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Keywords = formal coercion

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53 pages, 1141 KB  
Review
Factors Associated with Perceived Coercion in Adults Receiving Psychiatric Care: A Scoping Review
by Clara Lessard-Deschênes, Pierre Pariseau-Legault, Vincent Billé, Sophie Sergerie-Richard, Emilie Hudson, Benedetta Silva, Jean-Simon Drouin, Marie Désilets and Marie-Hélène Goulet
Healthcare 2025, 13(15), 1868; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151868 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 3157
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Perceived coercion has been associated with significant negative outcomes, including service avoidance and psychological distress. Despite growing interest, no recent comprehensive review has mapped the full range of factors influencing this experience. This scoping review aimed to synthesize and present the state [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Perceived coercion has been associated with significant negative outcomes, including service avoidance and psychological distress. Despite growing interest, no recent comprehensive review has mapped the full range of factors influencing this experience. This scoping review aimed to synthesize and present the state of knowledge on the factors associated with perceived coercion by adults receiving psychiatric care. Methods: Following the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology, a systematic search of five databases and grey literature was conducted for publications from 1990 to 2025 in English and French. A total of 143 sources were included and thematically analyzed. Consultation with experts and individuals with lived experience enriched the interpretation of findings. Results: Five categories of factors were identified: individual, clinical, relational, legal, and structural. Relational and legal factors were most consistently associated with perceived coercion, while individual and clinical factors showed inconsistent findings. Structural influences were underexamined but significantly shaped the experiences of the individuals receiving care. Conclusions: Perceived coercion arises from a complex dynamic of individual, relational, and systemic influences. Reducing coercion requires moving beyond individual-level factors to address structural conditions and policy frameworks. Future research should prioritize qualitative and intersectional approaches and amplify the voices of those most affected by coercive practices in psychiatric care. Full article
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23 pages, 575 KB  
Article
Towards Secure Internet of Things: A Coercion-Resistant Attribute-Based Encryption Scheme with Policy Revocation
by Yuan Zhai, Tao Wang, Yanwei Zhou, Feng Zhu and Bo Yang
Entropy 2025, 27(1), 32; https://doi.org/10.3390/e27010032 - 2 Jan 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1280
Abstract
With the development and application of the Internet of Things (IoT), the volume of data generated daily by IoT devices is growing exponentially. These IoT devices, such as smart wearable devices, produce data containing sensitive personal information. However, since IoT devices and users [...] Read more.
With the development and application of the Internet of Things (IoT), the volume of data generated daily by IoT devices is growing exponentially. These IoT devices, such as smart wearable devices, produce data containing sensitive personal information. However, since IoT devices and users often operate in untrusted external environments, their encrypted data remain vulnerable to potential privacy leaks and security threats from malicious coercion. Additionally, access control and management of these data remain critical issues. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a novel coercion-resistant ciphertext-policy attribute-based encryption scheme. The scheme leverages chameleon hashing to enhance deniable encryption, achieving coercion resistance, thereby enabling IoT data to resist coercion attacks. Moreover, the scheme employs attribute-based encryption to secure IoT data, enabling fine-grained access control and dynamic user access management, providing a secure and flexible solution for vast IoT data. We construct the scheme on a composite order bilinear group and provide formal proofs for its coercion resistance, correctness, and security. Finally, through experimental comparisons, we demonstrate the efficiency and feasibility of the proposed scheme. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Information Security and Data Privacy)
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28 pages, 378 KB  
Article
Dealing with Evaluative Expressions and Hate Speech Metaphors with Fuzzy Property Grammar Systems
by Adrià Torrens-Urrutia, Maria Dolores Jiménez-López and Susana Campillo-Muñoz
Axioms 2023, 12(5), 484; https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms12050484 - 16 May 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2554
Abstract
We introduce a Fuzzy Property Grammar System (FPGS), a formalism that integrates a Fuzzy Property Grammar into a linguistic grammar system to formally characterize metaphorical evaluative expressions. The main scope of this paper is to present the formalism of FPGS and to show [...] Read more.
