26,485 research outputs found
Simplification of Health and Social Services Enrollment and Eligibility: Lessons for California From Interviews in Four States
Explores state officials' and advocates' views on issues involved in streamlining enrollment and eligibility processes, including the importance of staff buy-in, community partners' outreach efforts, and technological challenges and lessons learned
Secure web application development and global regulation
The World Wide Web (WWW) has been predominantly responsible for instigating radical paradigm transformations in today’s global information rich civilizations. Many societies have basic operational economical components that depend on Web enabled systems in order to support daily commercial activities. The acceptance of E-commerce as a valid channel for conducting business coupled with societal integration and dependence on Web enabled technology has instigated the development of local, national, and global efforts to regulate criminal activities on the World Wide Web. This paper makes two contributions. The first contribution is the high-level review of the United States and United Kingdom legislation that has developed from the escalation and integration of the World Wide Web into society. The second contribution is the support for the idea that legislative compatibility, in concert with an organization’s policy compatibility, needs to be acknowledged in secure Web application development methodologies
The Business Case for Quality: Ending Business as Usual in American Health Care
Examines some of the reasons why establishing a business case for improving health care is so difficult, and considers possible solutions. Includes comments on quality provisions of the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003
Managed Competition in U.S. Telecommunications
The 1996 Telecommunications Act represents a major turn in U.S. policy towards 'deregulation.' Instead of tying price deregulation to the opening of entry in a market that has been regulated for decades, the Act creates a maze of new regulatory responsibilities for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the states. Incumbent local telephone companies, who were being freed from cost-based regulation prior to 1996, are now subject to detailed regulation of their wholesale services. Specifically, they must 'unbundle' their network facilities into a large number of components and lease these components or 'elements' to entrants at cost. Moreover, the Bell companies are not permitted to compete with long distance companies until they satisfy regulators that they have complied with a large number of interconnection requirements. This complex new regulatory regime has been the source of three years of regulatory battles and legal challenges and has needlessly delayed facilities-based entry into telecommunications. It would be far better if the FCC and the states were to pursue a strategy of full deregulation. The regulators should announce a date sufficiently far in the future at which all rate and entry regulation will cease, much as the Congress did for airlines in 1978. This would place potential competitors and customers on notice that fully flexible rates will be in place on this date and that new opportunities could be available for both. It also would reduce the value of rent seeking before the regulatory commissions and the never-ending cycle of rulemakings and court appeals.
Managing U.S-EU Trade Relations through Mutual Recognition and Safe Harbor Agreements:"New" and "Global" Approaches to Transatlantic Economic Governance?
governance; regulation; regulations; regulatory competition; directives; implementation; WTO
Ready or Not? Protecting the Public's Health From Diseases, Disasters, and Bioterrorism, 2011
Highlights examples of preparedness programs and capacities at risk of federal budget cuts or elimination, examines state and local public health budget cuts, reviews ten years of progress and shortfalls, and outlines policy issues and recommendations
The Effect of Incumbent Bidding in Set-Aside Auctions: An Analysis of Prices in the Closed and Open Segments of FCC Auction 35
This paper examines the impact of an incumbent carrier’s participation in two simultaneously conducted auctions: one set-aside for non-incumbents and one open to all carriers. This paper estimates the extent to which prices in the closed auction were inflated by the participation of incumbents. This paper also estimates what prices would have been in the open auction had incumbents been excluded from bidding in the closed. It is found that an incumbent’s participation in the closed auction through a front, Alaska Native, enabled it to win more licenses at lower prices in FCC Auction 35. In contrast, non-incumbents won fewer licenses and paid more for what they won. The econometric techniques employed here to estimate prices in a “but for” world could be replicated in future damage analysis. Finally, this paper suggests an alternative method of screening bidders seeking access to set-aside auctions that would be consistent with the FCC’s goal of promoting competition in the wireless industry.Auctions, spectrum auctions, market design
The Role of Skolkovo as a Top Priority Initiative of the Russian Innovation Policy
In the face of the ever growing global technological competition and increasing dependency on exports of natural resources, the government of the Russian Federation has recently declared knowledge-driven growth as its key policy objective. Under the Presidency of Dmitry Medvedev economic modernization and innovative development became top priorities of Russia’s political agenda. Thanks to the enthusiasm and personal engagement of Medvedev, a number of strategic initiatives, mainly aimed at overcoming the technological inferiority of Russia, were implemented. The Skolkovo Innovation Centre is one of the most significant of them. It is a technology hub and a research complex being built outside Moscow, often referred to as Russian Silicon Valley.
The aim of this research is to analyse the complex of strategic objectives of the newly created Centre, its role in the Russian innovation policy and its current, as well as potential impact on Russia’s overall innovative performance and global competitiveness. The analysis is based on the theoretical framework of national systems of innovation and is complemented by the innovation communication approach, underlining the key role of communication in success of an innovative ecosystem. The study shows that Skolkovo can be considered as one of the most successful innovation communication projects in modern Russia. Skolkovo has managed to draw attention to the numerous problems related to Russia’s technological backwardness and initiated a public discussion about the imperative of the country’s modernization through innovation-driven model of development. However, it is argued that the project has inherited structural disbalances and path dependencies of the Russian innovation system, which the country owes to the Soviet past and its leadership culture. Therefore, unless the Russian government improves the general investment climate, promotes the rule of law, eradicates corruption and fosters fare business competition, Skolkovo risks to be seen as a pure image promotion governmental endeavour rather than a powerful agent of change to boost Russia’s modernization.fi=Opinnäytetyö kokotekstinä PDF-muodossa.|en=Thesis fulltext in PDF format.|sv=Lärdomsprov tillgängligt som fulltext i PDF-format
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