24 research outputs found
Requests of Brown by LC Classification: December 2006
Requests of Brown from other HELIN libraries - December 2006
Requests of Brown by LC Classification: September 2006
Requests of Brown from other HELIN libraries - September 2006
Requests of Brown by LC Classification: September 2006
Requests of Brown from other HELIN libraries - September 2006
Requests of Brown by LC Classification: July 2006
Requests of Brown from other HELIN libraries - July 2006
EBSCO Library of Congress Classification Report 2011
This report lists all periodicals subscribed to in 2011 through EBSCO Subscription Services by the University Libraries, University of Rhode Island. Information provided includes title, ISSN, Library of Congress Classification number and name, and subscriber (URI, Pell, or CCE). The list is sorted by LC Classification to better show the journals that support each discipline/subject area. Not included here are titles available through online journal packages and reference databases, which now comprise the majority of the Libraries\u27 subscriptions. The journals listed here are those to which the Libraries subscribe to individually, title-by-title
Civil Engineering Accreditation Document 2013 (Revised 2014)
This is the revised 2013 report for 2014
EBSCO Library of Congress Classification Report 2012
This report lists all periodicals subscribed to in 2012 through EBSCO Subscription Services by the University Libraries, University of Rhode Island. Information provided includes title, ISSN, Library of Congress Classification number and name, and account number (for URI, Pell, or CCE). The list is sorted by LC Classification to better show the journals that support each discipline/subject area. Not included here are titles available through online journal packages and reference databases, which now comprise the majority of the Libraries\u27 subscriptions. The journals listed here are those to which the Libraries subscribe to individually, title-by-title, through EBSCO
Management Matters
New indications of managerial innovations are created and then used to show that changes in organizational technologies are an important source of economic growth. Specifically, the analysis demonstrates that, first, in response to a positive managerial technology shock, output, productivity and hours significantly increase in the short run, second, these types of innovations are as important as non-managerial ones in explaining movements in these variables at business cycle frequencies, and, third, product and process innovations promote the development of new managerial techniques.Business Cycles; Productivity; Management techniques; Technical Change