4,653 research outputs found
Five minutes with Jonathan Portes: “Policy-makers need to be much more open about the benefits of immigration”
The right to free movement is one of the founding principles of the European Union, however it has also been a source of controversy, particularly among Eurosceptic parties across Europe. In an interview with EUROPP’s editor Stuart Brown, Jonathan Portes, Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, discusses the economic costs and benefits of free movement and why policy-makers should be more open about the potential gains from immigration
Observability and Synchronization of Neuron Models
Observability is the property that enables to distinguish two different
locations in -dimensional state space from a reduced number of measured
variables, usually just one. In high-dimensional systems it is therefore
important to make sure that the variable recorded to perform the analysis
conveys good observability of the system dynamics. In the case of networks
composed of neuron models, the observability of the network depends
nontrivially on the observability of the node dynamics and on the topology of
the network. The aim of this paper is twofold. First, a study of observability
is conducted using four well-known neuron models by computing three different
observability coefficients. This not only clarifies observability properties of
the models but also shows the limitations of applicability of each type of
coefficients in the context of such models. Second, a multivariate singular
spectrum analysis (M-SSA) is performed to detect phase synchronization in
networks composed by neuron models. This tool, to the best of the authors'
knowledge has not been used in the context of networks of neuron models. It is
shown that it is possible to detect phase synchronization i)~without having to
measure all the state variables, but only one from each node, and ii)~without
having to estimate the phase
Migration, communities-on-the-move and international innovation networks: An empirical analysis of Spanish regions
This paper investigates the impact of migration on innovation networks between regions and foreign countries. We posit that immigrants (emigrants) act as a transnational knowledge bridge between the host (home) regions and their origin (destination) countries, thus facilitating their co-inventorship networks. We also argue that the social capital of both the hosting and the moving communities reinforces such a bridging role, along with language commonality and migrants’ human capital. Focusing on Spain, as a country that hosted an intense process of migration over the past two decades, we combine patent data with national data on residents and electors abroad and we apply a gravity model to the co-inventorship between Spanish provinces (NUTS3 regions) and a number of foreign countries. Both immigrants and emigrants affect the kind of innovation networking at stake. The social capital of both the moving and the hosting communities actually moderate this impact in a positive way. The effect of migration is stronger for more skilled migrants and with respect to non-Spanish speaking countries, pointing to a language-bridging role of migrants. Policy implications are drawn accordingly
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Work relations and the multiple dimensions of the work-life boundary: Hairstyling at home
This article proposes a multidimensional approach to analysis of the work-life boundary and examines the affects of particular social and organizational relations on the preservation or porous-ness of different dimensions. In line with Nippert-Eng (1996), it is suggested that different dimensions of the boundary are reinforced or weakened by different social and organizational pressures. Analysis describes a specific type of multidimensional breaching – instances when work is taken outside of the worksite (spatial breaching) and is carried out outside of work-time (temporal breaching). Empirical research was conducted among hairstylists working in salons and barbershops in a city in the North of England. Because of the nature of the tasks involved in hairstyling – that the skills involved are widely exchangeable and so may be employed in extra-work environments and temporalities – hairstylists provide a nice site for investigating the circumstances when this does (or does not) occur. Data collection involved a comprehensive self-completion survey of salons and barbershops in the city (response rate: 40%; N=132) and semi-structured interviews with 70 stylists working in 52 salons or barbershops. Findings demonstrate that work relations (hairstylists’ structural relations of production – whether a worker is an owner-proprietor, chair-renter, on-commission stylist, basic-only stylist, or trainee) are critical in determining both workers’ ability and desire to resist the seepage of work into their social lives as well as the particular dimensions of the boundary that are breached. This is because work relations affect the relative importance of four identified motivations for taking work out of the salon (income production; training; inter-personal reciprocity rooted in social relations; and inter-personal reciprocity rooted in the workplace)
Efeito da rotação de culturas na atividade enzimática total do solo.
O objetivo do trabalho foi avaliar a atividade enzimática do solo, em rotações de culturas envolvendo espécies de feijão, milho, braquiária e milheto
Relación entre capacidades físicas, Indice de Masa Corporal (IMC) y la discriminación dentro de la clase de educación física en alumnos de 10 y 11 años, en cuatro colegios de Chillan, Chile
Objetivo: verificar relación entre IMC, capacidades físicas y discriminación en clase de Educación Física, alumnos entre 10 a 11 años, 4 colegios de Chillán, Chile. Metodología: medir flexibilidad, velocidad y resistencia; calcular IMC; posteriormente contestar cuestionario de auto percepción frente a sus pares en relación a discriminación en clases de Educación Física. Población: 178 sujetos; muestra: 44 indicaron discriminación. Resultados: IMC: 72,6 por ciento de la muestra, que sienten discriminación, no presentan niveles de obesidad. Velocidad: 47,7 por ciento sujetos discriminados se encuentran sobre el promedio; demuestra que la velocidad es un factor que influye en la discriminación debido a que menos de la mitad de los alumnos discriminados se encuentran sobre el nivel de aprobación. Resistencia: 75 por ciento superior y 25 por ciento bajo el promedio lo que demuestra que la resistencia no es un factor determinante en la discriminación. Flexibilidad: 11 por ciento de los sujetos bajo el promedio y un 89 por ciento sobre el nivel de aprobación; se indica que la flexibilidad no es un factor determinarte en la discriminación. Los resultados indicaron que la relación de IMC y las capacidades físicas, en base a la discriminación en la clase de Educación Física, existe relación entre ambas, pero con resultados diferentes, ya que el índice de masa corporal en sujetos que presentan el rango de bajo peso y son discriminados, tienen mejor capacidad física que en alumnos de rango normal, riesgo de obesidad y obesida
Teores de nitrogênio e de clorofilas em folhas de feijão e de soja inoculados com rizóbios.
Com o objetivo de avaliar os teores de nitrogênio total e de clorofila total em plantas de feijão e de soja conduziu-se um experimento em Goiânia-GO, utilizando delineamento inteiramente casualizado com três repetições
Beyond a state-centric approach to urban informality: Interactions between Delhi’s middle class and the informal service sector
Since the ‘discovery’ of the informality in the early 1970s, its conceptualization has been significantly expanded beyond economic activity to include land-use and service provision. While informality often refers to that which is beyond the reach of the state, urban scholars focused on cities in the global South have shown that governments actively contribute to its production. This article presents original research on relations between
middle class residents and informal-sector workers in Delhi, India. It demonstrates that middle-class associations establish localized regimes that confer legitimacy on the work of street hawkers and waste workers, their use of urban space and the provision of services (e.g. waste collection). Thus, the state is one actor among many that seeks to govern cities, and in many cases localized governance regimes are imposed by non-state actors. I argue that the state should not serve as a key reference point for identifying informality. Instead scholars should focus on governance regimes imposed by state and non-state powerbrokers, and conceptualize informality as that which remains unregulated
Caracterização diamétrica de um povoamento de Araucaria angustifolia (bertol.) Kuntze sob alta competição.
Resumo
Reconceptualizing Context: A Multilevel Model of the Context of Reception and Second-Generation Educational Attainment
This paper seeks to return scholarly attention to a core intellectual divide between segmented and conventional (or neo-)assimilation approaches, doing so through a theoretical and empirical reconsideration of contextual effects on second-generation outcomes. We evaluate multiple approaches to measuring receiving country contextual effects and measuring their impact on the educational attainment of the children of immigrants. We demonstrate that our proposed measures better predict second-generation educational attainment than prevailing approaches, enabling a multilevel modeling strategy that accounts for the structure of immigrant families nested within different receiving contexts
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