#Global Study on Homicide 2023
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Portugal - porta de entrada
Dois artigos publicados recentemente na imprensa são bem ilustrativos das dimensões que a questão do tráfico de estupefacientes está a assumir em Portugal. Num deles, publicado no DN alerta-se para o facto de Portugal ser uma das principais portas de entrada da cocaína que está a inundar a Europa. No outro, do CM a preocupação é a mesma, só que relativamente ao haxixe proveniente do Norte de…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
GLI OMICIDI NEL MONDO CALANO (E LE DONNE SONO MENO)
A differenza della percezione comune, gli omicidi nel mondo sono in costante calo e vedono coinvolte molto di meno le donne degli uomini.
Negli ultimi decenni, la maggior parte dei Paesi del mondo ha visto un calo significativo dei tassi di omicidio, in particolare in alcune nazioni dell’Europa e dell’Asia. Diversi fattori hanno contribuito a questa tendenza, come il miglioramento nel sistema di giustizia penale, la maggiore presenza delle forze dell’ordine, i programmi di prevenzione della violenza e le iniziative comunitarie. Anche il progresso economico e sociale hanno avuto un ruolo cruciale, riducendo le disuguaglianze e migliorando la qualità della vita e il benessere.
Il tasso globale di omicidi negli ultimi 25 anni è diminuito di circa il 20%, scendendo da 8,8 a 6,1 ogni 100.00 abitanti all’anno. In particolare in Europa vi è stata una riduzione del 63% dal 2002 al 2023 (da 4 a 1,5 per 100.000 abitanti) e in Asia dove si è registrata una diminuzione del 36% nei tassi di omicidio nello stesso periodo (da 3,5 a 2,2 all’anno). Storicamente gli uomini sono vittime di omicidio in numero maggiore rispetto alle donne (circa 4 volte di più), spesso a causa di fattori come la criminalità organizzata e la violenza armata. Le Americhe hanno il tasso di omicidi più alto, con circa 12 vittime per 100,000 abitanti, sebbene il trend sia, anche in questa regione in calo (-20% dal 2000).
___________________
Fonte: Ufficio studi Mezzopieno – Guarda altri grafici
Global study on homicide UNODC
VERIFICATO ALLA FONTE | Guarda il protocollo di Fact checking delle notizie di Mezzopieno
BUONE NOTIZIE CAMBIANO IL MONDO | Firma la petizione per avere più informazione positiva in giornali e telegiornali
Se trovi utile il nostro lavoro e credi nel principio del giornalismo costruttivo non-profit | sostieni Mezzopieno
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
Excerpt from this story from New Republic:
Our world is becoming an increasingly dangerous place. One study recently found that extreme heat killed nearly 50,000 people in Europe last year. A single county in the United States—Maricopa County, in Arizona—reported 645 such deaths. Eye-popping sea surface temperatures are fueling a historically destructive hurricane season this summer, and lethal, record-breaking storms are lashing states from Texas to Vermont. In California, the climate-driven Park fire continues to burn a path of devastation that has left hundreds homeless, including numerous survivors of previous wildfires—people who have now lost their homes multiple times.
These aren’t “natural” disasters. 2023’s summer heat waves, for example, would have been “virtually impossible,” in one research team’s words, without human-caused climate change. That means these disasters are being driven by particular corporate actors—and particularly Big Oil companies. These companies, by generating a substantial portion of the greenhouse gas emissions that have warmed the planet, while simultaneously deceiving the public about the dangers of those emissions, have created a crisis that is putting millions of Americans at risk.
Existing laws are designed to protect us from such public safety threats. Recently, the victims of manmade climate disasters have started to demand that prosecutors use them.
Two weeks ago, over 1,000 survivors of climate disasters sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Justice calling on Attorney General Merrick Garland to “investigate the fossil fuel industry for climate-related crimes.” One of the signers, Allen Myers, said that the wildfire that burned down his family’s home “bore the fingerprints of the climate crisis” and stressed that the “fossil fuel industry knows that what they’re doing is dangerous.” Another, Jenny Sebold, a mother of three whose small business in Vermont was destroyed in climate-driven flooding, said, “I like to joke that I pay my bills in optimism�� while “the rich oil execs get to keep making piles of money.”
