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Related Concept Videos

Routes of Persuasion02:20

Routes of Persuasion

Persuasion is the process of changing our attitude toward something based on some kind of communication. Much of the persuasion we experience comes from outside forces. How do people convince others to change their attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors? What communications do you receive that attempt to persuade you to change your attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors?
Deindividuation00:57

Deindividuation

Deindividuation is a form of social influence on an individual’s behavior such that the individual engages in unusual or non-normal behavior while in a group setting. Why? Because in these group settings, the individual no longer sees themselves as an individual anymore, disinhibiting their behavior and personal restraint.
Travelling Waves01:04

Travelling Waves

A wave is a disturbance that propagates from its source, repeating itself periodically, and is typically associated with simple harmonic motion. Mechanical waves are governed by Newton's laws and require a medium to travel. A medium is a substance in which a mechanical wave propagates, and the medium produces an elastic restoring force when it is deformed.
Water waves, sound waves, and seismic waves are some examples of mechanical waves. For water waves, the wave propagation medium is water;...
Crossing over01:34

Crossing over

Unlike mitosis, meiosis aims for genetic diversity in its creation of haploid gametes. Dividing germ cells first begin this process in prophase I, where each chromosome—replicated in S phase—is now composed of two sister chromatids (identical copies) joined centrally.
The homologous pairs of sister chromosomes—one from the maternal and one from the paternal genome—then begin to align alongside each other lengthwise, matching corresponding DNA positions in a process called synapsis.
In order to...
Crossing Over01:30

Crossing Over

Crossing over is the exchange of genetic information between homologous chromosomes during prophase I of meiosis I. Genetic recombination gives rise to allelic diversity in the newly formed daughter cells. In humans, crossing over produces genetically distinct haploid egg and sperm cells that undergo fertilization to produce unique offspring. Before cell division starts, the germ cell’s chromosome(s) undergo duplication in the S phase of the cell cycle. As the cells enter prophase I, duplicated...
Crossing Over01:34

Crossing Over

Unlike mitosis, meiosis aims for genetic diversity in its creation of haploid gametes. Dividing germ cells first begin this process in prophase I, where each chromosome—replicated in S phase—is now composed of two sister chromatids (identical copies) joined centrally.
The homologous pairs of sister chromosomes—one from the maternal and one from the paternal genome—then begin to align alongside each other lengthwise, matching corresponding DNA positions in a process called synapsis.
In order to...

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Related Experiment Videos

Circumvention tourism.

Glenn Cohen1

  • 1Harvard Law School Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics.

Cornell Law Review
|October 18, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Home countries should generally extend criminal penalties extraterritorially to citizens who travel abroad for services illegal at home, such as female genital cutting and abortion. This analysis addresses circumvention tourism and its implications for domestic law enforcement.

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Legal Studies
  • Medical Ethics
  • International Law

Background:

  • Medical tourism involves patients traveling abroad for treatment, with 'circumvention tourism' referring to travel for services legal elsewhere but illegal in the home country.
  • This practice raises complex questions about the extraterritorial application of domestic criminal law and accommodating cultural or political differences.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the circumstances under which citizens should be able to avoid domestic criminal penalties by seeking services abroad where they are legal.
  • To explore the normative 'ought' question: when should home countries extend criminal prohibitions extraterritorially to citizens engaging in circumvention tourism?

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of the legal and ethical dimensions of extraterritorial criminal law application.
  • Case studies focusing on circumvention medical tourism for female genital cutting (FGC), abortion, reproductive technology use, and assisted suicide.

Main Results:

  • The study argues that, contrary to current practice, home countries should generally extend criminal prohibitions extraterritorially to citizens traveling abroad for FGC, abortion, and assisted suicide.
  • Extraterritorial application for reproductive technology use is also suggested, though to a lesser extent.
  • The analysis provides a framework for a broader theory of circumvention tourism.

Conclusions:

  • Home countries have a normative basis to extend criminal law extraterritorially to citizens circumventing domestic prohibitions through medical tourism.
  • This approach is recommended for services like FGC, abortion, and assisted suicide to uphold domestic legal and ethical standards.
  • The findings challenge existing practices and advocate for a more robust application of domestic law in cases of circumvention tourism.