83,193 research outputs found

    How Should Happiness Guide Policy? Why Gross National Happiness is not opposed to Democracy

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    Gross National Happiness (GNH) as a political program carries with it the ambition to make a difference to real policy decisions. Whatever the precise understanding of GNH, it was al-ways intended to be more than a purely theoretical concept and to make a direct difference to policy making and, what is more, to actual development paths. Yet, whatever policy recom

    Conference Proceedings at Publishing Cross-Roads

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    The potential intrinsic to electronic publishing provides conference conveners with the opportunity to position the papers presented to greater advantage of both authors and readers. Unfortunately, conference papers are being increasingly published in the most expensive vehicle, the formal peer-reviewed journal. This circumstance is counter-productive to the legitimate role of conference papers in scholarly communication. The experience at Caltech in electronically publishing the proceedings of an international conference shows that conference papers can be more effectively published online at significantly less cost thus increasing dissemination and acces

    Conference Papers

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    “Voodoo and the Black Vernacular as Weapons of Resistance: Liberation Strategies in Their Eyes Were Watching God” Dr. Babacar M’Baye, Associate Professor, Kent State University “Love and Marriage in Their Eyes Were Watching God and Tell My Horse” Dr. Jennifer Freeman Marshall, Assistant Professor, Purdue Universit

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    “Zora Neale Hurston and Caribbean-U.S. Crosscurrents in Literature and Culture” Dr. Jeff Karem, Professor, Cleveland State University Hoodoo in Zora Neale Hurston\u27s Fiction and Folklore. Dr. Pearlie Mae Peters, Professor, Rider Universit

    Conference Papers

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    Conference Papers

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    “Zora Neale Hurston and Ishmael Reed: Syncretizing Moses with ‘Sympathetic’ Rhetoric” Dr. Gillian Johns, Associate Professor, Oberlin Colleg

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    “Zora Neale Hurston and Afro-Caribbean Religion: Scholarly Curiosity or Spiritual Identity?” Dr. Betty L. Hart, Professor, University of Southern Indiana Dr. Cheryl Anne Nelson, Assistant Professor, Community College of Philadelphi

    Channels of published research communication used by Malaysian authors in computer science and information technology

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    Analyse 389 records retrieved from Inspec (1990-1999), Compendex (1987-1999) and IEL (IEE/IEEE Electronic library)(1987-1999). The records comprised 159 journal articles, 229 conference papers and 1 monograph chapter. The subject coverage was computer science and information technology. The yearly output of Malaysian publications indicated a gentle upward trend. The highest contributions was 87 published in 1997. The channels used to publish differ slightly from the norm for scientists. Conference papers were preferred to journal articles. The spread of conference papers used to publish indicate three zonal distributions; the nucleus, moderate and low productivity in the ratio of 19 : 41 : 88, leading to a clustering index of 2.15. This shows that Malaysian conference contributions were concentrated in a few proceedings. No clear core journals can be identified for the journal articles and contributions were distributed in a wide variety of journal titles. Malaysian Journal of Computer Science published the highest number of journal articles. More than 83 of the articles were published in journals from the UK, USA, the Netherlands and Malaysia

    Contributions to the Eighth International Conference on Phenomena in Ionized Gases

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    Summaries and reviews of conference papers on electron-atom collision theor

    Monetary policy and learning: Some implications for policy and research

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    In March 2003 the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta hosted a conference focusing on the relationship between monetary policy and learning. The conference papers and discussions are part of an emerging literature that introduces learning-about the economy or the model used by policymakers-into dynamic macroeconomic models. In some models, monetary policymakers learn about how the economy works while in others private agents learn about the model(s) the central bank uses to formulate monetary policy. ; This article outlines key issues, raised in a 1999 book by Thomas Sargent, about how to interpret monetary policy behavior and economic performance over the past thirty years using the Phillips curve framework and different assumptions about learning. To a large extent, several conference papers follow from Sargent's work. Some conference papers focus on understanding recent inflation history, attempting to detect monetary policy's role in generating the recent, more benign inflation performance. Other conference papers investigate the role of learning behavior in a variety of settings. The article outlines the implications from some of the papers. ; Finally, the article describes economic literature relating to central bank transparency, its relevance for effective communication to the public about monetary policy, and its likely role in future learning models. Through the transparency discussion, the article foreshadows Lars Svensson's keynote address at the conference (reprinted here), citing it as a "suggested user's guide for monetary policymakers to improve policy effectiveness."Monetary policy
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