34 research outputs found
Going nativist : how nativism and economic ideology interact to shape beliefs about global trade
Existing research explains variation in trade attitudes by pitting explanations rooted in the foreign part of foreign economic policy, like nativism, against economic beliefs like a commitment to free market principles. But what happens when these factors create significant cross-pressures - how do free market-oriented nativists think about trade? We argue that nativism is a higher-order belief that constrains the relationship between lower-order economic attitudes and beliefs about international trade. We test our argument using representative samples from the United States and United Kingdom. First, we analyze observational data and find a significant interaction whereby nativism moderates the relationship between free market attitudes and beliefs that trade provides national and global benefits. Second, we report results from a survey experiment to show that a message about the long-term benefits from free trade increases support for free trade in both samples. Importantly, we also find that nativist values weaken the treatment effect in the US sample. As long as international relations scholars focus on cultural or economic antecedents on their own, we miss much about how elements in belief systems interact
Détection et caractérisation préopératoires des métastases hépatiques de cancer colorectal par IRM, après chimiothérapie néo-adjuvante (étude rétrospective de corrélation radiohistologique à propos de 51 patients)
TOURS-BU Médecine (372612103) / SudocSudocFranceF
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A Conserved Downstream Element Defines a New Class of RNA Polymerase II Promoters (∗)
Although many TATA-less promoters transcribed by RNA polymerase II initiate transcription at multiple sites, the regulation of multiple start site utilization is not understood. Beginning with the prediction that multiple start site promoters may share regulatory features and using the P-glycoprotein promoter (which can utilize either a single or multiple transcription start site(s)) as a model, several promoters with analogous transcription windows were grouped and searched for the presence of a common DNA element. A downstream protein-binding sequence, MED-1 (Multiple start site Element Downstream), was found in the majority of promoters analyzed. Mutation of this element within the P-glycoprotein promoter reduced transcription by selectively decreasing utilization of downstream start sites. We propose that a new class of RNA polymerase II promoters, those that can utilize a distinctive window of multiple start sites, is defined by the presence of a downstream MED-1 element
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Optimization of a Versatile in Vitro Transcription Assay for the Expression of Multiple Start Site TATA-less Promoters
Going nativist: how nativism and economic ideology interact to shape beliefs about global trade
Existing research explains variation in trade attitudes by pitting explanations rooted in the foreign part of foreign economic policy, like nativism, against economic beliefs like a commitment to free market principles. But what happens when these factors create significant cross-pressures—how do free market-oriented nativists think about trade? We argue that nativism is a higher-order belief that constrains the relationship between lower-order economic attitudes and beliefs about international trade. We test our argument using representative samples from the United States and United Kingdom. First, we analyze observational data and find a significant interaction whereby nativism moderates the relationship between free market attitudes and beliefs that trade provides national and global benefits. Second, we report results from a survey experiment to show that a message about the long-term benefits from free trade increases support for free trade in both samples. Importantly, we also find that nativist values weaken the treatment effect in the US sample. As long as international relations scholars focus on cultural or economic antecedents on their own, we miss much about how elements in belief systems interact
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