10,833 research outputs found
Cultural Continuity and Communities and Well-Being
This paper describes a household survey of Inuit in northern Alaska and how the survey data were used to better understand the relative importance of jobs, wild food harvesting, and social ties for life satisfaction. It emphasizes the importance of non-material measures for life satisfaction. It builds on other research showing the importance of harvesting wild food and the persistence of a mixed economyâone that combines cash income and wild food harvests. An empirical model estimates the relationship between people's choices to work, and/or hunt and fish, and individual satisfaction with life. The model includes economic and non-economic measures of well-being as well as community characteristics and shows that what matters most for satisfaction are family ties, social support and opportunities to do things with other people. Jobs, income, housing, and modern amenitiesâare less important among arctic Inuit. This research addresses the purpose for the original survey projectâto give a more realistic picture of life in the Arctic by showing why people who live in remote, isolated, communities, with low incomes, and substandard housing are very satisfied with their lives. It also contributes to public policy in remote regions and efforts to understand how people are adapting in a rapidly changing environment.Abstract / Introduction / Methods / Data / Modeling Subsistence, Jobs, and Well-Being / Conclusions / ReferencesYe
Indigenous social and economic adaptations in northern Alaska as measures of resilience
I explored one aspect of social-ecological change in the context of an Alaskan human-Rangifer system, with the goal of
understanding household adaptive responses to perturbations when there are multiple forces of change at play. I focused on households
as one element of social resilience. Resilience is in the context of transition theory, in which communities are continually in a process
of change, and perturbations are key points in the transition process. This case study of Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, USA, contributes
to the understanding of cultural continuity and household resilience in times of rapid change by using household survey data from
1978 to 2003 to understand how households adapted to changes in the cash economy that came with oil development at the same time
as a crash in the caribou population and state-imposed limits on caribou harvests. The research illustrates that households are resilient
in the way they capture opportunities and create a new system so that elements of the old remain while parts change.Ye
Youth in Crisis Characteristics of Homeless Youth Served by Covenant House Alaska
This research is the result of a partnership between Covenant House Alaska and the
Institute of Social and Economic Research at the University of Alaska, Anchorage, as
part of a national effort, initiated by Covenant House Institute, to create partnerships
between Covenant House service providers and academic institutions. This report
documents trends in use of Crisis Center at Covenant House Alaska and the
characteristics of its clients. Use of Crisis Center, measured by visits and length of stay,
has been increasing since 2003. The number of youth coming to Covenant House Crisis
Center from outside of Anchorage is increasing, as is the number Alaska Natives served
by Covenant House. Data indicate that many after aging out of foster care, many youth
end up at Covenant House. Similarly many who receive mental health care outside of the
state, return to Alaska and end up at Crisis Center. Few have high school diplomas or
GED and three out of four are unemployed.Covenant House Alask
A preliminary Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) study of magnetite surface microtextures from the Wahianoa moraines, Mt Ruapehu, New Zealand.
Scanning electron microscope (SEM) of quartz microâtextures has routinely been used to identify the depositional environment of sediments in areas of former iceâsheet glaciation. On volcanic mountains, where the geomorphic origin of ridge deposits is often poorly understood, quartz is much less abundant, so SEM analysis has not been used as a depositional discriminator. Preliminary
research on surface microâtextures of abundant magnetite grains from the Wahianoa moraines, southâeastern Mt Ruapehu, suggests that SEM of magnetite may be useful in determining the processâorigin of deposits. We describe microâtextures and surface characteristics of samples of
magnetite, and our study shows that many of the microâtextures visible on quartz, thought to be diagnostic of glacial transport, are present on magnetite too. However, evaluating whether SEM analysis of magnetite is an applicable technique will require a better understanding of the microtextures occurring on known glacial, fluvioglacial and aeolian deposits on volcanic mountains
An Assessment of the Division of Juvenile Justice's Use of the Youth Level of Services/ Case Management Inventory
In June, 2010, the Alaska Division of Juvenile Justice (Division) invited the Alaska Judicial
Council and the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) at University of Alaska
Anchorage to assist âin understanding how scores on the Divisionâs assessment instrument for
juveniles, the Youth Level of Service/Case Management Inventory (YLS/CMI), reflect the actual
recidivism of juveniles whoâve received services from the Division.â Other states had shown that
YLS/CMI scores could be helpful in predicting recidivism among the youths they served, but Alaska
had not yet done the comparable research. ISER and the Council agreed that the questions proposed
would provide valuable information and help the Division to better address the reasons for youth
recidivism.The Division of Juvenile Justice.Executive Summary / Introduction / Part 1: Research background and design / Part 2: Findings / Part 3: Summary and Conclusions / Appendice
Pension Funding, Share Prices, and National Saving
This paper examines empirically the effect of unfunded pension obligations on corporate share prices and discusses the implications of these estimates for national saving, the decline of the stock market in recent years, and the rationality of corporate financial behavior. The analysis uses the information on inflation-adjusted income and assets that large firms were required to provide for 1976 and subsequent years. The evidence for a sample of nearly 200 manufacturing firms is consistent with the conclusion that share prices fully reflect the value of unfunded pension obligations. Since the conventional accounting measure of the unfunded pension liability has a number of problems (which we examine in the paper), it would be more accurate to say that the data are consistent with the conclusion that shareholders accept the conventional measure as the best available information and reduce share prices by a corresponding amount. The most important implication of the share price response is that the existence of unfunded private pension liabilities does not necessarily entail a reduction in total private saving. Because the pension liability reduces the equity value of the firm, shareholders are given notice of its existence and an incentive to save more themselves. For this reason, unfunded private pensions differ fundamentally from the unfunded Social Security pension and the other unfunded federal government civilian and military pensions.
