons employed. The Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC), an international law regulating conduct during war, should apply to ...
... increase the child mortality rate," regardless of whether the country was engaged in armed conflict, and that "increases in social militarization produce particularly adverse effects during years in ...
... ). Vivid examples of such systems are: the global economy and the global crisis, wars and armed conflicts, human beings and social organizations, the stock market, science and technology, the Olympic ...