11,118 research outputs found
Prison-Based Education and Re-Entry into the Mainstream Labor Market
We estimate the post-release economic effects of participation in prison-based General Educational Development (GED) programs using a panel of earnings records and a rich set of individual information from administrative data in the state of Florida. Fixed effects estimates of the impact of participating in the GED education program show post-release quarterly earnings gains of about 15 percent for program participants relative to observationally similar non-participants. We also show, however, that these earnings gains accrue only to racial/ethnic minority offenders and any GED-related earnings gains for this group seem to fade in the third year after release from prison. Estimates comparing offenders who obtained a GED to those who participated in GED-related prison education programs but left prison without a GED show no systematic evidence of an independent impact of the credential itself on post-release quarterly earnings.
Prison-Based Education and Re-Entry into the Mainstream Labor Market
incarceration, GED, earnings
The effect of injector design on thrust- chamber erosion
Relation between injector design and erosion of ablative and pyrolytic graphite thrust chamber throa
Stanford telemetry monitoring experiment on Lunar Explorer 35 Final report
Explorer 35 data analysis including occultation study and antenna pattern interpretation along with electromagnetic property experiment
Numerical Linked-Cluster Approach to Quantum Lattice Models
We present a novel algorithm that allows one to obtain temperature dependent
properties of quantum lattice models in the thermodynamic limit from exact
diagonalization of small clusters. Our Numerical Linked Cluster (NLC) approach
provides a systematic framework to assess finite-size effects and is valid for
any quantum lattice model. Unlike high temperature expansions (HTE), which have
a finite radius of convergence in inverse temperature, these calculations are
accurate at all temperatures provided the range of correlations is finite. We
illustrate the power of our approach studying spin models on {\it kagom\'e},
triangular, and square lattices.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
An experimental evaluation of 100-lb-thrust ablatively cooled rocket engines
Test firing of 100-lb thrust ablatively cooled rocket chamber
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Geological Characterization and Reserve Growth Potential of Spraberry Reservoirs in the Midland Basin, West Texas
Major reservoirs in the Spraberry-Dean play of the Midland Basin, West Texas, initially contained approximately 10.6 billion barrels of oil at discovery. However, current projections indicate that only around 7 percent of this vast resource will be recovered. Despite the significant remaining reserves, a large amount of mobile oil remains trapped in place due to reservoir heterogeneities at abandonment. Consequently, these reservoirs present excellent opportunities for reserve growth through extended conventional recovery methods.
Given the substantial volume of movable, nonresidual oil estimated to be present (more than 4 billion barrels), the Spraberry reservoirs were selected for detailed reinvestigation aimed at extended conventional recovery through strategic infield exploration. It was recognized that these reservoirs exhibit significant heterogeneity. Therefore, the primary objective of the project was to determine how an understanding of the genetic stratigraphy of these reservoirs could be leveraged to maximize recovery.
Traditionally, Spraberry reservoirs have been perceived as homogeneous "layer cake" oil pools, with development strategies focusing on natural fractures while overlooking the depositional sedimentary architecture of the productive sandstones and siltstones. This reinvestigation seeks to rectify this oversight and explore new approaches to optimize recovery from these complex reservoirs.Bureau of Economic Geolog
Emergency Department Pain Management Following Implementation of a Geriatric Hip Fracture Program
Introduction: Over 300,000 patients in the United States sustain low-trauma fragility hip fractures annually. Multidisciplinary geriatric fracture programs (GFP) including early, multimodal pain management reduce morbidity and mortality. Our overall goal was to determine the effects of a GFP on the emergency department (ED) pain management of geriatric fragility hip fractures. Methods: We performed a retrospective study including patients age ≥65 years with fragility hip fractures two years before and two years after the implementation of the GFP. Outcomes were time to (any) first analgesic, use of acetaminophen and fascia iliaca compartment block (FICB) in the ED, and amount of opioid medication administered in the first 24 hours. We used permutation tests to evaluate differences in ED pain management following GFP implementation. Results: We studied 131 patients in the pre-GFP period and 177 patients in the post-GFP period. In the post-GFP period, more patients received FICB (6% vs. 60%; difference 54%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 45–63%; p<0.001) and acetaminophen (10% vs. 51%; difference 41%, 95% CI 32–51%; p<0.001) in the ED. Patients in the post-GFP period also had a shorter time to first analgesic (103 vs. 93 minutes; p=0.04) and received fewer morphine equivalents in the first 24 hours (15mg vs. 10mg, p<0.001) than patients in the pre-GFP period. Conclusion: Implementation of a GFP was associated with improved ED pain management for geriatric patients with fragility hip fractures. Future studies should evaluate the effects of these changes in pain management on longer-term outcomes
(Mis)perceptions of ethnic group size and consequences for community expectations and cooperation with law enforcement
The changing composition of race and ethnic group size has been noted for Western nations over the last 15 years. Analysis of this change has linked fear of crime and attitudes toward immigrants and prejudice. Changes in ethnic composition are associated with movement of White residents out of traditionally White communities, rising ethnic tension as the ethnic mix shifts, and a heightened sense of injustice regarding the justice system. (Mis)perceptions of ethnic groups size shape attitudes toward minority groups, as well as policy, practice, and individual behavior in the context of the community. This study seeks to understand the extent of such misperceptions in the Australian context and whether misperceptions of race and ethnic composition are associated with beliefs and attitudes toward formal and informal social control. Utilizing Blalock’s racial threat hypothesis, this study analyzes whether perceived relative ethnic group size is associated with self-reported willingness to cooperate with police as a way to minimize perceived threat. Findings suggest that respondents overestimate the size of minority populations while underestimating the majority White composition and that these misperceived distortions in ethnic group size have consequences for informal and formal social control
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