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A Free Trade Area of the Americas: Status of Negotiations and Major Policy Issues
At the second Summit of the Americas in Santiago, Chile (April 1998), 34 Western Hemisphere nations agreed to initiate formal negotiations to create a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) by 2005. The negotiating groups completed a draft agreement in
January 2001, which was presented at the third Summit of the Americas held in Quebec City on April 20-22, 2001. President Bush expressed strong support for the FTAA and concrete progress has been made in moving it forward. Yet, differences in priorities among the negotiating countries are still evident, suggesting that the FTAA faces many policy hurdles in both the U.S. Congress and the hemisphere
Discrimination at Work: The Americas
Fact sheet on discrimination in the Americas, prepared by the ILO
Publications Catalogue 2008-9
Lists publications produced by, or in association with, the Institute for the Study of the Americas
Publications Catalogue 2006-07
Lists publications produced by, or in association with, the Institute for the Study of the Americas
Correlation, Network and Multifractal Analysis of Global Financial Indices
We apply RMT, Network and MF-DFA methods to investigate correlation, network
and multifractal properties of 20 global financial indices. We compare results
before and during the financial crisis of 2008 respectively. We find that the
network method gives more useful information about the formation of clusters as
compared to results obtained from eigenvectors corresponding to second largest
eigenvalue and these sectors are formed on the basis of geographical location
of indices. At threshold 0.6, indices corresponding to Americas, Europe and
Asia/Pacific disconnect and form different clusters before the crisis but
during the crisis, indices corresponding to Americas and Europe are combined
together to form a cluster while the Asia/Pacific indices forms another
cluster. By further increasing the value of threshold to 0.9, European
countries France, Germany and UK constitute the most tightly linked markets. We
study multifractal properties of global financial indices and find that
financial indices corresponding to Americas and Europe almost lie in the same
range of degree of multifractality as compared to other indices. India, South
Korea, Hong Kong are found to be near the degree of multifractality of indices
corresponding to Americas and Europe. A large variation in the degree of
multifractality in Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan and Singapore may be a
reason that when we increase the threshold in financial network these countries
first start getting disconnected at low threshold from the correlation network
of financial indices. We fit Binomial Multifractal Model (BMFM) to these
financial markets.Comment: 32 pages, 25 figures, 1 tabl
The Senator William Maclay of Pennsylvania and the early development of the radical tradition
A thesis submitted in part-fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of MA in Area Studies (United States) at the Institute for the Study of the Americas, 2009
Climate Change, Migration, and Conflict: Addressing Complex Crisis Scenarios in the 21st Century
Outlines how climate change, migration, and conflict intersect in Africa, Asia, and the Americas and implications for national, human, and environmental security. Recommends policy for boosting capacity in economic, social, and environmental development
Postgraduate Prospectus 2006-07
Outlines degree and course offerings on Latin American Studies, United States Studies and Comparative American Studies in the Institute for the Study of the Americas
The Mask Strikes Back: Blackness as Aporia in Moby-Dick and Benito Cereno
What is the American Gothic a reaction to? Whereas other thinkers such as Nathaniel Hawthorne locates the building blocks of the American Gothic in Puritan Christianity or Amerindian Genocide, I argue that Melville posits the genesis of chattel slavery and the construction of racial category as the repressed events that haunt the Americas and return uninvited. By using the Gothic motif of the living corpse, the famed writer of Moby-Dick addresses the social bereavement which Blackness comes to represent in the Americas. By looking for truth on the skin and flesh, the main characters of Moby-Dick and “Benito Cereno” represent the Enlightenment precept that truth can be arrested via observation and interpretation. Melville presents two Black characters as impasses in this project of interpretation: Moby-Dick’s drowned boy, Pip, and “Benito Cereno’s” undead leader, Babo
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