13 research outputs found
11. Looking Back
From Alumni Views, Robert H. Bluestein (â67), âILR addressed the social and economic issues of the times and sought to provide students with the tools to find solutions to many of the problems confronting society in the mid-to late-sixties. This was a period easily described as volatile, evolutionary, and sometimes revolutionary. As would have been the case at any vibrant institution, the curriculum and the students at ILR reflected those times.â Includes: Alumni Views of ILR; The Creation of the Alpern Scholarship and Prize; and A Professorâs Perspective
11. Looking Back
From Alumni Views, Robert H. Bluestein (â67), âILR addressed the social and economic issues of the times and sought to provide students with the tools to find solutions to many of the problems confronting society in the mid-to late-sixties. This was a period easily described as volatile, evolutionary, and sometimes revolutionary. As would have been the case at any vibrant institution, the curriculum and the students at ILR reflected those times.â Includes: Alumni Views of ILR; The Creation of the Alpern Scholarship and Prize; and A Professorâs Perspective.Part11LookingBackILRat50.pdf: 546 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Mononuclear cells and cytokines stimulate gastrin release from canine antral cells in primary culture
No. 9 - Cybersecurity and National Defense: Building a Public-Private Partnership
Organized and sponsored by the Dean Rusk Center for International Law and Policy, Cybersecurity and National Defense: Building a Public-Private Partnership was a daylong conference exploring issues related to the national security dimensions of cyber attacks as well as the role of the private sector in addressing cybersecurity risks. The overarching theme was the scope of public-private collaboration in addressing cybersecurity risks and the potential for future cooperation between government and the private sector. Clete D. Johnson, Chief Counsel for Cybersecurity at the Federal Communications Commission gave a lunchtime address on the FCCâs approach to communications security in the Internet era. The transcript of the conference proceedings has been edited for publication with the consent of the speakers
Factors Affecting Food Label Complexity: Does the New EU Regulation Satisfy Consumer Issues? An Exploratory Study
The Influences of Economic and Technology Policy on the Dynamics of New Firm Formation
This study attempts to reveal how macroeconomic and technology policies that encompass the opportunity and individual drivers of entrepreneurship explain the dynamics of new firm formation in a country. To do so we rely on the Schumpeterian, industrial organization, and labor economics traditions of entrepreneurship, and performed an exploratory test with longitudinal U.S. data from 1968 to 1993. The results of this study suggest that R&D investments, patents, economic concentration, pro-competition policy, and labor mobility are important areas in which government policy can influence the intensity of new firm formation. Copyright Springer 2006entrepreneurial policy, government, new firm formation, L50 (Regulation and Industrial Policy-General), M13 (Entrepreneurship) , M20 (Business Economics-General),