1,598 results
Search Results
102. Child Poverty, Child Maintenance and Interactions with Social Assistance Benefits Among Lone Parent Families: a Comparative Analysis.
- Author
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HAKOVIRTA, MIA, SKINNER, CHRISTINE, HIILAMO, HEIKKI, and JOKELA, MERITA
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,CHILD rearing ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ENDOWMENTS ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN - Abstract
In many developed countries lone parent families face high rates of child poverty. Among those lone parents who do get child maintenance there is a hidden problem. States may retain all, or a proportion, of the maintenance that is paid in order to offset other fiscal costs. Thus, the potential of child maintenance to alleviate poverty among lone parent families may not be fully realized, especially if the families are also in receipt of social assistance benefits. This paper provides an original comparative analysis exploring the effectiveness of child maintenance to reduce child poverty among lone parent families in receipt of social assistance. It addresses the question of whether effectiveness is compromised once interaction effects (such as the operation of a child maintenance disregard) are taken into account in four countries Australia, Finland, Germany and the UK using the LIS dataset (2013). It raises important policy considerations and provides evidence to show that if policy makers are serious about reducing child poverty, they must understand how hidden mechanisms within interactions between child maintenance and social security systems can work as effective cost recovery tools for the state, but have no poverty reduction impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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103. Regimes, Social Risks and the Welfare Mix: Unpacking Attitudes to Pensions and Childcare in Germany and the UK Through Deliberative Forums.
- Author
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TAYLOR-GOOBY, PETER, HEUER, JAN-OCKO, CHUNG, HEEJUNG, LERUTH, BENJAMIN, MAU, STEFFEN, and ZIMMERMANN, KATHARINA
- Subjects
CHILD care ,CHILDREN'S health ,DISCUSSION ,MEDICAL care costs ,PENSIONS ,PUBLIC opinion ,PUBLIC welfare ,RESEARCH ,RESPONSIBILITY ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Modern welfare regimes rest on a range of actors – state, market, family/households, employers and charities – but austerity programmes diminish the contribution of the state. While changes in this 'welfare mix' require support from the population, attitude studies have focused mainly on people's views on state responsibilities, using welfare regime theory to explain differences. This paper contributes to our understanding of the welfare mix by including other providers such as the market, the family or employers, and also introduces social risk theories, contrasting new and old risks. Regime theory implies differences will persist over time, but risk theory suggests that growing similarities in certain risks may tend to promote international convergence. This article examines attitudes to the roles of state, market, family, charity/community and employer for pension and childcare in Germany and the UK. We collected data using deliberative forums, a new method in social policy research that allows citizens space to pursue extended lightly moderated discussion and permits researchers to analyse people's justifications for their attitudes. Our research indicated patterns of convergence especially in preferences for childcare, but that regime predominates in people's justifications for their attitudes: regime differences in attitudes are resilient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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104. Trust in Financial Markets.
- Author
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Mayer, Colin
- Subjects
STOCK ownership ,PROPERTY ,STOCK exchanges ,BANKING industry ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines contemporaneous and historical evidence on the structure of ownership and control of corporate sectors in developed countries to draw lessons for development of financial markets. It records the critical role that equity markets played in the ownership and financing of corporations at the beginning of the 20th century. It notes that this occurred in the absence of formal systems of regulation and that equity markets functioned on the basis of informal relationships of trust. These were sustained through local stock markets in the UK, banks in Germany, and business coordinators and family firms in Japan. The paper explores the concept of trust that is required to promote the development of financial markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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105. Where 'fake news' flourishes: a comparison across four Western democracies.
- Author
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Humprecht, Edda
- Subjects
FAKE news ,ENGLISH-speaking countries ,CROSS-cultural differences ,DISINFORMATION ,DEMOCRACY - Abstract
How does the content of so-called 'fake news' differ across Western democracies? While previous research on online disinformation has focused on the individual level, the current study aims to shed light on cross-national differences. It compares online disinformation re-published by fact checkers from four Western democracies (the US, the UK, Germany, and Austria). The findings reveal significant differences between English-speaking and German-speaking countries. In the US and the UK, the largest shares of partisan disinformation are found, while in Germany and Austria sensationalist stories prevail. Moreover, in English-speaking countries, disinformation frequently attacks political actors, whereas in German-speaking countries, immigrants are most frequently targeted. Across all of the countries, topics of false stories strongly mirror national news agendas. Based on these results, the paper argues that online disinformation is not only a technology-driven phenomenon but also shaped by national information environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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106. AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE DYNAMIC RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CPI AND PPI: EVIDENCE FROM THE UK, FRANCE AND GERMANY.
