1,863 research outputs found
Childcare and family ideology in Sweden
This study examines the impact of public and private childcare supply and family ideologies on individual childbearing behavior in Sweden. We assume that childcare services facilitate the reconciliation of family and paid work. However, this relationship is not independent from family images like "dual-earners" or the "male-breadwinner". Although differences in family ideologies are not very pronounced in an egalitarian society like Sweden, we expect that childcare provision encourages young adults to start a family especially if dual-earner families are well accepted. In the empirical part, we use logistic regressions to analyze the entry into parenthood. Based on the Swedish survey "Family and Working Life in the 21st Century" and regional data for the years 2001 to 2003, we find that the probability to become parents is low in regions with a high level of childcare provision. However, in regions where non-familial childcare is highly accepted and, simultaneously, the childcare supply is high individuals are more likely to have a first child. This finding shows the importance of attitudes towards family arrangements on fertility behavior and childcare usage.Sweden, child care
Research evaluation and journal quality weights: Much ado about nothing?
Research evaluations based on quality weighted publication output are often criticized on account of the employed journal quality weights. This study shows that evaluations of entire research organizations are very robust with respect to the choice of readily available weighting schemes. We document this robustness by applying rather different weighting schemes to otherwise identical rankings. Our unit of analysis consists of German, Austrian and Swiss university departments in business administration and economics.Research evaluation, university management
How Do Editors Select Papers, and How Good are They at Doing It?
Using data on the B.E. Journals that rank articles into four quality tiers, this paper examines the accuracy of the research evaluation process in economics. We find that submissions by authors with strong publication records and authors affiliated with highly-ranked institutions are significantly more likely to be published in higher tiers. Citation success as measured by RePEc statistics also depends heavily on the overall research records of the authors. Finally and most importantly, we measure how successful the B.E. Journalsâ editors and their reviewers have been at assigning articles to quality tiers. While, on average, they are able to distinguish more influential from less influential manuscripts, we also observe many assignments that are not compatible with the belief that research quality is reflected by the number of citations.Peer Review, Research Evaluation, Citations, Journal Quality
Characterizations of pretameness and the Ord-cc
It is well known that pretameness implies the forcing theorem, and that
pretameness is characterized by the preservation of the axioms of
, that is without the power set axiom, or
equivalently, by the preservation of the axiom scheme of replacement, for class
forcing over models of . We show that pretameness in fact has
various other characterizations, for instance in terms of the forcing theorem,
the preservation of the axiom scheme of separation, the forcing equivalence of
partial orders and their dense suborders, and the existence of nice names for
sets of ordinals. These results show that pretameness is a strong dividing line
between well and badly behaved notions of class forcing, and that it is exactly
the right notion to consider in applications of class forcing. Furthermore, for
most properties under consideration, we also present a corresponding
characterization of the -chain condition
Class forcing, the forcing theorem and Boolean completions
The forcing theorem is the most fundamental result about set forcing, stating
that the forcing relation for any set forcing is definable and that the truth
lemma holds, that is everything that holds in a generic extension is forced by
a condition in the relevant generic filter. We show that both the definability
(and, in fact, even the amenability) of the forcing relation and the truth
lemma can fail for class forcing. In addition to these negative results, we
show that the forcing theorem is equivalent to the existence of a (certain kind
of) Boolean completion, and we introduce a weak combinatorial property
(approachability by projections) that implies the forcing theorem to hold.
Finally, we show that unlike for set forcing, Boolean completions need not be
unique for class forcing
From the Seat of the Chair: An Insiderâs Perspective on NCAA Student-Athlete Voices
This Article explains how student-athletes already have a significantly influential voice. The Author calls upon his personal experience as a former Division I student-athlete and Chair of the NCAA Division I National Student-Athlete Advisory Committee to show that student athletes are capable of effectuating change by expressing themselves through existing means, rather than unionization
The Joint Distribution of Wealth and Income Risk: Evidence from Bern
Using detailed tax data from the Swiss canton of Bern, I examine how changes in wealth are related to income risk. I find that only among elderly individuals high kurtosis of income risk may be positively correlated with wealth accumulation. Additionally, I document that a substantial share of taxpayers have negative net wealth. While wealth and income are positively correlated for positive net wealth taxpayers, this correlation is negative for negative net wealth taxpayers. These negative net wealth investors experience sharp increases in wealth and income in subsequent periods. Finally, wealth risk is more dispersed than income risk
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