We introduce a Fuzzy Property Grammar System (FPGS), a formalism that integrates a Fuzzy Property Grammar into a linguistic grammar system to formally characterize metaphorical evaluative expressions. The main scope of this paper is to present the formalism of FPGS and to show how it might provide a formal characterization of hate speech linguistic evaluative expressions with metaphors (as fuzzy concepts), together with evaluating their degree of linguistic violence. Linguistic metaphors are full of semantic coercions. It is necessary to formally characterize the context of the communication to acknowledge the extralinguistic constraints of the pragmatic domain, which establishes whether an utterance is violent. To show the applicability of our formalism, we present a proof of concept. By compiling and tagging a 3000-tweet corpus, we have extracted a lexicon of hate speech metaphors. Furthermore, we show how FPGS architecture can deal with different types of hate speech and can identify implicit violent figurative evaluative expressions by context and type. Although we are still in the experimental phase of our project and cannot present conclusive results at the computational level, the proof-of-concept results show that our formalism can achieve the desired outcome. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Logic)
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14 pages, 349 KB  
Article
A Formal Approach to Coercion Resistance and Its Application to E-Voting
by Stanislas Riou, Oksana Kulyk and David Yeregui Marcos del Blanco
Mathematics 2022, 10(5), 781; https://doi.org/10.3390/math10050781 - 28 Feb 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2835
Abstract
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic brought renewed attention to electronic voting—this time as a potential option to contain the spread during elections. One of the long unresolved topics with remote voting is the risk of voter’s coercion due to the uncontrolled environment [...] Read more.
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic brought renewed attention to electronic voting—this time as a potential option to contain the spread during elections. One of the long unresolved topics with remote voting is the risk of voter’s coercion due to the uncontrolled environment in which it takes place, indicating the importance of the coercion resistance property. In the present article, the authors conduct a database analysis of over 350 articles to present different formal definitions of coercion resistance based on three frameworks (game-based definitions, applied pi-calculus, and logic). Finally, the different security properties of each one are studied and compared in order to facilitate the development of electronic voting schemes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mathematics Cryptography and Information Security 2021)
16 pages, 325 KB  
Concept Paper
Disenchantment, Buffering, and Spiritual Reductionism: A Pedagogy of Secularism for Counseling and Psychotherapy
by Waleed Y. Sami, John Mitchell Waters, Amelia Liadis, Aliza Lambert and Abigail H. Conley
Religions 2021, 12(8), 612; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080612 - 6 Aug 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 6565
Abstract
The various mental health disciplines (e.g., counseling, psychology, social work) all mandate competence in working with clients from diverse religious and spiritual backgrounds. However, there is growing evidence that practitioners feel ill-equipped to meet the needs of their religiously- and spiritually-diverse clients. Furthermore, [...] Read more.
The various mental health disciplines (e.g., counseling, psychology, social work) all mandate competence in working with clients from diverse religious and spiritual backgrounds. However, there is growing evidence that practitioners feel ill-equipped to meet the needs of their religiously- and spiritually-diverse clients. Furthermore, formal education on religion and spirituality remains optional within coursework. Research on religion and spirituality is also noted for its reductionism to observable outcomes, leaving much of its nuance uncovered. This paper will utilize philosophies of secularism and explore the concepts of disenchantment, buffering, and coercion, to help illuminate why our contemporary society and our disciplines struggle with this incongruence between stated values and implementation. Case vignettes and recommendations will be provided to help practitioners and educators. Full article
16 pages, 1092 KB  
Article
Diffusing Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning in the EU
by Stefan Werland
Sustainability 2020, 12(20), 8436; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208436 - 13 Oct 2020
Cited by 31 | Viewed by 6402
Abstract
This paper explores how the European Commission promotes the concept of Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning (SUMP) among European cities. Despite the strong uptake of the SUMP concept, mobility-related problems persist in European municipalities. Linking theoretical approaches to understand the diffusion of policies with [...] Read more.
