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1 ts, environmental impacts, and environmental justice.
2 he cornerstone of modern systems of criminal justice.
3 ssues of both environmental and reproductive justice.
4 ittle action on bringing the perpetrators to justice.
5 commitments to health care access and social justice.
6 tems, air quality, public health, and social justice.
7 les of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
8 ntity, and Tyler & Lind (1992) on procedural justice.
9 y concerned with community health and social justice.
10 erring negligence, and dispensing corrective justice.
11 on of groups, and adherence to principles of justice.
12 r people, non-maleficence, beneficience, and justice.
13 les of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
14 sue-traditionalist, essentialist, and social justice.
15 s to evaluate distributive and participatory justice.
16  and (2) theories of cultural relativism and justice.
17 d Intervening) in the International Court of Justice.
18 cale cooperation and helps dispense criminal justice.
19 from adult control and the pursuit of social justice.
20 hat emphasises people's wellbeing and social justice.
21 nt-reported child empathy and sensitivity to justice.
22 ur understanding of environmental health and justice.
23 rious measures of environmental equality and justice.
24  lack standards for addressing environmental justice.
25 tal goals: impact, efficiency, equality, and justice.
26 ts, credit, media, health care, and criminal justice.
27 ronger alternative preferences for restoring justice.
28 der versus social cooperation through Social Justice.
29  the Court acts as if composed of 4.68 ideal justices.
30             Why do people care so much about justice?
31 s were hopeful that the trials would promote justice, 87.2% (n = 681) of those older than 35 years be
32 was defined according to history of criminal justice adjudication, up to and including each subject's
33 tatutes are enforced by the US Department of Justice; administrative actions are pursued by the Depar
34 with health-care and social-care services or justice agencies.
35 ith health-care and social-care services and justice agencies.
36 lementing policy, accountability, and social justice, all of which enhance public-health responses.
37 ncludes humane detention and the delivery of justice and adequate health care for prisoners.
38 mental Health Sciences (NIEHS) environmental justice and community-based participatory research (CBPR
39 dilemmas challenging traditional concepts of justice and equity of access.
40 omparatively, exploring behaviors related to justice and fairness in other species.
41   In particular, we discuss some problems of justice and fairness inherent in the system, focusing on
42 re across human societies is our interest in justice and fairness.
43 were influenced by parental values regarding justice and fairness.
44 en 1996 and 2005 from the U.S. Department of Justice and gathered further information from publicly a
45    The use of integrated programmes to align justice and health-care goals has great potential to imp
46                                     Juvenile justice and inpatient/residential facilities accounted f
47 nd reduce health disparities in the juvenile justice and mental health systems.
48 ff-label marketing from the US Department of Justice and other publicly available sources (date range
49           Collaboration between the criminal justice and public health systems will be required for s
50 endowed human kind with a tendency to pursue justice and punish defection that deviates from social n
51 factors are associated with attitudes toward justice and reconciliation.
52 e have important implications for procedural justice and the building of police-community trust.
53 ns are driven by concerns about distributive justice and the efficient use of scarce resources, it wo
54  (sociodemographic, US Army career, criminal justice, and medical or pharmacy) were used to predict s
55  fall on educational, primary care, juvenile justice, and social service agencies as well as on psych
56 surement, barriers to reporting, barriers to justice, and the false perception of CSA as a new phenom
57 the least restrictive/intrusive alternative, justice, and transparency.
58 f beneficence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, and justice are the foundation of ethical decision making.
59  on Social Determinants of Health for social justice as a route to a fair distribution of health.
60 itutes of Health, the National Institutes of Justice as well as various international programs.
61 stance, we present an optimal mapping of the justices between the Courts, which underscores the simil
62 earch more diverse would aid not only social justice but scientific quality and clinical effectivenes
63 Global cooperation is necessary not only for justice but to ensure our own health.
64 e of fairness is fundamental to distributive justice but, as suggested by moral sentimentalists, is r
65 terrence is an established theme in criminal justice, but its role in prevention of assault has been
66                   It appears that a sense of justice centered on harm caused to victims emerges early
67    I explain that the International Court of Justice chose to conduct an objective review of JARPA II
68 ational commitment, psychological contracts, justice, citizenship behavior, and person-environment fi
69                                 Distributive justice concerns how individuals and societies distribut
70 eral ban on transplanting HIV+ organs raises justice concerns.
71 s would improve or deteriorate environmental justice conditions.
72               Although the rulings of a nine-justice Court require representation in nine dimensions,
73                              The responsible justice department and ethics committee approved this st
74  these alternative preferences for restoring justice depend on the perspective of the deciding agent.
75 s been paid to how punishment and a sense of justice develop in children.
76 y, beneficence, nonmaleficence, paternalism, justice, duty, rationing, informed consent, and withdraw
77 on must meet the requirements of society for justice, equity of access, and avoidance of racial or ot
78     Independent effects linked with criminal justice exposure persisted with confounder adjustment.
79                   Both clinical and criminal justice factors are associated with better public safety
80 reat one another, including concepts such as justice, fairness, and rights.
