406 research outputs found

    The Independent Counsel Statute: A Legal History

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    Priester et al provide a comprehensive legal history of the independent counsel statute from its inception in 1978 until its apparent last hurrah in 1999. They also explore the role of the independent counsel in the history and practice of the government\u27s evidentiary privileges

    THE IMPACT OF MIGRATION AND REMITTANCES ON RURAL INCOMES IN CHINA

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    New Economics of Labor Migration (NELM) theory posits a complex relationship between migrants and household income generation. This paper uses NELM and original survey data to examine the impacts of migration on income sources in Northeast China. Migration is found to increase farm incomes but decrease self-employed incomes.migration, remittances, China, self-employment, income sources, Consumer/Household Economics, Labor and Human Capital,

    Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in China

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    Distorted incentives, agricultural and trade policy reforms, national agricultural development, Agricultural and Food Policy, International Relations/Trade, F13, F14, Q17, Q18,

    Water management reforms in the Yellow River Basin: implications for water savings, farm incomes and poverty

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    River basins / Water management / Governance / Water use / Crop production / Models / Farm income / Poverty / Water users’ associations / China / Yellow River Basin

    Marketing Channel and Technology Adoption: Chinese Villages in the Local Horticulture Market

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    China has been experiencing the substantial changes in agricultural sectors in the past decades. Interaction between diversified channels for marketing agricultural products and modern technology adoption are important for restructuring agriculture and improving productivity, but fewer researches have been done in this field in China. With the village - level data collected a round Beijing, the capital of China, this study attempts to find out the major market channel(s) in rural China and its (their) linkage with technology innovation in the horticulture sector. The study finds that small brokers still dominate horticultural product distribution in rural area because of their cheap labor costs; however, the modern supply chain components such as supermarkets are penetrating the rural area and competing with small brokers. Modern market channels stimulate the adoptions of new technology, whereas technology adoption had few effects on modern market channel selection. In addition, shares of crop such as vegetables and fruits are soaring; surprisingly villages farther away from Beijing experienced faster crop restructuring with higher specialization. In the future we try to incorporate wholesalers or supermarkets into the analysis, which can depict a more complete picture of rural market development.Crop Production/Industries,

    Fuel cell research - An investigation of non- steady-state operation Final report, 1 Jun. 1963 - 1 Jun. 1965

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    Application of galanostatic studies to fuel cell electrodes - effects of pulsed loading on fuel cell operatio

    What Does an Exemplary Middle School Mathematics Teacher Look Like? The Use of a Professional Development Rubric

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    A School University Research Network (SURN) committee composed of current mathematics teachers, central office math supervisors, building administrators, mathematicians, and mathematics educators researched numerous sources regarding best practices in mathematics instruction. The resulting professional development rubric synthesizes their findings and can serve a professional development role by providing teachers and administrators with a tool to develop clarity and consensus on best mathematics instructional practices, and how these practices are implemented in the classroom. It is also being used as a tool for cooperating teachers in their supervision of student teachers and as a reflective method for self-evaluation

    The impact of the Doha trade proposals on farmers

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    This paper analyzes the potential impacts of the Doha trade proposals (those of the USA, EU and G20) on agricultural production and incomes of China's farmers by region and income group. By linking a global trade model to a national policy model which itself is connected to a set of disaggregated household data, we are able to assess the effects of the proposed Doha trade liberalizations on households both at the national and regional levels. According to the results of the model, the impacts of a Doha Round agreement on households differ significantly from those of China's WTO accession. China's economy would benefit from the trade liberalization associated with the Doha Round. The overall impacts, however, are relatively minor. Although farmers will benefit at the national level, the gains among farmers vary largely by income group and province. Also, the impacts on households that produce different types of crops differ. (C) 2010 Society for Policy Modeling. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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