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First no. of each vol. contains index to previous vol.
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Research institutes, foundations, centers, bureaus, laboratories, experiment stations, and other similar nonprofit facilities, organizations, and activities in the United States and Canada. Entry gives identifying and descriptive information of staff and work. Institutional, research centers, and subject indexes. 5th ed., 5491 entries; 6th ed., 6268 entries.
In this book the author examines Norwegian approaches to conflict resolution that may be instructive for the United States. He focuses on two major questions: What can be done to relieve the criminal justice system of our city and state governments of their intolerable difficulties in delivering justice to the community, and what can be done to help the citizen feel that the city cares and is concerned with the protection of basic social contract demands? Contents: General Background and Statement of the Problem; Why Look to Norway? The Development of Theory; The Forliksra deneóConcept and History; Evolution of the Legal Structure; The Boards in Action: The Operations of the Forliksra dene; The Police Prosecutor: Fines and Sentencing Court; A Day in the Oslo Criminal Court: The Role of the Layman; The "KONFLIKTRAD" Experiment in Lier, Norway; Contrasts and Conclusions: Ideas for America.
Is the arms trade totally uncontrolled? What are the main obstacles to limitations on arms transfers? What can be learned from past attempts at arms transfer control? This book, which completes SIPRI's trilogy on the facts and implications of Third World build-up of major conventional weapons, assesses past efforts, current proposals and future possibilities to limit the transfer of weapons and military technology to Third World countries. It is a companion to the two SIPRI volumes, Arms Production in the Third World (1986) and Arms Transfers to the Third World 1971-85 (OUP, 1987)