I’ve previously written about how criminal law professors, former prosecutors, and climate advocates like me have begun arguing that Big Oil can and should be held accountable for some form of homicide—i.e., the deaths caused by climate disasters. But people who haven’t actually been killed, like Allen and Jenny, deserve justice too. And their experiences point toward another possibility: charging individual fossil fuel CEOs with reckless endangerment.
Reckless endangerment is an offense in most states. It criminalizes reckless conduct that “creates a substantial risk of serious bodily injury to another person.” The argument that Big Oil CEOs have committed this crime is pretty straightforward. The climate crisis, by intensifying and in many cases causing extreme weather events, including heat waves, hurricanes, floods, and wildfires, is creating a substantial risk of serious injury for vast numbers of people in practically every state and county in the country.
Fossil fuel executives, in pursuing ever-expanding oil and gas production and spreading disinformation to block efforts that would have made climate change less catastrophic, have in very concrete and material ways contributed to this risk. And a growing body of internal documents shows they knew it was dangerous: that production of fossil fuels would cause, in their own words, “globally catastrophic” climate harms that would “submerge New York,” do “great irreversible harm to our planet,” “have serious consequences for man’s comfort and survival,” and cause “suffering and death due to thermal extremes.” Fossil fuel executives even raised the height of offshore drilling platforms to account for expected sea-level rise! Doing something when you know it’s dangerous is the legal definition of recklessness. So demonstrating that Big Oil execs acted with criminal recklessness seems eminently possible.
A reckless endangerment charge also gets around what is often considered the most significant burden in climate accountability litigation: causation. It can be difficult to connect the climate contributions of specific corporations to particular climate disasters. But reckless endangerment is a crime of conduct, not result. You don’t need to prove a defendant’s reckless conduct caused a particular injury but simply that it created the risk of doing so.
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
no violence or crime let us be creative law abiding and positive
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/ecuador-detains-12-people-including-judges-organized-crime-investigation-2024-03-04/
“ It is a battle that will change the whole system,” said Jimmy “Barbeque” Cherizier, a former police officer who styles himself as Robin Hood figure in his territory.
https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/12/18/latin-america-can-boost-economic-growth-by-reducing-crime
0 notes
Text
let us improve the condition of poor and needy without becoming RADICLE ROBIN HOODS who voilently loot and destroy society to help others
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/ecuador-detains-12-people-including-judges-organized-crime-investigation-2024-03-04/
“ It is a battle that will change the whole system,” said Jimmy “Barbeque” Cherizier, a former police officer who styles himself as Robin Hood figure in his territory.
https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/12/18/latin-america-can-boost-economic-growth-by-reducing-crime
👇🏻
"although slavery was a worldwide institution for thousands of years, nowhere in the world was slavery a controversial issue prior to the 18th century. People of every race and color were enslaved – and enslaved others.
White people were still being bought and sold as slaves in the Ottoman Empire, decades after American blacks were freed.
Everyone hated the idea of being a slave but few had any qualms about enslaving others. Slavery was just not an issue, not even among intellectuals, much less among political leaders, until the 18th century – and then it was an issue only in Western civilization."
Only after INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION in Europe people in there started UNIVERSAL EDUCATION so that they get EDUCATED / SKILLED LABOUR . Before that most societies in the world kept the poor uneducated and socially backward Slavery exploitation is an evil which has been prevalent from ancient times in most of the societies
0 notes
Text
Rise in Incidence of Crime to Propel Global Molecular Forensic Market Growth
According to Inkwood Research, the Global Molecular Forensic Market is expected to record a CAGR of 9.67% in terms of revenue over the forecasting period of 2023-2032.
“Browse 84 Market Data Tables and 66 Figures spread over 180 Pages, along with an in-depth TOC on the Global Molecular Forensic Market Forecast 2023-2032.”
The progress in molecular biology and technical engineering has enhanced sequencing methods and outcomes in the molecular forensic market. Human identification stands out as a challenging domain within forensic science. Forensic biology, particularly DNA analysis and human identity testing, demands the examination of diverse samples. These samples exhibit significant variations concerning their source, DNA quality, carrier matrix, presence of inhibitors, sample age, as well as DNA quality and quantity.
