3,060 research outputs found
The Muslim Question in Europe
The book challenges the popular notion of a clash of cultures pitting Muslim and non-Muslim Europeans against one another. The study finds instead vehement conflict among three longstanding European public philosophies: liberalism, nationalism, and postmodernism. The consequential differences of outlook are demonstrated in four policy areas: 1) citizenship requirements, 2) the headscarf debate, 3) mosque-state relations and 4) counter-terrorism. The book reaches three important conclusions. First, Muslim Europeans do not represent a monolithic anti-Western bloc -- a Trojan Horse -- within Europe. They vehemently disagree among themselves but along the same basic liberal, nationalist, and postmodern contours as non-Muslim Europeans. Second, ideological discord significantly contributes to policy âmessiness,â that is, to inconsistent, contradictory policies
Testing isomorphism of graded algebras
We present a new algorithm to decide isomorphism between finite graded
algebras. For a broad class of nilpotent Lie algebras, we demonstrate that it
runs in time polynomial in the order of the input algebras. We introduce
heuristics that often dramatically improve the performance of the algorithm and
report on an implementation in Magma
Trademarks, the International Pharmaceutical Industry, and the Developing Countries
There are several reasons why an examination of the impacts of trademarks in the pharmaceutical industry on the developing countries is opportune. First, the nature of supply and consumption is strongly conditioned by the trademark system. Second, the pharmaceutical sector is the most important internationally as far as the registration of trademarks is concerned - what happens here has a powerful influence elsewhere. Third, an internationally recognised alternative to brand names as an identification method, namely the use of generic names, exists and is in fact used to varying degrees by different countries
BNew Developments in the Australian Labour Market in 2006
2006 generally represented a solid year in terms of macroeconomic performance and labour market indicators, even under the threat of increasing inflation and interest rates. However, some favourable aggregate labour market indicators disguised major disparities at disaggregated regional, sectoral or demographic levels. The major development in the labour market was the implementation and operation of the WorkChoices legislation which will shape the industrial relations landscape in Australia for many years to come. This article presents an analysis of the performance of the macroeconomy and labour market, and reviews the developments of the WorkChoices legislation.economic performance; industrial relations legislation; labour market; WorkChoices
Model-robust and model-sensitive designs.
Abstract: The main drawback of the optimal design approach is that it assumes the statistical model is known. In this paper, a new approach to reduce the dependency on the assumed model is proposed. The approach takes into account the model uncertainty by incorporating the bias in the design criterion and the ability to test for lack-of-fit. Several new designs are derived in the paper and they are compared to the alternatives available from the literature.A-optimality; Bias; D-optimality; Lack-of-fit; Model-discrimination; Model-robustness;
A quantum delayed choice experiment
Quantum systems exhibit particle-like or wave-like behaviour depending on the
experimental apparatus they are confronted by. This wave-particle duality is at
the heart of quantum mechanics, and is fully captured in Wheeler's famous
delayed choice gedanken experiment. In this variant of the double slit
experiment, the observer chooses to test either the particle or wave nature of
a photon after it has passed through the slits. Here we report on a quantum
delayed choice experiment, based on a quantum controlled beam-splitter, in
which both particle and wave behaviours can be investigated simultaneously. The
genuinely quantum nature of the photon's behaviour is tested via a Bell
inequality, which here replaces the delayed choice of the observer. We observe
strong Bell inequality violations, thus showing that no model in which the
photon knows in advance what type of experiment it will be confronted by, hence
behaving either as a particle or as wave, can account for the experimental
data
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