150,014 research outputs found
Industrial Terrorism and the Unmaking of New Deal Labor Law
The passage of the Wagner (National Labor Relations) Act of 1935 represented an unprecedented effort to guarantee American workers basic labor rights--the rights to organize unions, to provoke meaningful collective bargaining, and to strike. Previous attempts by workers and government administrators to realize these rights in the workplace met with extraordinary, often violent, resistance from powerful industrial employers, whose repressive measures were described by government officials as a system of industrial terrorism. Although labor scholars have acknowledged these practices and paid some attention to the way they initially frustrated labor rights and influenced the jurisprudence and politics of labor relations in the late 1930s and early 1940s, the literature has neither adequately described the extent and intensity of this phenomenon nor fully explored its effects. This Article remedies that shortcoming. Focusing on three industries where the practice of industrial terrorism was especially well developed and its influence especially pronounced, this Article shows how the practitioners of industrial terrorism and their allies in Congress were able to turn the legacy of violence and disorder, which they authored by their violent resistance to the Wagner Act, into the basis of an extraordinary counterattack on labor rights. It shows how this attack culminated in 1947 with the enactment of the profoundly reactionary Taft-Hartley Act and remade the landscape of American labor relations
Decision trees, monotone functions, and semimatroids
We define decision trees for monotone functions on a simplicial complex. We
define homology decidability of monotone functions, and show that various
monotone functions related to semimatroids are homology decidable. Homology
decidability is a generalization of semi-nonevasiveness, a notion due to
Jonsson. The motivating example is the complex of bipartite graphs, whose Betti
numbers are unknown in general.
We show that these monotone functions have optimum decision trees, from which
we can compute relative Betti numbers of related pairs of simplicial complexes.
Moreover, these relative Betti numbers are coefficients of evaluations of the
Tutte polynomial, and every semimatroid collapses onto its broken circuit
complex.Comment: 16 page
Magnetically centered liquid column float Patent
Magnetically centered liquid column floa
Solar X-rays - A comparsion with microwave radiation
OSO-I data analysis for comparison of solar X-rays and microwave radiatio
Some Intuition behind Large Cardinal Axioms, Their Characterization, and Related Results
We aim to explain the intuition behind several large cardinal axioms, give characterization theorems for these axioms, and then discuss a few of their properties. As a capstone, we hope to introduce a new large cardinal notion and give a similar characterization theorem of this new notion. Our new notion of near strong compactness was inspired by the similar notion of near supercompactness, due to Jason Schanker
Topological Change in Mean Convex Mean Curvature Flow
Consider the mean curvature flow of an (n+1)-dimensional, compact, mean
convex region in Euclidean space (or, if n<7, in a Riemannian manifold). We
prove that elements of the m-th homotopy group of the complementary region can
die only if there is a shrinking S^k x R^(n-k) singularity for some k less than
or equal to m. We also prove that for each m from 1 to n, there is a nonempty
open set of compact, mean convex regions K in R^(n+1) with smooth boundary for
which the resulting mean curvature flow has a shrinking S^m x R^(n-m)
singularity.Comment: 19 pages. This version includes a new section proving that certain
kinds of mean curvature flow singularities persist under arbitrary small
perturbations of the initial surface. Newest update (Oct 2013) fixes some
bibliographic reference
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