This paper explores how the European Commission promotes the concept of Sustainable Urban Mobility Planning (SUMP) among European cities. Despite the strong uptake of the SUMP concept, mobility-related problems persist in European municipalities. Linking theoretical approaches to understand the diffusion of policies with empirical findings from working with cities in the SUMP context, this article explores channels of policy diffusion and investigates shortcomings related to the respective approaches. Studies on the diffusion, the transfer and the convergence of policies identify formal hierarchy, coercion, competition, learning and networking, and the diffusion of international norms as channels for policy transfer. The findings which are presented in this paper are twofold: First, the paper finds evidence that the Commission takes different roles and uses all mechanisms in parallel, albeit with different intensity. It concludes that the approaches to explain policy diffusion are not competing or mutually exclusive but are applied by the same actor to address different aspects of a policy field, or to reach out to different actors. Second, the article provides first evidence of factors that limit the mechanisms’ abilities to directly influence urban mobility systems and mobility behaviour. Full article
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29 pages, 522 KB  
Article
NetVote: A Strict-Coercion Resistance Re-Voting Based Internet Voting Scheme with Linear Filtering
by Iñigo Querejeta-Azurmendi, David Arroyo Guardeño, Jorge L. Hernández-Ardieta and Luis Hernández Encinas
Mathematics 2020, 8(9), 1618; https://doi.org/10.3390/math8091618 - 18 Sep 2020
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 5012
Abstract
This paper proposes NetVote, an internet voting protocol where usability and ease in deployment are a priority. We introduce the notion of strict coercion resistance, to distinguish between vote-buying and coercion resistance. We propose a protocol with ballot secrecy, practical everlasting privacy, verifiability [...] Read more.
This paper proposes NetVote, an internet voting protocol where usability and ease in deployment are a priority. We introduce the notion of strict coercion resistance, to distinguish between vote-buying and coercion resistance. We propose a protocol with ballot secrecy, practical everlasting privacy, verifiability and strict coercion resistance in the re-voting setting. Coercion is mitigated via a random dummy vote padding strategy to hide voting patterns and make re-voting deniable. This allows us to build a filtering phase with linear complexity, based on zero knowledge proofs to ensure correctness while maintaining privacy of the process. Voting tokens are formed by anonymous credentials and pseudorandom identifiers, achieving practical everlasting privacy, where even if dealing with a future computationally unbounded adversary, vote intention is still hidden. It is not assumed for voters to own cryptographic keys prior to the election, nor store cryptographic material during the election. This property allows voters not only to vote multiple times, but also from different devices each time, granting the voter a vote-from-anywhere experience. This paper builds on top of the paper published in CISIS’19. In this version, we modify the filtering. Moreover, we formally define the padding technique, which allows us to perform the linear filtering scheme. Similarly we provide more details on the protocol itself and include a section of the security analysis, where we include the formal definitions of strict coercion resistance and a game based definition of practical everlasting privacy. Finally, we prove that NetVote satisfies them all. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mathematics Cryptography and Information Security)
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18 pages, 343 KB  
Article
‘Non-Religion’ as Part of the ‘Religion’ Category in International Human Rights
by Alan G. Nixon
Religions 2020, 11(2), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11020079 - 10 Feb 2020
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 7681
Abstract
‘Religion’ still occupies and maintains a position of formal and informal privilege in many current societies. It retains these privileges despite the increasing numbers of people who label themselves ‘non-religious’. There is also evidence that overtly non-religious people are being persecuted due to [...] Read more.
‘Religion’ still occupies and maintains a position of formal and informal privilege in many current societies. It retains these privileges despite the increasing numbers of people who label themselves ‘non-religious’. There is also evidence that overtly non-religious people are being persecuted due to the continuation of these privileges. This paper will examine such treatment of the non-religious in the context of human rights instruments and laws. It lays out the international law case for the rights of the non-religious. It also discusses the extent to which state actors have or have not ignored human rights standards in their persecution or deprivileging of non-religious people. This paper will proceed through a three-step analysis. Step 1 is to examine the aspirational Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in relation to the non-religious. The relevant sections of the UDHR and interpretations that they have received will be discussed. Step 2 is to do the same with the binding International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Finally, Step 3 is to give examples of lower-level and local laws, where I shall examine the extent to which individual countries’ laws and practices toward non-religious people support or contradict the treaty commitments that those countries have made. The continuation in coercion/persecution cases suggests that something is amiss with human rights protections being provided to the non-religious. If we are to create social structures that are more inclusive of the non-religious and to advocate for non-religious rights, it is necessary to examine the societal power and privilege still held by ‘religion’. It is hoped that this article can inform and encourage further similar engagements among sociologists, religious studies scholars, activists and lay-people interested in the treatment of non-religious peoples. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion, Power, and Resistance: New Ideas for a Divided World)
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