85,138 research outputs found
Examining Recent Expert Elicitation Judgment Guidelines: Value Assumptions and the Prospects for Rationality
This paper was presented at the VALDOR Symposium, Stockholm, June 1999. The author examines the value assumptions in the U.S. Department of Energy and Nuclear Regulatory Commission guidance on the use of expert judgment relating to high level nuclear waste disposal site selection
Soft Collinear Effective Theory
In this talk I review soft collinear effective theory. After a discussion of
the formalism and properties of the effective field theory, I turn to
phenomenology. I present results on color-suppressed B to D decays, and on the
Upsilon radiative decay spectrum.Comment: 6 Pages, 3 figures. Parallel session overview talk presented at
PANIC05, Particles and Nuclei International Conference, Santa Fe, NM -
October 24-28, 200
Post-Racial
This image was created by Sam Fleming for Tapestries: Interwoven voices of local and global identities, volume 6 (2017), published by Macalester College.For more information, please visit the Tapestries journal home page. Copyright 2017, Samuel Fleming
Production & Decay of Quarkonium
In this talk I review NRQCD predictions for the production of charmonium at
the Tevatron. After a quick presentation of the NRQCD factorization formalism
for production and decay I review some old results and discuss how they compare
to recent data. Following this I discuss some recent work done with Adam
Leibovich and Ira Rothstein.Comment: Invited talk: 9th International Symposium on Heavy Flavor Physic
The Borrower\u27s Tale: A History of Poor Debtors in \u3ci\u3eLochner\u3c/i\u3e Era New York City
This study adds to the recent scholarship on Progressivism in practice—fine-grained, place-based studies of reform at the local level—but focuses closely on the relationships among reformers, industry, and the law that an earlier generation of historians studied at the national level and outlined in broad brushstrokes. This study also builds upon the creditor-centered work of historians such as Mark H. Haller and John V. Alviti, but moves beyond their reliance upon distinctions and categories, such as those separating profit making credit providers from philanthropic credit providers, which were less important to borrowers than they have been for historians. In focusing primarily on the lived experience of poor borrowers, this article imports into the study of household credit relationships an approach mapped out by several historians of social welfare policy and institutions, who have attempted to reorient the institution-centered historiography of social welfare to give greater weight to the perspectives of welfare recipients. This study attempts to correct a similar imbalance in the historiography of household credit relationships.
The value of viewing the history of credit through the lived experiences of working-class households is not solely in documenting the human dignity and agency of poor borrowers, although this is certainly one of the goals of this study. Rather, by looking at credit relationships from the borrower’s point of view, a number of different institutions, groups, and policies that borrowers experienced as simultaneous and overlapping, but that historians have usually studied separately from one another, are brought into the same analytic frame. Thus, in contrast to prior work, this study treats charitable and for-profit lenders to the poor together as participants in the same market for working-class credit. The debtors’ stories presented here show how impoverished families organized their financial lives, made ends meet, and employed borrowing as a survival strategy
Hands Up Don\u27t Shoot
This image was created by Sam Fleming for Tapestries: Interwoven voices of local and global identities, volume 6 (2017), published by Macalester College.For more information, please visit the Tapestries journal home page. Copyright 2017, Samuel Fleming
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