SUMMARY AND NEXT STEPS Sample Clauses

SUMMARY AND NEXT STEPS. This deliverable has outlined the context, conceptual underpinning and content of a survey to be fielded in seven countries, each of which has representatives in the FIDUCIA consortium: UK, Germany, Italy, Finland, Bulgaria, Lithuania and Turkey. Building on earlier work from project partners on the ESS, the surveys will break new ground in consideration of compliance with new rules and regulations and the portability of procedural justice across national boundaries The surveys will also add to knowledge on public experiences and perceptions of cybercrime, the policing of migrants and minority groups, and novel techniques for measuring offending behaviour in survey contexts. Following the model of the ESS, the surveys will be managed at a national level, with FIDUCIA partners and local survey companies feeding in to matters such as translation and ensuring the applicability of ideas and concepts across all seven countries. APPENDIX A: FIDUCIA NEW EUROPEAN CRIMES AND TRUST-BASED POLICY ~ SP1 - COOPERATION SSH.2011.3.2-1 GRANT AGREEMENT NR 290653 Work Package 12: Trust and attitudes to justice “abroad” Task 12.1: Design of the survey indicators Deliverable 12.1: Survey items / Questionnaire (in English) Version: Date: 30/09/2014 Type: Deliverable Confidentiality: Public Responsible Partner: LSE Editor: Xxx Xxxxxxx (LSE) Contributors: Xxxx Xxxxx (BBK), Xxx Xxxxxxxx (OXFORD), Xxxxxxx Xxxxxx (UNIPR), Xxxxx Xxxxx, Xxxxx Xxxxxxxxx (CSD), Xxxxxxx Xxxxxxxx (TEISE) Preliminary note: This questionnaire comes in a standard form (items highlighted in yellow only) and an extended form (the entire document including the highlighted portions). Partners are invited to search the best value option that allows them to flexible in the fielding of this survey as specified in the “tender” document.
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SUMMARY AND NEXT STEPS. We presented the ADM method, based on ATAM, as a systematic way to make design decisions supported on an analytical understanding of the impact of non- functional properties over the system architecture. This method can be categorized as a scenario-based method. Our goal in this eDiana deliverable is to the method in a general way. A detailed description and usage guidelines will be provided in further deliverables of this task and the modelling baseline will be specified in WP6. Here the goal is to present evidence that it is possible to move from a concrete requirements scenario to a design fragment, while maintaining analytic capability. Further work is required to test, adjust and enrich the ADM method in the eDiana context. In this method, we introduced the concept of analytical advice as a characterization of design decisions that are used to achieve a desired non-functional requirement. An analytical advice is a means of satisfying a system response measure (such as end-to-end response times or mean time to failure) by manipulating some aspect of an analyzable model (such as design models annotated with XXXXX’x XXX stereotypes) through system design decisions.
SUMMARY AND NEXT STEPS. In this Fiducia deliverable we presented some preliminary findings regarding two of the theoretical goals of a new seven-country survey. Prior research indicates that the perceived legitimacy of the criminal justice system activates self-regulatory mechanisms: when people believe that legal authorities have the right to power and the right to dictate appropriate behaviour, they tend to defer to, and cooperate with, legitimate authorities because they feel it is the right thing to do (x.x. Xxxxx, 2006a, 2006b; Xxxxxxx et al., 2011; Xxx et al., 2011a, 2011b; Xxxxxxx et al., 2012a, 2012b; Xxxxxxxxx et al., 2013; Xxxxxx & Xxxxxxx, 2012). This work also shows the centrality of procedural justice to legitimacy: when police act in line with the norms and values of procedural justice, members of the public tend to believe that the police have the right to power. The first goal was to extend procedural justice theory by addressing whether the framework applies to three crimes that have not yet been investigated empirically. These crimes were: (a) downloading music, TV shows or films from internet sites that may be illegal; (b) buying alcohol, cigarettes or other goods that have been brought into the country without taxes being paid; and (c) employing somebody who does not have the right to work in the country (e.g. as a plumber or nanny). The legitimacy of legal authorities may be an important factor promoting compliance with new laws and regulations, such as those surrounding file sharing or the grey market, which pertain to behaviours that many people do not have firm or fixed opinions on. That is, most people do not commit burglary because they believe it is morally wrong to do so. They may not, however, believe it is morally wrong to buy cigarettes on which tax has not been paid, meaning that compliance with tax or duty-related regulations must be obtained via either (costly) deterrence measures or promotion of the idea that obeying the law is in itself the right thing to do, regardless of what one thinks about specific illegal acts. To summarise our findings, personal morality was a consistent predictor of compliance in the context of ‘old’ and ‘new’ crimes and legitimacy explained some variation in three of the countries. By contrast, perceived risk of sanction was relatively unimportant. The second theoretical goal was to assess whether procedural justice theory applies to the police in a country that one does not reside in. A key aspect of procedural justic...

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