6,999 research outputs found
Promoting decentralised and flexible budgets in England: Lessons from the past and future prospects
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central institutions dominate decision making. The recent Labour Government sought to counter this convention through devolution to Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and London and administrative decentralization to the English regions. This article examines New Labourâs efforts to promote sub-national policy discretion and fiscal autonomy via the Regional Funding Allocations (RFA) process. Findings are subsequently drawn upon to offer insights into the difficulties the Coalition Government is likely to face in its endeavor to decentralize functions and budgets to local authorities and communities. The paper addresses two central questions (i) Can New Labourâs attempt to promote decentralized and flexible budgets in England be viewed asevidence of a transition to a more fluid, multi-level form of governance? (ii)What lessons can be harnessed from the RFA experience in taking forward the Coalition governmentâs plans to promote fiscal discretion at the sub-national tier? It concludes that there are deep-rooted barriers in Whitehall that may limitthe freedoms and flexibilities pledged to local government and could undermine efforts to decentralize
Deal Making in Whitehall: competing and complementary motivations behind the Review of Sub-national Economic Development and Regeneration'
Purpose â The aim of this paper is to explore Whitehall motivations underpinning the Sub-national Review of Economic Development and Regeneration.
Design/methodology/approach â The paper is based on interviews conducted with senior Whitehall officials involved in regional working.
Findings â The Sub-national Review seeks to streamline regional structures and provide regions with enhanced autonomy. However, findings indicate that there are distinct differences of opinion across Whitehall departments regarding the future trajectory of English regionalism and what powers and functions regional bodies should acquire. These contradictory positions raise questions about the implementation and effectiveness of the proposals.
Originality/value â An examination of these phenomena is intended to provide greater clarity regarding the opportunities and constraints presented by the latest phase of regional restructuring
Carbon monoxide in the solar atmosphere I. Numerical method and two-dimensional models
The radiation hydrodynamic code CO5BOLD has been supplemented with the
time-dependent treatment of chemical reaction networks. Advection of particle
densities due to the hydrodynamic flow field is also included. The radiative
transfer is treated frequency-independently, i.e. grey, so far. The upgraded
code has been applied to two-dimensional simulations of carbon monoxide (CO) in
the non-magnetic solar photosphere and low chromosphere. For this purpose a
reaction network has been constructed, taking into account the reactions which
are most important for the formation and dissociation of CO under the physical
conditions of the solar atmosphere. The network has been strongly reduced to 27
reactions, involving the chemical species H, H2, C, O, CO, CH, OH, and a
representative metal. The resulting CO number density is highest in the cool
regions of the reversed granulation pattern at mid-photospheric heights and
decreases strongly above. There, the CO abundance stays close to a value of 8.3
on the usual logarithmic abundance scale with [H]=12 but is reduced in hot
shock waves which are a ubiquitous phenomenon of the model atmosphere. For
comparison, the corresponding equilibrium densities have been calculated, based
on the reaction network but also under assumption of instantaneous chemical
equilibrium by applying the Rybicki & Hummer (RH) code by Uitenbroek (2001).
Owing to the short chemical timescales, the assumption holds for a large
fraction of the atmosphere, in particular the photosphere. In contrast, the CO
number density deviates strongly from the corresponding equilibrium value in
the vicinity of chromospheric shock waves. Simulations with altered reaction
network clearly show that the formation channel via hydroxide (OH) is the most
important one under the conditions of the solar atmosphere.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, final version will contain online materia
Inflammasome-Microbiota Interplay in Host Physiologies
Host defense responses against microbes are most often thought of in terms of effectors of microbial destruction. However, recent evidence demonstrates that the more complex interactions between the microbiota and innate immune mechanisms, such as the inflammasome-mediated response, cannot be readily explained within just the traditional paradigms of microbial killing mechanisms. In this review, the concepts of both resistance and tolerance are applied to inflammasome-microbiota interactions, and the various physiological consequences of this interplay, including roles in inflammation, tissue repair, tumorigenesis, and metabolism, are discussed
Measuring the muon's anomalous magnetic moment to 0.14 ppm
The anomalous magnetic moment (g-2) of the muon was measured with a precision
of 0.54 ppm in Experiment 821 at Brookhaven National Laboratory. A difference
of 3.2 standard deviations between this experimental value and the prediction
of the Standard Model has persisted since 2004; in spite of considerable
experimental and theoretical effort, there is no consistent explanation for
this difference. This comparison hints at physics beyond the Standard Model,
but it also imposes strong constraints on those possibilities, which include
supersymmetry and extra dimensions. The collaboration is preparing to relocate
the experiment to Fermilab to continue towards a proposed precision of 0.14
ppm. This will require 20 times more recorded decays than in the previous
measurement, with corresponding improvements in the systematic uncertainties.
We describe the theoretical developments and the experimental upgrades that
provide a compelling motivation for the new measurement.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, presented at International Nuclear Physics
Conference 2010 (INPC 2010
Heavy Color-Octet Particles at the LHC
Many new-physics models, especially those with a color-triplet top-quark
partner, contain a heavy color-octet state. The "naturalness" argument for a
light Higgs boson requires that the color-octet state be not much heavier than
a TeV, and thus it can be pair-produced with large cross sections at
high-energy hadron colliders. It may decay preferentially to a top quark plus a
top-partner, which subsequently decays to a top quark plus a color-singlet
state. This singlet can serve as a WIMP dark-matter candidate. Such decay
chains lead to a spectacular signal of four top quarks plus missing energy. We
pursue a general categorization of the color-octet states and their decay
products according to their spin and gauge quantum numbers. We review the
current bounds on the new states at the LHC and study the expected discovery
reach at the 8-TeV and 14-TeV runs. We also present the production rates at a
future 100-TeV hadron collider, where the cross sections will be many orders of
magnitude greater than at the 14-TeV LHC. Furthermore, we explore the extent to
which one can determine the color octet's mass, spin, and chiral couplings.
Finally, we propose a test to determine whether the fermionic color octet is a
Majorana particle.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures; journal versio
Time Preference and the Life Cycle: The Logic of Long-Term High Risk vs. Short-Term Low Risk Investment
This paper argues that time-preference functions (or "discount rates") for R&D should properly be considered to be functions of the economic environment. In particular, during periods of accelerating growth and general increasing prosperity it is appropriate and rational to prefer a marginal dollar in the present to a marginal dollar in the future. Conversely, during periods of saturating growth and deteriorating prospects, the converse holds: it is rational to prefer a marginal dollar in the future to one in the present. Periods of increasing general prosperity -- rising tide -- are likely to be associated with the early phases of an industry "life cycle". Periods of declining prosperity, by contrast, may occur towards the end of the life cycle.
The implications for R&D policy are derived in terms of a simple model. The results suggest that at the beginning of the life cycle the optimal R&D policy is to invest in short-term, low risk ventures (i.e. product or process improvements). Late in the cycle, however, the optimal policy reverses to long-term high-risk projects. In simple terms: a firm in a declining industry needs to find a new product or business to replace the old one. Unfortunately, the appropriate behavior is discouraged by most existing B/C methodologies
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