81 s, respondents with high levels of perceived justice for violations during the Khmer Rouge era were l
82 ould explicitly incorporate an environmental justice framework that addresses racial/ethnic dispariti
83 bjects-respect for persons, beneficence, and justice-have posed specific dilemmas in the design of in
84 , the NIH invested $40.9 million in criminal justice health research, or 1.5% of the $2.7 billion hea
85 nded grants, 180 (<0.1%) focused on criminal justice health research.
86 prisoners but may have relevance to criminal justice health was not included.
87 p by several sectors that span registration, justice, health, statistics, and civil society.
88 sk was raised even in people with a criminal justice history but without custodial sentences or guilt
89 han a third of all male cases had a criminal justice history, but relative risk against the general p
90 ity suggests that punishment aims to restore justice (i.e., reciprocity) between the criminal and his
91 8, and was annulled by the European Court of Justice in 2000 following a protracted lobbying campaign
92  if not obstructing, progress towards social justice in a fuller sense?
93 tle is known about what motivates a sense of justice in children.
94 n expressed more empathy and sensitivity for justice in everyday life than non-religious parents.
95 e regarding the role played by principles of justice in negotiation.
96 ies for improving environmental equality and justice in other locations.
97 advance in our understanding of how criminal justice interventions could help shape public health.
98 s contrasts with the US, where Department of Justice investigations and whistleblower testimony have
99 Limitations: The study sample was limited to justice-involved male youths.
100 tanding and improving the health of criminal justice-involved persons is small, even compared with th
101  information on the cardiovascular health of justice-involved populations, and unique prevention and
102 th and other medical treatment, and criminal justice involvement.
103 nts and high-stakes negotiations reveal that justice is a complex concept, both in relation to attain
104 of beneficence, nonmaleficence and sometimes justice is paramount as well.
105 sdiction of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, is provided by the University of Texas Medical
106 ion of environmental health and reproductive justice issues in these communities as well as the limit
107     Our study raised important environmental justice issues that can inform public health programs an
108 intuitions in the context of modern criminal justice issues.
109 ocial psychological evidence suggesting that justice judgments and reactions may be determined more b
110 environmental pollution, the need for social justice, large gaps between the rich and the poor, lack
111 rmative post-MDG framework for global health justice look like?
112 emembered, and suggests that some historical justice might be done by using the adjective "Lamarckian
113 hile maintaining procedural and distributive justice; minimise the influence of financial incentives
114 n size and factors influencing environmental justice near oil and gas (O&G) wells.
115 history of the 27th president and 10th chief justice of the Supreme Court offers a unique opportunity
116 ntion of opioid relapse among adult criminal justice offenders (i.e., persons involved in the U.S. cr
117             In this trial involving criminal justice offenders, extended-release naltrexone was assoc
118 tic counselors to adhere to the principle of justice or equity in their practice cannot be successful
119 iatrists report such gun possession to state justice or police departments.
120 ents were referred for treatment by juvenile justice or social service agencies.
121 eating as more autonomy-assertive and social justice-oriented behavior and to forgo sugary snacks and
122 od supply, health, environmental, and social justice outcomes for the world's population.
123 earch has been done to evaluate the criminal justice outcomes of such courts.
124 ve received the most attention, distributive justice (outcomes of negotiation) and procedural justice
125 rgans to balance the competing principles of justice (patients with most urgent need for transplant a
126 l criminal records stored on the Ministry of Justice Police National Computer database.
127 upporting its effectiveness in U.S. criminal justice populations are limited.
128                              We focus on how justice preferences guide the process and outcome of neg
129 chival research on the roles played by these justice principles in negotiation.
130 leased from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice prison system between January 2004 and December
131 is integral to the social sciences, criminal justice procedures, and the effective treatment of high-
132 ice (outcomes of negotiation) and procedural justice (process of negotiation), we introduce the topic
133 e of their effectiveness, few other criminal justice programs have shown such promise with drug-abusi
134 ch and Development Programme, UK Ministry of Justice, Psychiatry Research Trust, NIHR Biomedical Rese
135                            Parallels between justice reactions to those acts of disrespect directed t
136 e databases capturing treatment and criminal justice records for California (2006 to 2010); published
137 nce (66%) was the most common theme, whereas justice represented the least frequently addressed ethic
138                                Environmental justice research documents disparities in exposure to ai
139 ly, the review discusses the implications of justice research for understanding the specific and gene
140        Drawing on theories of "environmental justice," researchers have been concerned with whether t
141 esearch fits within the ethical standards of justice, respect for autonomy, and beneficence.
142 ion has increased during the 1990s; criminal justice responses remain very popular; for many, illicit
143 gs on social punishment, that other forms of justice restoration (for example, compensation to the vi
144 cate that humans prefer alternative forms of justice restoration to punishment alone.
145 examined the extent to which dispositions in justice sensitivity (i.e., how individuals react to expe
146                                              Justice sensitivity did not impact the neuro-hemodynamic
147 t knowledge in how individual differences in justice sensitivity impact neural computations that supp
148  problems and use costly health and criminal justice services at high rates.
