7,019 research outputs found

    Blanket Forts and Bike Trips

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    Historic Patterns in Urban Esthetics and Urban Reconstruction

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    Feminine Honor May be More Than Sexual Purity and Familiar Obligation: A Review of the Literature

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    Kirmser Undergraduate Research Award - Individual Non-Freshman, honorable mentionCitation: Nelsen, E. (2016) Feminine Honor May be More Than Sexual Purity and Familiar Obligation: A Review of the Literature. Unpublished manuscript, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS.Dr. Don SaucierThe published research appears to indicate a consensus among researchers and scholars that feminine honor has so far been defined as a woman’s reputation that is created and maintained through sexual purity and familiar obedience. This essay critically examines the past literature on honor beliefs in order to evaluate the extent to which this consensus is accurate. Though some of the evidence from culture of honor and masculine honor research may support this definition, because it does not ask directly about feminine honor this conclusion may be inaccurate. Indeed, in analyzing and integrating the past literature on honor from across fields, it is seen that the current conceptualization is not completely representative of all of the ways in which women may and do become honorable

    Multivariate Measures of Concordance for Copulas and their Marginals

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    Building upon earlier work in which axioms were formulated for multivariate measures of concordance, we examine properties of such measures. In particular, we examine the relations between the measure of concordance of an nn-copula and the measures of concordance of the copula's marginals

    The Core, Periphery, and Beyond: Stock Market Comovements among EU and Non-EU Countries

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    We thank conference participants at the 2016 Financial Management Association and our discussant Fernando Moreira, and two anonymous referees for immensely helpful comments. We also thank Andrew Patton and James P. LeSage for sharing their MATLAB codes for computing quantile dependence. The authors of this paper are responsible for any errors or omissions. The Securities and Exchange Commission, as a matter of policy, disclaims responsibility for any private publication or statement by any of its employees. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or the authors\u27 colleagues on the staff of the Commission
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