1,014 research outputs found

    Interest on Indian Claims: Judicial Protection of the Fisc

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    TRUE EFFICIENCY IN RETAIL FOOD DISTRIBUTION: A CASE STUDY IN PREPARING FOR LONG RANGE GROWTH

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    Discusses a system approach to overall distribution planning and supports his views with a case example.Agribusiness,

    Biomarkers in NSCLC Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Mutations

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    Lung Cancer is the most common global cause of cancer related deaths in men and women (Markus, Alain, 2013). As standard radiation and chemotherapy have proved ineffective, novel target therapies are in the midst of development. This review will analyze the success of the inhibitor drugs targeting the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) mutation, commonly found amongst Lung Cancer patients. Numerous studies and reviews are utilized to determine the cause of the 10% success rate currently exhibited for these drugs. The L858R and E746-A750 point mutations and deletions respectively, were found prevalent in responsive patients as well as clinical-pathological features such as female gender, Asian descent, non-smoking history, and Adenocarcinoma. Adenocarcinoma was found almost exclusively in responsive patients and non-smoking history is proposed to have an independent correlation to EGFR mutations (Kosaka, et.al. 2004). These prevailing features can be used as biomarkers to predict the responsiveness of a patient population, leading to efficient and successful distrigution of the EGFR inhibition drug to Lung Cancer patients

    Batch distillation simulation using the quasi-state column approximation

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    What’s the Difference? Wage Differentials and the Donative-Labor Hypothesis in Non-Profit Firms

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    There are three objectives in this paper. First is to show the existence of wage differentials. The second objective is to investigate the reasons why individuals would take lower wages at a non-profit and try to show that these reasons exist empirically. Thirdly, to prove or disprove the postulate that the donative labor hypothesis is not as important as other factors when explaining wage differentials. To facilitate achieving these goals, this paper will begin by laying out the economic theory behind wages. Then it will move to looking at the current research on the topic of wage differentials, which will be followed by an econometric model. Lastly, to conclude there will be a discussion of the results

    The Intersection of History and Trade: Essays in Trade and Trade Policy

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    In this research I examine the effects that past institutions have on current day economics. In chapters one and two I focus on empirically measuring the impact of past historical trade institutions on current day trade flows. In chapter three I turn my focus to understanding how implicit institutions impact the economic discipline. My first chapter begins with examining the historical legacy of trading institutions of membership in the ex-Soviet Union and Comecon on current day Russia\u27s bilateral trade flows. The use of long-term data from 1998 to 2016 allows for examination of changes in the legacy effects over time, finding that overall historical patterns developed by these institutions remain highly significant 26 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Specifically finding that historical borders exert a positive, significant, but decaying impact on current day trade. Historical trading blocs also exhibit a similar pattern but are weaker and not as statistically significant. This chapter provides the first estimates of the legacy left by past institutions with an institutional legacy decay measure. Chapter two I continue my focus on the historical institutions of ex-USSR and Comecon membership on bilateral trade flows to and from Russia. This paper is the first of its kind to examine how the components of Intra-Industry Trade (IIT) are impacted by historical trading institutions in the years of 1996 to 2018. In understanding the long reaching effects of the historical USSR border and Comecon trading bloc, this paper finds that all components of IIT are positively impacted by the historical trading institutions. Interestingly only Vertical Intra-Industry Trade (VIIT) shows signs of the impact of these institutions decaying in a monotonic fashion, while Horizontal Intra-Industry Trade (HIIT) indicates that the effect of historical institutions is much longer. In chapter three I try to understand an important institution within the discipline of economics. Specifically, I focus on understanding how, given a specific set of assumptions about the market and market actors, the discipline advocates for a policy of free trade. The advocacy of free trade was not always as dominant especially during the first American Progressive Movement (1890-1918). Economists who led the movement (i.e. the Economic Progressives) reconstructed society in their image of a technocrat ran state. In their view laissez-faire, and ultimately free trade as an expression of laissez-faire, was the antithesis of the new economic order they created. In spite of all their success, the Economic Progressives were unable to banish free trade from economic theory. I argue this failure was a function of a contradiction in their core research philosophies as well as their inherent philosophical bias. These biases and contradictions, when contrasted with other schools of thought, made the Economic Progressives movement seem less attractive and potentially led to its downfall

    Alien Registration- Freidman, Meyer P. (Bangor, Penobscot County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/15742/thumbnail.jp
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