2,612 research outputs found

    An annotated bibliography of tax compliance and tax compliance costs

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    An annotated bibliography of tax compliance and tax compliance costs.tax; tax compliance; compliance costs; bibliography; tax evasion; tax avoidance; auditing; tax simplification

    The pace of academic life is not the problem—the lack of autonomy is

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    To many disgruntled with the quantification of scholarship, its impossible demands and meaningless metrics, it is the heightened pace of academic life that is the problem. For Alison Edwards, the crux of the problem is actually a lack of autonomy. Is it time for academics to take back control? This post is inspired in part by the Impact Blog’s Accelerated Academy series

    Developing tax policy in a complex and changing world

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    Authors' draft. Final version published in Economic Analysis and Policy. Available onlineThis paper examines issues affecting the formulation of tax policy through to the development of actual proposals by tax policy-makers. This is done taking account of the possibility that too narrow an approach to this process can produce misleading conclusions and that proposals for tax reform may be inappropriate when the wider context of the tax system as a whole and the environment in which it has to operate are considered. Two issues are used to illustrate this situation – tax compliance and tax simplification. The paper concludes that in developing tax policy it is important to ensure that the wider context is taken into account and it also outlines a practical approach to achieve this aim.Economic and Social Research Council funding is gratefully acknowledged (Award number RES-000-23-1595 ‘Optimum Tax Compliance Costs and Tax Simplification’)

    Gateway To The University Community: Building an In-Person Toolkit for Graduate Teaching Assistants

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    Library instruction programs can provide excellent support for faculty courses and do a great job of supporting graduate students with their research and publishing process, but for many graduate students, researching is only part of their role - and likely the role they have the most support for. Large research intensive universities rely heavily on graduate teaching assistants to support or teach high-enrollment or introductory level courses to undergraduate students, but effective teaching requires training, practice, and a network of support. In addition to uneven access to preparation for their teaching roles, graduate students are often new to the university, and some are new to the country. Given these challenges, it is unsurprising that many graduate teaching assistants are unaware of the instructional support available to them from libraries and elsewhere on campus. To address this need, the NC State University Libraries partnered with our digital education and learning technologies unit, the Graduate School, and other support units on campus. We hosted an open house event and a series of workshops to equip TAs with online resources, instructional technology tools, library instructional supports, and insights into student research challenges. This project has expanded Libraries’ support of graduate students far beyond their research: enhancing their pedagogy and helping to build a more cohesive network of support and a sense of community for this under-resourced and high-stress population. This pilot event and workshop series has been an incredible opportunity to increase the audience and awareness of library instructional services with students and campus partners. While the impact has yet to be measured, the potential is great. This presentation will detail the process of creation for the Graduate Student event series, including planning for the kickoff event, budgetary and staffing needs as well as the process for planning for the year long training offered by the Toolkit. This presentation will also address the successes and challenges of this model of graduate student engagement, offer best practices and recommendations for creating an event at your college or university and how the libraries and their partners consciously tried to address gaps in the levels of student engagement and perceived needs. News and updates on future iterations of the GTA Toolkit will also be shared

    Discounted cash flow and business valuation in a nineteenth century merger: A note

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    In 1889 the Shelton Iron, Steel and Coal Company Limited was incorporated to take over the assets and business activities of two existing companies. To guide the contracting parties in negotiating a price to be paid for the properties belonging to the Shelton Collieries and Ironworks an independent valuation was arranged by Deloitte, Dever, Griffiths & Co., later appointed auditors of the new company. The article comprises an appraisal of the valuation exercise, which is an early example of the use of a discounted cash flow technique to provide relevant information for a capital investment decision

    Phosphorylation of androgen receptors at serine 515 is a potential prognostic marker for triple negative breast cancer

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    1.7 million cases of breast cancer are diagnosed every year with 522,000 deaths. Molecular classifications of breast cancer have resulted in improved treatments. However, treatments for triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) are lacking. Analysis of molecular targets for TNBC is a priority. One potential candidate is androgen receptor (AR) phosphorylation. This study assessed the role of AR phosphorylation at ser81/ser515 and their two upstream effectors, cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (pCDK1) and extracellular-regulated kinase 1/2 (pERK1/2) in 332 ductal breast cancer patients by immunohistochemistry. pERK1/2 combined with AR-515 associated with improved cancer-specific survival (CSS, p = 0.038), decreased size (p = 0.001), invasive grade (p < 0.001), necrosis (p = 0.003), b-lymphocytes (p = 0.020), molecular subtype (p < 0.001) and estrogen receptor (ER)/progesterone receptor (PR)-status (p < 0.001). The cohort was therefore stratified into ER+ve and ER-ve patients. In ER+ve tumours, pERK1/2 combined with AR-515 associated with improved CSS (p = 0.038), smaller size (p = 0.004), invasive grade (p = 0.001), decreased b-lymphocytes (p = 0.013) and increased plasma cells (p = 0.048). In contrast, in TNBC patients, phosphorylation of AR-515 associated with poorer CSS (p = 0.007). pERK1/2 combined with AR-515 associated with decreased inflammation (p = 0.003), increased tumour stroma (p = 0.003) and tumour budding (p = 0.011), with trends towards decrease CSS (p = 0.065) and macrophage levels (p = 0.093). In Conclusions, AR-515 may be an important regulator of inflammation in breast cancer potential via ERK1/2 phosphorylation. AR-515 is a potential prognostic marker and therapeutic target for TNBC

    An investigation into the impact of vitamin supplementation, maternal characteristics and lifestyle choices on the development of pre-eclampsia

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    Background: Pre-eclampsia remains in the top five leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity in the United Kingdom (Knight 2018). For decades, research has striven to establish the aetiology, improved ways of managing the condition and ways to prevent its occurrence. Recent studies have turned their attention to the physiological processes in vitamin metabolism, in particular vitamin D and folic acid, and associated links with a reduction in pre-eclampsia. With a Public Health England (PHE) initiative encouraging women to take the multivitamin supplement Healthy Start, providing a combination of these two vitamins as well as vitamin C, there was opportunity to explore the impact of combined supplementation and the outcome of pre-eclampsia. In addition, some have identified maternal characteristics and socio-economic factors such as age and parity as possible precursors to pre-eclampsia, though not always conclusively. Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional cohort study was conducted on 952 women (including n = 599 (63%) non-pre-eclampsia women and n = 353 (37%) of women diagnosed with a range of severity of pre-eclampsia. All gave birth at a tertiary maternity unit in the West Midlands. Data collected from medical records regarded uptake of vitamins, along with lifestyle choices and maternal characteristics, such as body mass index (BMI), ethnicity and age. Non-parametric testing and binary regression was conducted using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS). Ethical approval was ensured. Findings: Whilst a combination of vitamins given later in pregnancy demonstrated no correlation between them and pre-eclampsia, folic acid supplementation in particular demonstrated a strong statistical correlation with the incidence of pre-eclampsia p>0.001 when taken pre-conception and during the first trimester. Women experiencing their first pregnancy, with raised BMI giving birth during winter or spring seasons in particular, showed a greater risk of developing pre-eclampsia. Conclusion: Though no correlation was found between multi vitamins taken later in pregnancy there is evidence from this study to suggest that dual vitamin supplementation could have the potential to decrease the incidence of pre-eclampsia but more likely when administered pre-conception and during the first trimester. It is therefore proposed, that further research into the supplementation of multivitamins preconception and early pregnancy, could be beneficial and this warrants further investigation
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