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This paper discusses and evaluates factors within society making it harder for women to gain leadership roles in corporations and especially political office. It addresses two main factors: partisanship and media influence. The history of gender inequality and how it manifests in society today is also described. Evidence regarding how Republicans or Democrats view gender inequality is shown through different figures, especially relating to prominent media topics such as the #MeToo Movement. The discrepancy between women in politics compared to their male counterparts is discussed.
Using Harnett County, NC, as the site of a hypothetical Malaria outbreak, a series of emergency management recommendations are proposed to mitigate and respond to the emerging public health emergency. Malaria is a mosquito-borne, infectious disease, found mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa and South America but is occasionally found in the United States. Supposing an outbreak was to occur locally, it would necessitate exploring local, state and federal resources, available for a successful cross-jurisdictional response. This paper approaches a hypothetical public health emergency using a multijurisdictional-intergovernmental approach.
All states and the Federal government have developed their own process for criminal trial of minors as adults, an action that involves reclassifying the criminally accused outside a status with Constitutional rights acknowledged in current Supreme Court jurisprudence. The processes, protections, and standards for this movement vary substantively, with some that fail to conform to known minimal standards of procedural due process. We seek to address these discrepancies, their history, their probable causes, and their ancillary effects to show how they fail to provide adequate procedural safeguards to the least represented and least protected defendants in the criminal justice system.
While it is commonly agreed that human trafficking is a horrendous crime and action should be taken to prevent it, the question arises of whether governments actually allow or even encourage trafficking to take place. The European Union (EU) has explicitly been working against trafficking for a number of years, yet the crime still frequently occurs in the region. As many countries in the EU have legalized prostitution in some way, one would wonder whether there was a relationship between legislative leniency towards prostitution and human trafficking, specifically of a sexual nature. This research seeks to test the question: how does the legalization of prostitution affect human trafficking in the European Union?