672 research outputs found
The Riots of December 2008: their Causes in Historical and International Contexts
The riots of December 2008 were initially provoked by the killing of a schoolchild, but
had wider motives. Most rioters were students or schoolchildren; while the destruction
was perpetrated mainly by self-styled anarchists and revolutionaries. For the most part,
their attitudes and behaviour patterns can be dated from 1974 and were now unique to
Greece. The young were experienced in protesting against a poor educational system,
lack of job prospects and political corruption.
Anarchists and revolutionaries flourished in a society which had good cause to be
disrespectful of governmental authority. Both groups confronted a discredited and
inefficient police force
Simitis's Unsuccessful Struggle for Economic and Governmental Modernisation: A Case of Irresolution or Impotence?
Modernisation, meaning the attainment of best governmental practice in the European Union, was the mission of Kostas Simitis while prime minister in 1996–2004. In the goals which mattered most to himself and to voters — improving governmental efficiency so as to promote economic development and citizens’ welfare — his
record was disappointing. Various international measures of Greece’s governmental and economic efficiency, and assessments of citizens’ satisfaction and government finances, indicate regression rather than progress. The basic cause of failure is argued to be the prevalence of traditional clientelist attitudes, which made the state very influential over society and the economy, while condemning it to inefficiency. Government
influence over the economy and labour force burdened them with restrictive practices. Yet few if any members of the major political parties accepted the full implications of modernisation. While meriting some blame, Simitis failed mainly because of factors beyond his control
Calculating Hyperfine Couplings in Large Ionic Crystals Containing Hundreds of QM Atoms: Subsystem DFT is the Key
We present an application of the linear scaling Frozen Density Embedding
(FDE) formulation of subsystem DFT to the calculation of isotropic hyperfine
coupling constants (hfccs) of atoms belonging to a guanine radical cation
embedded in a guanine hydrochloride monohydrate crystal. The model systems
considered range from an isolated guanine to a 15,000 atom QM/MM cluster where
the QM region is comprised of 36 protonated guanine cations, 36 chlorine anions
and 42 water molecules. Our calculations show that the embedding effects of the
surrounding crystal cannot be reproduced neither by small model systems nor by
a pure QM/MM procedure. Instead, a large QM region is needed to fully capture
the complicated nature of the embedding effects in this system. The
unprecedented system size for a relativistic all-electron isotropic hfccs
calculation can be approached in this work because the local nature of the
electronic structure of the organic crystals considered is fully captured by
the FDE approach
Are Greeks Really the Poor Relations of the European Union? Evidence of the Standard of Living
Greek governments frequently emphasise that their goal is convergence in standard of living with the European Union average, and assume that they have far to go. This paper discuses the methods available to compare standards of living between the 15 member countries. They are: estimates of Gross Domestic Product at Purchasing Power Parity; average incomes in relation to average prices of everyday necessities; estimates of income inequality; subjective expressions of satisfaction with living conditions, and subjective assessments of improvement or deterioration in them; and ownership of certain goods, and of homes. Each measure is open to objection; but on most, Greece comes near the bottom of the EU scale. According to the other criteria of Human Development adopted by the United Nations, Greece rates high in health but low in educational level
New Trends in Greece in the 1990s: an Essay in Contemporary History
Even though complete success is impossible, it is worth trying to see the
recent past from the perspective of the distant future. This task requires
one to identify and describe significant new trends in contemporary history.
Those which became apparent in Greece in the 1990s are arguably
of special importance
The New Democracy Government and the Continuing Struggle for Modernisation, 2004-2007
The government led by Konstantinos Karamanlis from March 2004 continued the modernising task of those led by Kostas Simitis, while differing in language and emphasis. Most of its achievements were in the spheres of financial reform and economic management. Here it strengthened investors’ confidence and reduced the budget deficit. It did nothing to improve procedures for appointments to the public administration, or to raise its level of efficiency. Abuses of patronage continued without change. The government built on the improvements in service to citizens begun by its predecessor. Changes in public attitudes give grounds for thinking that firm leadership in reform will win widespread support
B-cell depletion in SLE: clinical and trial experience with rituximab and ocrelizumab and implications for study design.
B cells are believed to be central to the disease process in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), making them a target for new therapeutic intervention. In recent years there have been many publications regarding the experience in SLE of B-cell depletion utilising rituximab, an anti-CD20 mAb that temporarily depletes B cells,reporting promising results in uncontrolled open studies and in routine clinical use. However, the two large randomised controlled trials in extra-renal lupus (EXPLORER study) and lupus nephritis (LUNAR study) failed to achieve their primary endpoints. Based on the clinical experience with rituximab this failure was somewhat unexpected and raised a number of questions and concerns, not only into the true level of benefit of B-cell depletion in a broad population but also how to test the true level of effectiveness of an investigational agent as we seek to improve the design of therapeutic trials in SLE. A better understanding of what went wrong in these trials is essential to elucidate the underlying reasons for the disparate observations noted in open studies and controlled trials. In this review, we focus on various factors that may affect the ability to accurately and confidently establish the level of treatment effect of the investigational agent, in this case rituximab, in the tw studies and explore hurdles faced in the randomised controlled trials investigating the efficacy of ocrelizumab, the humanised anti-CD20 mAb, in SLE. Further, based on the lessons learned from the clinical trials, we make suggestions that could be implemented in future clinical trial design to overcome the hurdles faced
Labor's Share By Sector And Industry, 1948-1965
This is the publisher's version, which the author has permission to share. The publisher's website is: http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/ilrreview
Pump-probe differencing technique for cavity-enhanced, noise-canceling saturation laser spectroscopy
We present an experimental technique enabling mechanical-noise free,
cavity-enhanced frequency measurements of an atomic transition and its
hyperfine structure. We employ the 532nm frequency doubled output from a Nd:YAG
laser and an iodine vapour cell. The cell is placed in a traveling-wave
Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) with counter-propagating pump and probe beams.
The FPI is locked using the Pound-Drever-Hall (PDH) technique. Mechanical noise
is rejected by differencing pump and probe signals. In addition, this
differenced error signal gives a sensitive measure of differential
non-linearity within the FPI.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Optics Letter
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