42,126 research outputs found
Why Did Rhode Island have Slower Employment Growth than the Nation During the Recovery Period, 2009-16?
[Excerpt] When most of the nation was recovering from the Great Recession, Rhode Island was on a different path. From June 2009 to June 2016, national employment increased by 10.1 percent while employment in Rhode Island increased by only 5.1 percent. To examine why Rhode Island lagged behind employment growth rates nationwide, this Beyond the Numbers article compares industry employment growth trends in Rhode Island with overall growth trends over the 2009–16 period for the United States, using data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program. This 7-year period generally coincides with the national economic recovery, which officially began in June 2009.
Using methodology that can be used for any state, this article isolates the impact of industry job growth on overall statewide job growth. The analysis suggests that had employment growth in the state’s largest supersector, education and health services, matched that of the national average, the gap between overall state employment growth and the national average would have closed by more than half. Specifically, job losses in the colleges and universities industry, within the educational services sector, and the hospital subsector, within the healthcare and social assistance sector, were responsible for depressed overall growth in this supersector and the state overall
On the shape of capillarity droplets in a container
We provide a quantitative description of global minimizers of the Gauss free
energy for a liquid droplet bounded in a container in the small volume regime.Comment: 37 pages, 3 figure
Not Always Sparse: Flooding Time in Partially Connected Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
In this paper we study mobile ad hoc wireless networks using the notion of
evolving connectivity graphs. In such systems, the connectivity changes over
time due to the intermittent contacts of mobile terminals. In particular, we
are interested in studying the expected flooding time when full connectivity
cannot be ensured at each point in time. Even in this case, due to finite
contact times durations, connected components may appear in the connectivity
graph. Hence, this represents the intermediate case between extreme cases of
fully mobile ad hoc networks and fully static ad hoc networks. By using a
generalization of edge-Markovian graphs, we extend the existing models based on
sparse scenarios to this intermediate case and calculate the expected flooding
time. We also propose bounds that have reduced computational complexity.
Finally, numerical results validate our models
'The Accidental Birth of Hate Crime in Transnational Criminal Law: 'Discrepancies' in the Prosecution for "Incitement to Genocide" during the Nuremberg Process involving the cases of Julius Streicher, Hans Fritzsche and Carl Schmitt.'
This volume of three interrelated studies aims to explore the various contingencies through which individuals responsible, to various degrees, for promoting expressions of racist hate were subjected to markedly different types of legal responses within the landmark Nuremberg trials programme. These contingencies, together with loose judicial reasoning, complicate scholarly efforts to identify the historical emergence of this type of transnational hate crime, and to illustrate the complications that arise when seeking to ascertain its implications as a precedent.
It needs to be emphasised at the outset that what follows is not a comprehensive study of the origins of the criminalisation of hate speech in general as this would have to include a full comparative survey of all domestic laws and their judicial interpretation, application and institutional enforcement. In addition, the interaction between domestic, regional and international criminalisations would also have to be addressed in what would amount to a massive multi-volume study, beyond the scope of this study. It is acknowledged that a strong case can be made for a more comprehensive approach, placing the contents of what follows within this wider context of transnational regulation. For example, there has clearly been a measure of interaction, albeit of an inconsistent type, between US immigration and naturalisation law and practice, and international criminal law relating to hate speech, with the Streicher case expressly referred to as a precedent for the idea that "persecution," as a subset of crimes against humanity, can include racist and anti-Semitic propaganda
Soap films with gravity and almost-minimal surfaces
Motivated by the study of the equilibrium equations for a soap film hanging
from a wire frame, we prove a compactness theorem for surfaces with
asymptotically vanishing mean curvature and fixed or converging boundaries. In
particular, we obtain sufficient geometric conditions for the minimal surfaces
spanned by a given boundary to represent all the possible limits of sequences
of almost-minimal surfaces. Finally, we provide some sharp quantitative
estimates on the distance of an almost-minimal surface from its limit minimal
surface.Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures. Version 2: more detailed description of the
proof of the estimates in Section 5 adde
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