9,809 research outputs found
When the Advantaged Become Disadvantaged: Men’s and Women’s Actions Against Gender Discrimination
Intergroup theories suggest that different social identities will either discourage or encourage the taking of action against discrimination (Bartky, 1977; Jost & Banaji, 1994). However, research (e.g., Branscombe, 1998) has shown that discrimination is a less negative experience for men than for women. As such, it is possible that men may take greater action than women, regardless of identity. However, men’s responses to their perceived disadvantage has not yet been tested. Among those induced to ascribe to a gendered stereotype identity, men endorsed more action than women did.Among those induced to ascribe to an identity based on a gendered social experienced, women endorsed marginally more action than men did. Differences in responses are proposed to be a function of the different efficacy levels developed by each gender within each social identity
A model of financial fragility
This paper presents a dynamic, stochastic game-theoretic model of financial fragility. The model has two essential features. First, interrelated portfolios and payment commitments forge financial linkages among agents. Second, iid shocks to investment projects’ operations at a single date cause some projects to fail. Investors who experience losses from project failures reallocate their portfolios, thereby breaking some linkages. In the Pareto-efficient symmetric equilibrium studied, two related types of financial crises can occur in response. One occurs gradually as defaults spread, causing even more links to break. An economy is more fragile ex post the more severe this financial crisis. The other type of crisis occurs instantaneously when forward-looking investors preemptively shift their wealth into a safe asset in anticipation of the contagion affecting them in the future. An economy is more fragile ex ante the earlier all of its linkages break from such a crisis. The paper also considers whether fragility is worse for larger economies.Financial crises
RESOURCE QUALITY, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, AND FOOD SECURITY
USDA's Economic Research Service estimates that about 33 percent of the developing world's people suffer from insufficient food intake. Growth in agricultural productivity is critical to improvements in food security. We will examine the impact of changes in acreage and fertilizer response on production in 67 study countries and review the implications for food security.Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Productivity Analysis,
The evolution of cash transactions: some implications for monetary policy
This paper considers the implications of a decreasing demand for cash transactions under several monetary policy regimes. A policy of nominal-interest-rate targeting implies that a secular decline in the volume of cash transactions unambiguously leads to accelerating inflation. A policy of maintaining a fixed composition of government liabilities leads to accelerating (decelerating) inflation if agents have sufficiently high (low) levels of risk aversion. A policy of inflation targeting produces falling nominal and real interest rates, while a policy of fixing the rate of money growth can easily lead to indeterminacy and endogenous oscillation in interest rates.Payment systems ; Monetary policy - United States ; Money
Long-term consequences of vietnam-era conscription: schooling, experience, and earnings
This paper uses the 2000 Census 1-in-6 sample to look at the long-term impact of Vietnam-era military service. Instrumental Variables estimates using draft-lottery instruments show post-service earnings losses close to zero in 2000, in contrast with earlier results showing substantial earnings losses for white veterans in the 1970s and 1980s. The estimates also point to a marked increase in schooling that appears to be attributable to the Vietnam-era GI Bill. The net wage effects observed in the 2000 data can be explained by a flattening of the experience profile in middle age and a modest return to the increased schooling generated by the GI Bill. Evidence on disability effects is mixed but seems inconsistent with a long-term effect of Vietnam-era military service on health.
Understanding the performance of the low energy neutrino factory: the dependence on baseline distance and stored-muon energy
Motivated by recent hints of large {\theta}13 from the T2K, MINOS and Double
Chooz experiments, we study the physics reach of a Low Energy Neutrino Factory
(LENF) and its dependence on the chosen baseline distance, L, and stored-muon
energy, E_{\mu}, in order to ascertain the configuration of the optimal LENF.
In particular, we study the performance of the LENF over a range of baseline
distances from 1000 km to 4000 km and stored-muon energies from 4 GeV to 25
GeV, connecting the early studies of the LENF (1300 km, 4.5 GeV) to those of
the conventional, high-energy neutrino factory design (4000 km and 7000 km, 25
GeV). Three different magnetized detector options are considered: a
Totally-Active Scintillator Detector (TASD) and two models of a liquid-argon
detector distinguished by optimistic and conservative performance estimates. In
order to compare the sensitivity of each set-up, we compute the full
{\delta}-dependent discovery contours for the determination of non-zero
{\theta}13, CP-violating values of {\delta} and the mass hierarchy. In the case
of large {\theta}13 with sin^2(2*{\theta}13) = (few)*10^{-3}, the LENF provides
a strong discovery potential over the majority of the L-E_{\mu} parameter space
and is a promising candidate for the future generation of long baseline
experiments aimed at discovering CP-violation and the mass hierarchy, and at
making a precise determination of the oscillation parameters.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Exploring the Use of Mental Health Services and Programs at a Historically Black College: A Case Study
Research shows students’ use of counseling programs and services to address the mental health needs of their student body on HBCU campuses are underdocumented. This qualitative descriptive single case study was developed to provide substantiated conclusions on this use that can be added to the current literature. The purpose of this study was to investigate participants’ perceptions on the use of these services, and the strategies used to influence the use of these services, on one HBCU campus. This study was guided by two research questions: (a) What are the perceptions of the counseling center staff, faculty, and students of the use of counseling center programs and services to address the mental health needs of its student body? (b) What are perceptions of the strategies to influence participation in the counseling center services and programs? Purposeful sampling and snowball sampling were used to recruit 16 students, 2 faculty members, and 3 counseling center staff for the study. Data was collected via qualitative documents, qualitative interviews, and field notes. The data was analyzed using in vivo, descriptive, and constant-comparison coding. The key findings of the study revealed two conclusions: (a) the campus counseling center offers programs and services to meet the mental health needs of its student body, but those services and programs are severely underused by the students and (b) the strategies used to influence participation of these services and programs need improvement. Conclusions are discussed in the context of the social ecological systems theory
Contesting the 'promotion' and 'protection' of human rights: a critical understanding of the ASEAN–EU relationship through representational force
How do we explain ASEAN - a non-western, traditionally 'weak' actor - and the degree to which it has successfully co-opted the EU into accepting its approach to human rights? This article considers the question of human rights in the ASEAN-EU relationship. It does so by reappraising the literature on constructivism and comparative regionalism, embracing the move beyond norm diffusion and Europe to norm contestation and local actors, namely ASEAN. Building on the literature of contestation, it operationalises Mattern's model of Representational Force to analyse the case study of the ASEAN-EU relationship from the 1990s to the establishment of AICHR in 2009 and beyond where we can see contestation in action. Interestingly, through the contestation over the 'promotion' and 'protection' of human rights, there is significant scope to see how it is ASEAN that has largely co-opted the EU into supporting a uniquely 'ASEAN' approach to human rights in Southeast Asia
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