21,230 research outputs found
Will anyone vote? Prospects for turnout in the general election
One of the most notable features of the last two general elections was the low level of turnout. Before 2001 turnout at general elections was always at least 70% (and often far higher). But in 2001 it fell to just 59% and, at 61%, the figure in 2005 was little better. Over 17 million people eligible to vote that year chose not to do so, seven million more than voted for the winning Labour party. Britain found itself almost at the bottom of the turnout league among established European democracies. The failure of large sections of the public to go to the polls has led to considerable concern about the health of Britain’s democracy and stimulated many a suggestion as to how the country’s politicians might be able to reconnect with the electorate
Maintaining a Healthy Equity Structure: A Policy Change at Producers Cooperative Association
board of directors, cooperative, retains, Demand and Price Analysis, Marketing, Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
How has Economic Restructuring Affected China’s Urban Workers?*
Using data from the China Urban Labor Survey conducted in five large Chinese cities at year end 2001, we quantify the nature and magnitude of shocks to employment and worker benefits during the period of economic structuring from 1996 to 2001, and evaluate the extent to which adversely affected urban workers had access to public and private assistance. Employment shocks were large and widespread, and were particularly hard on older workers and women. Unemployment reached double digits in all sample cities and labor force participation declined by 8 percent. Urban residents faced modest levels of wage and pension arrears, and sharp declines in health benefits. Public assistance programs for dislocated workers had limited coverage, with most job-leavers relying upon private assistance to support consumption, mainly from other household members.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40014/3/wp628.pd
Community content building for evolutionary biology: Lessons learned from LepTree and Encyclopedia of Life
Online resources to aid large-scale ecological and evolutionary biology are beginning to take root, only a decade behind fields such as genomics and molecular biology. One barrier has been a long tradition, in evolutionary biology at least, of work by individuals on the order of a few hundred of species rather than the thousands or hundreds of thousands necessary to understand the general evolutionary or ecological processes that explain species characteristics and distributions. Advances in collaborative and semantic software offer promise – it should be possible to develop high quality online species-level datasets for comparative analyses and even to integrate, via machine reasoning, across highly customized datasets. In this talk we will compare and contrast two approaches to assembling the data
Quantum backgrounds and QFT
We introduce the concept of a quantum background and a functor QFT. In the
case that the QFT moduli space is smooth formal, we construct a flat quantum
superconnection on a bundle over QFT which defines algebraic structures
relevant to correlation functions in quantum field theory. We go further and
identify chain level generalizations of correlation functions which should be
present in all quantum field theories.Comment: 28 pages, published versio
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