1,246 research outputs found

    Assessing farmland in Illinois. 1224

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    Cover title."December, 1983."--p. [3] of cover.Prepared by D.L. Chicoine and J.T. Scott.Includes bibliographical references and index

    Place ratings, shifting neoliberalism and quality of life in communities

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    The publication of place ratings on the basis of their competitive attractiveness and quality of life has been one element of place marketing and promotion agenda associated with the onset of neoliberalism. The Places Rated Almanac in the US has epitomised and led the development of such guides, and after a quarter of a century appears on the basis of sales to continue to offer currency and utility. This paper explores the relevance of this particular almanac and its offsprings within the context of recent accounts of the periodisation of neoliberalism. In particular it considers the extent to which such guides have continued to have resonance through the shift from economic-focussed roll back neoliberalism to more socially-oriented roll out neoliberalism

    AIDS Mortality and its Effect on the Labor Market: Evidence from South Africa

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    This paper investigates how HIV/AIDS has impacted the labor market in South Africa, focusing on its effect on wages and employment. This is done by matching individual level data with group specific cumulative AIDS mortality rates. Exploiting the panel nature of the data, I remove individuals whose productivity is most likely impacted by HIV/AIDS, and find evidence that cumulative AIDS mortality has led to reductions in wages of between three and six percent for the African population group (Black South Africans). Furthermore, I also find evidence that the epidemic has lowered employment in South Africa. This result is concentrated among those with the lowest levels of education and employment. Although not large in magnitude, these effects are widespread across a significant portion of the population, contributing to substantial loss of income throughout the South African economy

    An Analysis of FFA Chapter Owned Livestock Projects in South Dakota

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    This problem purposes to investigate effectiveness, difficulties, and procedure concerned with FFA chapter owned livestock projects in South Dakota. What is the most common business arrangement? How are participate selected? What are desirable contractual arrangement? What are the most serious difficulties encountered? What are the benefits derived? These and other questions dealing with chapter owned livestock represent the foundation of this study

    The Birth of Fertility Fraud: How to Protect Washingtonians

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    Doctors in multiple states have been accused of using their own sperm to impregnate patients without the patient’s consent. Because most states do not have laws prohibiting fertility doctors from using their own sperm to impregnate their patients, families have not been able to seek meaningful legal remedies. State legislatures enacted new fertility fraud laws to deter, criminalize, and provide a legal civil cause of action to those harmed by these actions—but only after these allegations came to light. If the Washington State Legislature creates a law before any similar allegations come to light in Washington, those patients harmed in Washington will have a civil remedy against fertility doctors, unlike patients in other states. To protect Washington patients from the same legal fate, the legislature needs to act proactively and enact a new law against fertility fraud

    Low subfrontal dural opening for anterior clinoid meningioma

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    Optimizing University Managed Resources for South Dakota Public Universities: A Simulation Approach

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    A simulation analysis demonstrates the use of tuition as a policy tool to achieve financial independence among the six South Dakota public universities under University Managed Resources (UMR). The simulation analysis maintains an overall environment of funding stability and is guided by horizontal equity, a concept from the economics of public finance that all entities of the same or similar situation are treated similarly. Financial independence, within the simulation analysis, is defined as an annual budgeting process with no reallocation of financial resources among or between the six universities. For each of the three indicators of horizontal equity simulated, achieving financial independence also realized a convergence of base funding per state-support-tuition student full-time-equivalents (FTE) among the six universities. Applying the economics of public finance concept vertical equity, as a guide to provide rationale for, and explanations of, variation in base funding per state-support-tuition student full-time-equivalent (FTE) among the six public universities, would be a worthwhile follow-up study
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