149 imization Survey, developed by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
150                         Centre for Crime and Justice Studies (UK).
151 ies, studies of the function of the criminal justice system and risk assessments have resulted in imp
152 s further collaboration between the criminal justice system and the health care communities.
153                      Service by the criminal justice system and treatment of intellectual disabled of
154  disorders pose a challenge for the juvenile justice system and, after their release, for the larger
155 sion-making, and diversion from the criminal justice system are deemed indefensible.
156 ion of ex-military personnel in the criminal justice system for violent offences.
157 oblems, mental health problems, and criminal justice system involvement.
158    INTERPRETATION: Contact with the criminal justice system is a public-health opportunity to promote
159 health of persons involved with the criminal justice system is unknown.
160 eyewitness identification and has warned the justice system of problems with eyewitness identificatio
161                  Involvement in the criminal justice system often results from illegal drug-seeking b
162                                 The criminal justice system relies heavily on eyewitness identificati
163 arings, child death investigations, criminal justice system reports, and the National Health Service,
164 ility of receiving inpatient, emergency, and justice system services declined by 14, 32, and 17 perce
165 ductions in costs of inpatient/emergency and justice system services offset 82% of the cost of the FS
166 (i.e., persons involved in the U.S. criminal justice system) who had a history of opioid dependence a
167 have extensive involvement with the criminal justice system, and 3) family intervention may have clin
168  with service outcome research, the criminal justice system, and a round up of other related research
169  intersection of clinical care, the criminal justice system, and public health to evaluate the effect
170 of intellectual disabilities in the criminal justice system, as well as individual characteristics of
171 eatment that, if implemented in the criminal justice system, could help improve public heath and redu
172  for all people in contact with the criminal justice system, including those not found guilty and tho
173 people with mental disorders in the criminal justice system, many communities have created specialize
174      In male youths involved in the criminal justice system, the relationship between psychological d
175 n popularity as a form of jail diversion for justice system-involved people with serious mental illne
176 ecially those not involved with the criminal justice system.
177 nd the soaring medical costs of the criminal justice system.
178 addiction that could be used in the criminal justice system.
179 ion-a ubiquitous and revitalized node of the justice system.
180 e models that will be useful in the criminal justice system.
181 l disorders who are involved in the criminal justice system.
182 an be transinstitutionalised to the criminal justice system.
183 primary care, social services, and the youth justice system.
184 probability of interfacing with the criminal justice system.
185 filtrate decision-making within the criminal justice system.
186 ns about particular features of the criminal justice system.
187 nsurance coverage, as well as lower rates of justice-system involvement and substance abuse.
188 thcare of young persons involved in criminal justice systems but should assist policymakers, healthca
189 rms in criminal law, policing practices, and justice systems to reduce imprisonment, reforms in the o
190 ms, including the child welfare and juvenile justice systems, have experienced at least one traumatic
191 nst the backdrop of weak health and criminal-justice systems, high rates of pre-trial detention, and
192 uals, effects that act to undermine criminal justice systems.
193 ncern of both the mental health and criminal justice systems.
194 nding the operation of contemporary criminal justice systems; and (h) the question of whether people
195 and pressure and a lower sense of procedural justice than did those with bulimia.
196 o such diverse arenas as marketing, criminal justice, the military, and worker productivity.
197 est attainable standard of health, access to justice, the right to liberty, and the right to life.
198 estigate the central problem of distributive justice: the trade-off between equity and efficiency.
199 etting, social cognitive, and organizational justice theories are the three most important approaches
200  statement is to be useful to many and to do justice to a dynamic field of great complexity.
201           No single review could possibly do justice to all of these approaches.
202 owing the ethical principles of altruism and justice to guide organ allocation.
203 ture-oriented mental time travel' neither do justice to its capacity to ground veridical beliefs abou
204 lth economics evaluations must be able to do justice to medical innovation and the market while prote
205                      Neither story line does justice to our actual understanding of genomes, to ENCOD
206    Static models of the epidermis may not do justice to the ECM, which is metabolically active, as it
207 rgy landscape and folding kinetics that does justice to the essential characteristic of high-dimensio
208  these cellular proteins as IAPs fails to do justice to this versatile group of factors that play a w
209 alism and dual aspect theories attempt to do justice to three central, but controversial, intuitions
210 ing Breast Cancer Advocacy and Environmental Justice," to help identify successful CBPR methods and t
211 icence, respect for individual autonomy, and justice, we conclude that a study of HLA-identical sibli
212 rs toward hospitalization, and of procedural justice were stable in the short term.
213 roduce improvements in impact, equality, and justice, whereas emission reductions from ships would wi
214 ements in terms of efficiency, equality, and justice, whereas off-road mobile source reductions can h
215 uch as cost-benefit analysis or distributive justice will be needed to inform resource allocation dec
216 tral to the modern provision of fairness and justice within society.
217 y and law; financing and resources; criminal justice; workforce, training, and research; and beliefs

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