- Author
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WOO, KAI-YIN, LEE, SHU-KAM, and NG, CHO-YIU JOE
- Subjects
WHOLESALE price indexes ,CONSUMER price indexes ,INVESTIGATIONS ,ERROR correction (Information theory) ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
This paper examines the dynamic relationship between the consumer price index (CPI) and the producer price index (PPI) in the UK, France and Germany from 1997 to 2013. We employ the momentum-threshold autoregressive (MTAR) cointegration model for empirical analysis. The results show that the CPI and the PPI are cointegrated with bi-directional long-run Granger causality between CPI and PPI, signifying the existence of both demand-pull and the cost-push nature of inflation. The estimates of threshold vector error correction models (TVECMs) indicate asymmetric adjustments to equilibrium, where upward adjustments are statistically significant but downward adjustments are sluggish and insignificant. Moreover, we generate the unconditional half-life estimates as a measure of persistence, which reveal robust evidence of complex non-linearities in the adjustment process. Our overall results provide valuable information for policymakers to formulate inflation-control policies and optimal policy horizons under a non-linear framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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107. Deferred and Income-contingent Tuition Fees: An Empirical Assessment using Belgian, German and UK Data.
- Author
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Vandenberghe, V. and Debande, O.
- Subjects
HIGHER education finance ,INCOME-contingent loans ,TUITION ,HIGHER education ,LOANS ,EDUCATIONAL finance - Abstract
This paper is a numerical exploration of the following. Assume, in the European Union context, that decision-makers want to spend more on higher education via higher tuition fees, but also want payments to be deferred and income-contingent. There are several possible ways to achieve this. First, ask graduates to repay a fixed amount each year if their current net income is above a certain threshold - income-contingent loans (ICL). Second, ask former students to repay a fixed proportion of their income - human capital contracts (HCC). What are the respective distributional properties of these policies, and how do they compare with traditional financing through income taxation? This paper shows that, irrespective of major variations between countries with different higher education, labour market and fiscal structures, with income taxation non-graduates pay more that 50% of the increased higher-education costs. It also shows that the HCC and ICL have vertical equity properties because non-graduates do not pay, but also because the income contingency principle on which they are based redistributes income among heterogeneous graduates. Finally, the paper shows that HCC are the best way to take account of graduates' ability to pay. It also reveals, however, that the ICL can be made to be almost as equitable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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108. The Impact of Information Technology Development on the Legal Concept — Particular Examination on the Legal concept of 'Signatures'.
- Author
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Wang, Minyan
- Subjects
INFORMATION technology ,LAW & economic development ,COMPUTER science ,CIVIL law ,SIGNATURES (Writing) - Abstract
This paper intends to explore the impact of Information technology (IT) development on the legal concept of `signatures'. To what extent and in which way does it impact on the legal concept of `signatures'? This paper attempts to examine this issue from an international and comparative perspective. It was found that IT development has different levels of impact on the legal concept of `signatures' in different jurisdictions. In the Common Law system such as the UK and the US, it does not change the legal concept of `signatures'. However, it does put the legal concept on such an important position. On the contrary, IT development changes the legal concept of `signatures' in the Civil Law system such as Germany and China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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109. THE IMPACT OF SIMPLE FISCAL RULES IN GROWTH MODELS WITH PUBLIC GOODS AND CONGESTION.
- Author
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GHOSH, SUGATA and NOLAN, CHARLES
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC goods ,PUBLIC finance ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,ECONOMIC indicators ,PUBLIC administration ,PUBLIC investments - Abstract
In this paper we examine the implication of a simple class of fiscal rules for long-run economic growth and welfare. The Golden Rule of Public Finance that we examine is motivated by institutional arrangements in countries such as Germany and the UK. We find that rules that seek to limit government borrowing to productive investment spending have a clear justification in terms of growth and welfare when government-provided goods are otherwise excessively provided. Even in the case where it is private consumption that is excessive, the Golden Rule of Public Finance is likely to be good from a growth perspective, but the welfare effects are more ambiguous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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110. Standardization in EU education and training policy: findings from a European research network.
- Author
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Ertl, Hubert and Phillips, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL standards ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TRAINING ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research ,TEACHING - Abstract
This paper describes an EU-funded project under the Training and Mobility of Researchers (TMR) Programme, with a particular emphasis on the Oxford-based part. Involving six European universities, the overarching investigation was concerned with the tensions between standardization and tradition in education. In Oxford the focus was on aspects of EU education and training policy in four Member States: the United Kingdom, German, Sweden, and France. The paper describes the research undertaken and its outcomes, using the project as an example of EU funding programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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111. Hybridisation or Polarisation: Doctors and Accounting in the UK, Germany and Italy.
