997 research outputs found

    Riding the Yield Curve: Reprise

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    We investigate the efficacy of riding the yield curve. This strategy dictates holding longer-term treasury bills when the yield curve is upwardsloping. We find that the strategy is surprisingly effective. it stochastically dominates buying and holding shorter-term bills for large subperiods, and nearly dominates for the entire sample period, 1949-1988. Our empirical results suggest that abnormal profit opportunities are available from selectively increasing the maturity of a short-term portfolio.

    Opening the Dialogue for Indigenous Knowledges Developments in Australia

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    A review of Martin Nakata, Disciplining the Savages, Savaging the Disciplines (Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra, 2007)

    Popular culture and public order: an empirical investigation into socio-cultural relationships in the city of Newcastle upon Tyne

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    This thesis is about the relationship between popular cultures and public order. Although it is located in a particular setting for good sound empirical reasons, the analysis could just as easily have been about any urban setting. I chose the words public order since they seemed to describe best the process by which urban public space has come to carry a vocabulary or rules and expectations which the inhabitants are supposed to acknowledge in their routine everyday encounters and interactions. What I have tried to illustrate is that the orderliness of public life is permeated with specific assumptions about how people should behave in public; about what is considered to be respectable, moral, decent, profane or depraved. I therefore take as a starting point the fact that the assumptions which underlie public order are not the product of society 'per se' but of specific social groups such as architects, planners and politicians. The assumptions which lie behind public order are, of course, ideological and quite clearly fused with political strategies designed to elicit a "civilised" and "cultured" population. Consequently, if urban "civilization" was founded on the belief that the good, moral, order was shaped by the physical setting or environment then Culture came to describe the process through which people had to pass in order to enter the terrain of the cultivated. From the perspective of the sociology of culture the word "culture" is an analytical metaphor for understanding social process: for describing, delineating, and interpreting what it is that people actually do when they communicate to one another. Seen this way popular culture implies culture "of the people" and "by the people" but definitely not "for the people". Popular culture, then, is the. process by which people themselves construct social space and thereby imprint meaning, purpose, value, etc., on actions, symbols and intentions

    Indian Car

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    Introduction to the direct method of teaching German

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    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1917. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive

    PSC 321H.01: Politics of Western Europe

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    PSC 433E.01: Introduction to International Law

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    PSC 433.01: International Law and Organizations

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    PSC 100S.01: Introduction to American Government

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    PSC 100S.02: Introduction to American Government

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