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International Lawyer Interview with Professor Jerome A. Cohen
Jerome A. Cohen (사) 이준국제법연구원 2022 Journal of East Asia and International Law Vol.15 No.1
Dr. Jerome Cohen (孔傑榮/柯恩) is Professor Emeritus at New York University School of Law, Founder and Faculty Director Emeritus of its US-Asia Law Institute, and Adjunct Senior Fellow for Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations. Professor Cohen was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey as the son of a local government attorney. After graduating from Linden High School, he received his B.A. and J.D. degree from prestigious Yale University and its Law School in 1951 and 1955, respectively. As a law student, he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Law Journal. From 1955–56 he clerked at the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren and then under Justice Felix Frankfurter. Professor Cohen joined the faculty of University of California- Berkeley School of Law in 1959. Then, Professor Cohen was asked to recommend a candidate for a four-year grant to study China offered by the Rockefeller Foundation. When there was no clear candidate, however, he decided to pursue the opportunity himself.
Endoscopic Sedation in Developing and Developed Countries
( Ariel A. Benson ),( Lawrence B. Cohen ),( Jerome D. Waye ),( Alaleh Akhavan ),( James Aisenberg ) 대한소화기학회 2008 Gut and Liver Vol.2 No.2
Background/Aims: Data are scarce on endoscopic sedation practices outside the United States and Western Europe, particularly from developing nations. An Internet survey was used to assess endoscopic sedation practices in developing and developed countries. Methods: Responses to a Web-based survey of sedation practices from 165 expert endoscopists from 81 countries were analyzed. The most common sedation method was defined as that used for >50% of endoscopies within a country. Results: Responses were received from 84 endoscopists practicing in 46 countries (51% response rate; 32 responses from 22 developing countries and 52 responses from 24 developed countries). A combination of benzodiazepine and opioid was the most common method for esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) in 40% of the countries and for colonoscopy in 56% of the countries. For propofol and unsedated endoscopy, the corresponding figures were 8% and 19% for EGD and 18% and 10% for colonoscopy. No single sedation method accounted for >50% of EGD and colonoscopy cases in 32% and 17% of the countries, respectively. There were no significant differences in the proportions of developing and developed countries using combined benzodiazepine and opioid, propofol, or unsedated endoscopy. Conclusions: Sedation is used for most endoscopic procedures worldwide, with sedation practice not differing significantly between developing and developed countries.