24,451 research outputs found
Arresting Children: Examining Recent Trends in Preteen Crime
Are juvenile offenders getting younger? The American public often hears policymakers and justice practitioners assert that young people are committing crimes at younger and younger ages. Is this true? This analysis explores this question by examining data collected by law enforcement agencies across the country. It tracks juvenile crime patterns from 1980 through 2006 and finds that the age profile of juvenile offenders has not changed substantially in 25 years. Crime rates among children under age 13 have generally followed the same crime patterns exhibited among older youth. In a few offense categories, however, increases in preteen crime have outpaced increases among older juveniles, particularly sexual offenses, assaults, and weapons possession (not necessarily firearms). The fact that school authorities and family members often report these offenses suggests a possible hypothesis to explain increases in some preteen crimes: The juvenile justice system today may be dealing with child behavior problems that were once the responsibility of social welfare agencies, schools, and families
The Impact of Income on Mortality: Evidence from the Social Security Notch
There is widespread and longstanding agreement that life expectancy and income are positively correlated. However, it has proven much more difficult to establish a causal relationship since income and health are jointly determined. We use a major change in the Social Security law as exogenous variation in income to examine the impact of income on mortality in an elderly population. The legislation created a notch' in Social Security benefits based upon date of birth; those born before January 1, 1917 generally receive higher benefits than those born afterwards. We compare mortality rates after age 65 for males born in the second half of 1916 and the first half of 1917. Data from restricted-use versions of the National Mortality Detail File combined with Census data allows us to count all deaths among elderly Americans between 1979 and 1993. We find that the higher income group has a statistically significantly higher mortality rate, contradicting the previous literature. We also find that the younger cohort responded to lower incomes by increasing post-retirement work effort. These results suggest that moderate employment has beneficial health effects for the elderly.
Massless Scalar Field Propagator in a Quantized Space-Time
We consider in detail the analytic behaviour of the non-interacting massless
scalar field two-point function in H.S. Snyder's discretized non-commuting
spacetime. The propagator we find is purely real on the Euclidean side of the
complex plane and goes like as from either the
Euclidean or Minkowski side. The real part of the propagator goes smoothly to
zero as increases to the discretization scale and remains zero
for . This behaviour is consistent with the termination of
single-particle propagation on the ultraviolet side of the discretization
scale. The imaginary part of the propagator, consistent with a
multiparticle-production branch discontinuity, is finite and continuous on the
Minkowski side, slowly falling to zero when . Finally, we
argue that the spectral function for the multiparticle states appears to
saturate as probes just beyond the discretization scale. We
speculate on the cosmological consequences of such a spectral function.Comment: 6 pages, 1 eps figure embedded in manuscrip
Private Options to Use Public Goods Exploiting Revealed Preferences to Estimate Environmental Benefits
We develop and apply a new method for estimating the economic benefits of an environmental amenity. The method fits within the household production framework (Becker 1965), and is based upon the notion of estimating the derived demand for a privately traded option to utilize a freely-available public good. In particular, the demand for state fishing licenses is used to infer the benefits of recreational fishing. Using panel data on state fishing license sales and prices for the continental United States over a fifteen-year period, combined with data on substitute prices and demographic variables, a license demand function is estimated with instrumental variable procedures to allow for the potential endogeneity of administered prices. The econometric results lead to estimates of the benefits of a fishing license, and subsequently to the expected benefits of a recreational fishing day. In contrast with previous studies, which have utilized travel cost or hypothetical market methods, our approach provides estimates that are directly comparable across geographic areas. Further, our results suggest that the benefits of recreational fishing days are generally less than previously estimated.Private Options, Public Goods, Environmental Benefits
Melting of cognetic depleted and enriched reservoirs and the production of high Ti Mare basalts
Implicit in current understanding of the location of terrestrial enriched and depleted reservoirs is the notion that they are spatially separated. The depleted reservoir on Earth is situated in the upper mantle, and the complementary enriched reservoir is located in the crust. However, Earth reservoirs are continually being modified by recycling driven by mantle convection. The Moon is demonstrably different from Earth in that its evolution was arrested relatively early - effectively with 1.5 Ga of its formation. It is possible that crystallized trapped liquids (from the late stages of a magma ocean) have been preserved as LILE-enriched portions of the lunar mantle. This would lead to depleted (cumulate) and enriched (magma ocean residual liquid) reservoirs in the lunar upper mantle. There is no evidence for significant recycling from the highland crust back into the mantle. Therefore, reservoirs created at the Moon's inception may have remained intact for over 4.0 Ga. The topics discussed include the following: (1) radiogenic isotopes in high-Ti mare basalts; (2) formation of cogenetic depleted and enriched reservoirs; and (3) melting of the source to achieve high-Ti mare basalts
Geometrical Optics of Beams with Vortices: Berry Phase and Orbital Angular Momentum Hall Effect
We consider propagation of a paraxial beam carrying the spin angular momentum
(polarization) and intrinsic orbital angular momentum (IOAM) in a smoothly
inhomogeneous isotropic medium. It is shown that the presence of IOAM can
dramatically enhance and rearrange the topological phenomena that previously
were considered solely in connection to the polarization of transverse waves.
In particular, the appearance of a new-type Berry phase that describes the
parallel transport of the beam structure along a curved ray is predicted. We
derive the ray equations demonstrating the splitting of beams with different
values of IOAM. This is the orbital angular momentum Hall effect, which
resembles Magnus effect for optical vortices. Unlike the recently discovered
spin Hall effect of photons, it can be much larger in magnitude and is inherent
to waves of any nature. Experimental means to detect the phenomena is
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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