Fuel Costs, Migration, and Community Viability
ISER researchers compiled and reviewed existing studies and data sources relating to the
economic and social viability of remote rural Alaska communities. We particularly looked for
possible linkages between high fuel costs and migration. Our review indicates the following: (1)
migration from smaller places toward larger places is an ongoing phenomenon that is more
noticeable when birth rates drop; (2) there is no systematic empirical evidence that fuel prices, by
themselves, have been a definitive cause of migration; (3) the pursuit of economic and
educational opportunities appears to be a predominant cause of migration; (4) however, currently
available survey data are not sufficient to definitively determine other reasons for migration,
which could include concerns about public safety and/or alcohol abuse; 5) most of the survey
data pre-date the latest rapid increase (2006-2008) in fuel prices. We suggest several ways that
better data could be collected on community viability and the reasons for migration.First Alaskans Institute.
Alaska Native Policy Center.Introduction / Methods / Findings / Significant data collection opportunities / Conclusions / References / Data Sources Use
Resolving 3D Disk Orientation using High-Resolution Images: New Constraints on Circumgalactic Gas Inflows
We constrain gas inflow speeds in star-forming galaxies with color gradients
consistent with inside-out disk growth. Our method combines new measurements of
disk orientation with previously described circumgalactic absorption in
background quasar spectra. Two quantities, a position angle and an axis ratio,
describe the projected shape of each galactic disk on the sky, leaving an
ambiguity about which side of the minor axis is tipped toward the observer.
This degeneracy regarding the 3D orientation of disks has compromised previous
efforts to measure gas inflow speeds. We present HST and Keck/LGSAO imaging
that resolves the spiral structure in five galaxies at redshift .
We determine the sign of the disk inclination for four galaxies, under the
assumption that spiral arms trail the rotation. We project models for both
radial infall in the disk plane and circular orbits onto each quasar sightline.
We compare the resulting line-of-sight velocities to the observed velocity
range of Mg II absorption in spectra of background quasars, which intersect the
disk plane at radii between 69 and 115 kpc. For two sightlines, we constrain
the maximum radial inflow speeds as 30-40 km s. We also rule out a
velocity component from radial inflow in one sightline, suggesting that the
structures feeding gas to these growing disks do not have unity covering
factor. We recommend appropriate selection criteria for building larger samples
of galaxy--quasar pairs that produce orientations sensitive to constraining
inflow properties.Comment: 15 pages with 8 figures and 2 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy in a Medium-Scale Macroeconomic Model: Expanded Version
In this paper, we study Ramsey-optimal fiscal and monetary policy in a medium-scale model of the U.S.\ business cycle. The model features a rich array of real and nominal rigidities that have been identified in the recent empirical literature as salient in explaining observed aggregate fluctuations. The main result of the paper is that price stability appears to be a central goal of optimal monetary policy. The optimal rate of inflation under an income tax regime is half a percent per year with a volatility of 1.1 percent. This result is surprising given that the model features a number of frictions that in isolation would call for a volatile rate of inflation---particularly nonstate-contingent nominal public debt, no lump-sum taxes, and sticky wages. Under an income-tax regime, the optimal income tax rate is quite stable, with a mean of 30 percent and a standard deviation of 1.1 percent. Simple monetary and fiscal rules are shown to implement a competitive equilibrium that mimics well the one induced by the Ramsey policy. When the fiscal authority is allowed to tax capital and labor income at different rates, optimal fiscal policy is characterized by a large and volatile subsidy on capital.
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