3,641 research outputs found

    Mixed Signals: to what extent does male wage scarring vary with the characteristics of the local labour market in which unemployment was experienced?

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    I test the hypothesis that unemployment experienced in high unemployment regions is less likely to be viewed by employers as a negative productivity signal, and more as a characteristic of the region. This predicts that unemployment's short-run negative wage effects will be mitigated if experienced in high unemployment regions. If so, then what long-term implications does this have for future wage growth (Wage Scarring)? How important is regional heterogeneity in driving wage outcomes? Continuous work-life histories are matched to the regional context in which individuals reside. This novel data set permits control for the timing of career disruptions, as well as regional location at the time of displacement, whilst searching and at re-employment. Persistent wage penalties are found, conditional on previous labour market status. Seminal UK research concludes that the first spell of non-employment carries the highest penalty. Considering unemployment and inactivity, no reduction in the penalty associated with incidence of inactivity is found. Strong regional differences are found in the impact of redundancy on wage growth. This is contingent on labour market tight-ness and urbanity of the region in which unemployment was experienced. Redundancy followed by unemployment in areas of high economic activity is equally damaging for future earnings potential, independent of age. Moreover, robust evidence is found supporting the main hypothesis in the UK, on average and for over 45s made redundant in their previous jobs.job displacement, wage scarring, regional heterogeneity, work-life histories

    Job seeker's allowance in Great Britain: How does the regional labour market affect the duration until job finding?

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    Employing a large individual-level administrative dataset from Great Britain, covering the period 1999-2007, we analyse the factors influencing the length of unemployment benefits claimant periods with subsequent transition to re-employment. To this end, this individual-level data is merged with a group of regional indicators to control for relevant regional labour market characteristics. From a methodological point of view, we adopt a flexible censored quantile regression approach to estimating conditional re-employment hazards. Our results indicate that the individual characteristics of an unemployed person are generally more im- portant than the regional labour market conditions. However, regional labour supply and demand conditions are important determinants for the length of unemployment compensation claim periods. Our analysis provides evidence that large cities such as London and Birmingham provide the worse local labour market conditions for job seekers allowance recipients, while remote regions like the Shetland islands perform among the best.benefit duration, quantile regression, hazard rate.

    Science and ideology : the case of physics in nazi Germany

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    Science is not «above» politics and ethics: it is intrinsically political, and constantly raises ethical dilemmas. The consequences of evading such issues were made particularly clear in the actions of scientists working in Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 40s. The accusation in 2006 that Dutch physicist Peter Debye was an opportunist who colluded with the Nazis reopened the debate about the conduct of physicists at that time. Here I consider what those events can tell us about the relationship of science and politics today. I argue that an insistence that science is an abstract, apolitical inquiry into nature is a myth that can leave it morally compromised and vulnerable to political manipulation

    Einstein and nazi physics : When science meets ideology and prejudice

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    In the 1920s and 30s, in a Germany with widespread and growing anti-Semitism, and later with the rise of Nazism, Albert Einstein?s physics faced hostility and was attacked on racial grounds. That assault was orchestrated by two Nobel laureates in physics, who asserted that stereotypical racial features are exhibited in scientific thinking. Their actions show how ideology can infect and inflect science. Reviewing this episode in the current context remains an instructive and cautionary tale

    Construction of a linked postcode district to regional-level dataset for Great Britain.

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    A one-to-one link is developed between overlapping sub-regional entities using geographical tools newly available to the Economic Research Community. The aim of this project is to create a database exploiting the geographical variation in publicly available data, in order to better control for regional heterogeneity. The database covers the period 1995 to 2007, and includes regional identiers at the postcode district, Local Authority, NUTS3 and Travel-To-Work Area levels of aggregation. Roughly 160 controls are available to the researcher. This data could be used to provide new insights for Regional Policy Analysis. An example of an application of this resource in the context of unemployment duration can be found in (Ball and Wilke, 2009) for the UK.Regional data, Great Britain, Overlapping regional entities, Regional heterogeneity.

    Red Sea rifting in central Egypt: constraints from the offshore Quseir province

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    The formation of oceanic crust in the southern and central Red Sea is generally accepted to have started at c. 5 Ma. However, the nature of the crust in the northern Red Sea is still debated. This paper describes the rift architecture, dynamics and evolution of the northern Red Sea and identifies domains that relate to first-order geodynamic processes. The proximal margin domain is located onshore and is characterized by latest Oligocene-Miocene half-graben basins. New seismic interpretations show that the offshore region is a necking domain dominated by low-angle, high-offset extensional faults, which led to the exhumation of lower crustal gabbros at Brothers Islands. Two-dimensional forward models suggest that the necking domain passes into a distal margin domain, where the continental crust thins to c. 25 Ma, followed by Early Miocene crustal thinning accommodated by an east-dipping detachment fault. A Late Miocene phase with a flip of the detachment geometry led to the present day configuration
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