52 results match your criteria: "Center for Human Rights[Affiliation]"
Affilia
May 2023
School of Social Work, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA.
Human trafficking is an egregious violation of fundamental human rights and a global challenge. The long-term harms to survivors' physical, psychological and social wellbeing are profound and well documented, and yet there are few studies exploring how to best promote resilience and holistic healing. This is especially true within shelter programs (where the majority of anti-trafficking services are provided) and during the transition out of residential shelter care, which is often a sensitive and challenging process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Public Health
January 2024
Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
To achieve Sustainable Development Goal 5 for gender equality by 2030, it is crucial for health and development professionals and governmental officials to understand how legal systems empower or oppress populations on the basis of gender worldwide, including opportunities and challenges of statutory provisions created by legal pluralism. Using Ethiopia as a case study, this paper examines how local laws applied in Sharia and Customary Dispute Resolution courts impact gender equality and the health of women and girls inspite of the inculcation of human rights statutes into national legislation, including the Constitution. We identify several key issues with the substantive law and its enforcement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Law Med
July 2023
2Niagara University, New York, NY, USA.
Multiple states have enacted statutes to govern procedures when a state seeks to execute a person who may be incompetent to understand why s/he is being so punished, an area of the law that has always been riddled with confusion. The Supreme Court, in , sought to clarify matters, ruling that a mentally ill defendant had a constitutional right to make a showing that his mental illness "obstruct[ed] a rational understanding of the State's reason for his execution."However, the first empirical studies of how has been interpreted in federal courts painted a dismal picture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Chem Neurosci
February 2024
Undergraduate Program in Cognitive Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912. United States.
Contributions of brain glutamate (Glu) to conscious emotion are not well understood. Here, we evaluate the relationship of experimentally induced change in neocortical Glu (ΔGlu) and subjective states in well individuals, using combined application of pharmacological challenge, magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), and comprehensive affective assessment. Drug challenge with d-amphetamine (AMP) (20 mg oral), methamphetamine (MA) (Desoxyn, 20 mg oral), and placebo (PBO) was conducted on three separate test days in a within-subjects double blind design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
August 2023
World Council of Churches, Switzerland.
Background: The climate crisis is the biggest threat to the health, development, and wellbeing of the current and future generations. While there is extensive evidence on the direct impacts of climate change on human livelihood, there is little evidence on how children and young people are affected, and even less discussion and evidence on how the climate crisis could affect violence against children.
Participants And Setting: In this commentary, we review selected research to assess the links between the climate crisis and violence against children.
Front Public Health
July 2023
Faculty of Medicine, Center for Reproductive Medicine and Integral Development of Adolescence, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Introduction: After decades of absolute criminalization, on September 14, 2017, Chile decriminalized voluntary termination of pregnancy (VTP) when there is a life risk to the pregnant woman, lethal incompatibility of the embryo or fetus of genetic or chromosomal nature, and pregnancy due to rape. The implementation of the law reveals multiple barriers hindering access to the services provided by the law.
Objectives: To identify and analyze, using the Tanahashi Model, the main barriers to the implementation of law 21,030 in public health institutions.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health
September 2023
UCD School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Confl Health
June 2023
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: The Taliban takeover in August 2021 brought global economic sanctions, economic collapse, and draconian restrictions on women's freedom of movement, work, political participation, and education. This study examined Afghan health workers' experiences and perceptions of availability and quality of maternal and child health care since then.
Methods: We conducted a survey, using a convenience sample, of health workers from urban, semi-rural, and rural public and private clinics and hospitals across the 34 provinces, covering changes in working conditions, safety, health care access and quality, maternal and infant mortality as well as perceptions about the future of maternal and child health and health care.
Front Psychol
November 2022
Center for Reproductive Medicine and Integral Development of Adolescence, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Introduction: After three decades of the absolute prohibition of abortion, Chile enacted Law 21,030, which decriminalizes voluntary pregnancy termination when the person is at vital risk, when the embryo or fetus suffers from a congenital or genetic lethal pathology, and in pregnancy due to rape. The law incorporates conscientious objection as a broad right at the individual and institutional levels.