REQUEST FREE SAMPLE LINK��– https://inkwoodresearch.com/reports/molecular-forensic-market/#request-free-sample
Increasing Incidence of Crime to Boost Global Market Growth
The demand for forensic services is experiencing a significant surge. The most recent crime data released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) through its Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program indicates a noteworthy shift. After several years of nearly continuous declines, national rates for violent crime and homicide increased from 2014 to 2016. The violent crime rate rose from 361.6 per 100,000 people in 2014 to 373.7 per 100,000 in 2015 and further increased to 386.3 per 100,000 in 2016.
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR): Dominating Forensic Technology in 2022
PCR stands out as the preferred test in the global molecular forensic market, commanding a dominant share. This preference is primarily attributed to its user-friendly nature, superior results, rapid turnaround time, and cost-effective solutions.
Asia-Pacific to Grow with Highest CAGR by 2032
The Asia-Pacific (APAC) molecular forensic market is poised for rapid growth in the coming years. Numerous APAC countries, such as Australia, China, India, Japan, and Singapore, among others, are steadfastly promoting the adoption of forensic solutions. This includes the integration of NGS- and mass spectrometry-based tests, particularly across the emerging economies within the APAC region.
Some of the top companies operating in the global market include Illumina Inc, General Electric Company, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc, etc.
Request for Customization: https://inkwoodresearch.com/request-for-custom-report/
Related Reports:
GLOBAL CLEANROOM TECHNOLOGY MARKET
About Inkwood Research
Inkwood Research specializes in syndicated & customized research reports and consulting services. Market intelligence studies with relevant fact-based research are customized across industry verticals such as technology, automotive, chemicals, materials, healthcare, and energy, with an objective comprehension that acknowledges the business environments. Our geographical analysis comprises North & South America, CEE, CIS, the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
#molecularforensicmarket#molecularforensic#pharmaceuticalindustry#inkwoodresearch#marketresearchreports
0 notes
Text
BBC 0427 30 Jun 2023
12095Khz 0359 30 JUN 2023 - BBC (UNITED KINGDOM) in ENGLISH from TALATA VOLONONDRY. SINPO = 55445. English, dead carrier s/on @0358z then ID@0359z pips and newsday preview. @0401z World News anchored by David Harper. A French policeman has been charged with homicide and is in custody over the killing of a teenager near Paris on Tuesday. The 17-year-old, named as Nahel M, was shot at point-blank range as he drove off and crashed soon afterwards. Anger at his killing has sparked violence across the country. A march led by the boy's mother was marred by clashes on Thursday afternoon. In a third night of unrest, protesters were arrested in Lille and Marseille. The executive directors of two U.N. agencies are warning that Haiti’s humanitarian crisis has reached unprecedented levels amid reports of widespread hunger and gang violence. The Wagner Group is still recruiting fighters across Russia, days after staging a mutiny that led Vladimir Putin to raise fears of civil war. Members of California's Black reparations task force presented their historic two-year report to state lawmakers Thursday, challenging critics to read the hefty tome and reconsider redress for the descendants of slavery. In the first global assessment of TB among incarcerated people, a new study found consistently high TB case rates and low case detection in prisons, suggesting the need for health organizations to increase efforts to reduce the spread of TB among this high-risk population. A 24-year-old former international student has been charged in the stabbings Wednesday in a University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada classroom in what police believe was a hate-motivated incident targeting a gender-studies class. Christine King Farris, the last living sibling of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., has died. Her niece, the Rev. Bernice King, tweeted that her “beloved aunt” died Thursday. She was 95. For decades after her brother's assassination in 1968, Farris worked along with his widow, Coretta Scott King, to preserve and promote his legacy. But unlike her high-profile sister-in-law, Farris' activism, and grief, was often behind the scenes. @0406z "Newsday" begins. 250ft unterminated BoG antenna pointed E/W, Etón e1XM. 250kW, beamAz 315°, bearing 63°. Received at Plymouth, United States, 15359KM from transmitter at Talata Volonondry. Local time: 2259.
0 notes