Objectives: The aim of the study was to explore the exercise of conscientious objection in public health institutions, describing and analyzing its consequences and proposals to prevent it from operating as structural violence.
JAMA
September 2022
Department of History, Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences, and Center for Human Rights Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Front Psychol
June 2022
Lynch School of Education and Human Development, Center for Human Rights and International Justice, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, United States.
Throughout the last four decades, Andean women from the highland communities of Peru have been significantly affected by ongoing neoliberal capitalist development and patriarchal structures. These intersecting violence(s) took on more horrific dimensions during the Peruvian armed conflict (1980-2000) and have contributed to multiple psychosocial sequelae that linger in the daily lives on these communities as "ghostly matters." Seeking to face these experiences in a context of ongoing material impoverishment, Andean women from highland communities have initiated multiple associations or economic collective projects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychodyn Psychiatry
February 2022
A Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Co-Medical Director of the Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York.
Medical-legal asylum evaluations, conducted by experienced clinicians, are one of the most important parts of an application for successfully being granted asylum. Over two-thirds of these are mental health evaluations. Customarily these evaluations are summarized and drafted as diagnostic statements, providing the attorney with clear, corroborative testimony demonstrating that the patient suffers from psychological sequalae directly related to the individual's previous experience of persecution in their home country.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnergy Sustain Soc
November 2021
Center for Human Rights, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
Background: The urgency to pursue sustainable consumption or use energy in a manner that does not negatively impact the environment has become an important theme in recent times. As a major fluctuation in the atmosphere, climate change will be one of the major challenges faced by youth. As a result, there have been a growing number of young South Africans advocating for environmental justice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
August 2021
Infectious Diseases, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Curr Psychiatry Rep
May 2021
Harvard Global Mental Health: Trauma and Recovery Program, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Lancet
June 2021
Anesthesiology Global Health Initiative, Department of Anesthesiology, and Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights, Weill Cornell Medicine New York, NY 10065, USA; Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. Electronic address:
Curr Psychiatry Rep
March 2021
Harvard Global Mental Health: Trauma and Recovery Program, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Purpose Of Review: This paper is a review of the self-care challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic on the physical and emotional health and well-being of healthcare providers. New self-care practices are presented.
Recent Findings: Globally, thousands of health care practitioners and staff have been infected; many have died.
BMJ Mil Health
May 2023
Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Introduction: Civilian-military relations play an important yet under-researched role in low-income and middle-income country epidemic response. One crucial component of civilian-military relations is defining the role of the military. This paper evaluates the role of Nigerian military during the 2014-2016 West African Ebola epidemic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFocus (Am Psychiatr Publ)
July 2020
Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York (Fey); Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights, New York (Ahola); and Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, New York (Ahola and Casoy).
Lancet
November 2020
Department of Emergency Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA; Libertas Center for Human Rights and Department of Emergency Medicine, Elmhurst Hospital Center, New York, NY, USA.
J Hum Lact
November 2020
5635 School of Nursing, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities (Emerita), New Brighton, MN, USA.
Douglas A. Johnson began his career as a human rights activist while earning his undergraduate degree in philosophy (1975) at Macalester College in the United States. He lived at Gandhi's ashram in India to study nonviolent organizing (1969 to 1970).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Health Action
December 2020
Department of Emergency Medicine, Brown University Warren Alpert Medical School, Providence, RI, USA.
The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has overwhelmed many health systems globally. Innovative initiatives are needed to combat the pandemic and scaleup response efforts. This communication describes a collaborative partnership between an international humanitarian organization and an academic university to develop and rapidly deploy a remote digital COVID-19 trainer-of-trainers (TOT) program to enhance global response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
August 2020
Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights, Weill Cornell Medicine, OB/GYN, 1300 York Ave, New York 10065, NY, United States.
With 1 in 3 women affected, accounting for one billion women worldwide, Violence Against Women (VAW) constitutes one of the widest reaching human rights violations globally. Although the forms they take may vary, these abuses are not confined to a single social class, geographic region, or culture. Existing studies have yet to describe the full burden of abuse that asylum-seeking women endure throughout their lifetimes.
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