- Author
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Jacobs, Kerry
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,PROFESSIONAL education ,GENERAL practitioners ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
This paper describes a study of doctors and the education of doctors in Germany, Italy and the UK and the changing location of accounting practices and expertise. In these countries there have been coercive reform attempts to get doctors to accept increased financial responsibility and pay greater attention to costs and budgets.suggested that Finnish doctors have willingly adopted accounting practices as part of their legitimated competencies and have become a hybrid profession. This paper address the question of whether that is a valid generalisation in Germany, Italy or the UK. The key focus of the paper is on the education and training of doctors, which should have altered if hybridisation has occurred. The finding is that there is no evidence from the countries studied that accounting has become incorporated into the formal education of doctors. While there were management and accounting training courses for doctors these were only available for those in or aiming for clinico-managerial positions. This does not support the argument that medicine has become a hybridised profession, but it does support the case for polarisation. These changes are absorbed or managed by an emergent sub-group, the medical manager. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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112. Mechanisms of poverty alleviation: anti-poverty effects of non-means-tested and means-tested benefits in five welfare states.
- Author
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Nelson, Kenneth
- Subjects
WELFARE state ,SOCIAL policy ,POVERTY - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of European Social Policy is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2004
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113. Exploring factors affecting international technological specialization: the role of knowledge flows and the structure of innovative activity.
- Author
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Malerba, Franco and Montobbio, Fabio
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGY ,INDUSTRIAL arts ,PATENTS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
We define international technological specialisation (ITS) as the technological performance of a country in a specific technology relative to its overall international technological performance. This paper uses patent applications and patent citations at the European Patent Office for five countries (US, UK, Italy, France, Germany) from 1989 to 1994 for 135 technological classes in three industrial sectors (Chemicals, Electronics and Machinery). It shows that ITS is significantly persistent and is affected by the direction of cross-sectoral knowledge spillovers within countries. In addition, the paper shows that the concentration of innovative activities, the emergence of new innovators and technological co-operation positively affect ITS. Some differences across sectors emerge. Keywords: Technological specialization; Knowledge spillover; Market structure [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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114. National Business Systems and Industry-specific Competitiveness.
- Author
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Haake, Sven
- Subjects
COMPETITION ,CAPITALISM ,INDUSTRIES ,MARKETING strategy ,BUSINESS planning ,SOCIAL interaction ,BUSINESS intelligence - Abstract
Countries have been shown to be competitive in specific industries. This paper contends that this industrial specialization can be understood in terms of an affinity between national 'models of capitalism' and the characteristics of industrial task environments. Put differently, industry-specific competitiveness is conceived to arise out of a fit between patterns of national business systems and patterns of industrial task environments. Specifically, the paper will propose a relationship between the communitarian or individualistic nature of national business systems and the organization-specificity of knowledge in an industry. More communitarian business systems are thought to enjoy a competitive advantage in industries with a high organization-specificity of knowledge, i.e. in industries that rely more on the long-term accumulation of organization-specific knowledge within tightly-knit corporate communities. More individualistic business systems, on the other hand, are thought to enjoy a competitive advantage in industries with a low organization-specificity of knowledge, i.e. in industries that thrive more on the speedy dissemination or reallocation of company-unspecific knowledge through a constant reconfiguration of social relationships. The paper will offer some illustrations of these proposed relationships in terms of the competitive profiles of the United States, Japan, Germany and Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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115. The European Project TILA
- Author
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Jauregi, Kristi, Melchor-Couto, Sabela, and Beltrán, Elina Vilar
- Abstract
Telecollaboration for Intercultural Language Acquisition (TILA), is an EU-funded project within the Lifelong Learning Programme that will run between January 2013 and June 2015. TILA's overall objectives are: (1) to innovate, enrich and make foreign language teaching programmes more attractive and effective by encouraging the implementation of telecollaboration activities in secondary schools across Europe; (2) to assist teachers and teacher training programmes in developing information and communications technology (ICT) literacy skills as well as organisational, pedagogical and intercultural competences to guarantee adequate integration of telecollaboration practices; and (3) to study the added value that telecollaboration may bring to language learning in terms of intercultural understanding and motivation amongst younger learners. Our aim in this (albeit short) paper is to introduce the project, its background and outline the specific teaching needs of our participants with regards to languages and technology. [For full proceedings, see ED565044.]
- Published
- 2013
116. Self-Reported Satisfaction and the Economic Crisis of 2007-2010: Or How People in the UK and Germany Perceive a Severe Cyclical Downturn.
- Author
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Mertens, Antje and Beblo, Miriam
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,JOB satisfaction ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,PRICE inflation ,GROSS domestic product ,LABOR market ,TWENTY-first century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Self-reported satisfaction measures respond to a great variety of socio-demographic characteristics as well as the job and living environment. In this paper we ask whether the recent financial market crisis has caused a deterioration of satisfaction not only for the unemployed but also for those out of the labour force and especially those in employment. The focus of our analyses is on the pattern of life, job and health satisfaction over time and the influence of unemployment rates, inflation rates and GDP growth. We compare the UK and Germany, two countries with different employment protection regulations and different consequences of the crisis for the labour market. For our analysis we use data from the German Socio-Economic Panel and the British Household Panel Study for the period 1996-2010 and supplement this with annual information on macroeconomic indicators. We estimate Ordered Logit and OLS models, both with individual fixed effects. We find some limited psychological costs with respect to self-reported life satisfaction in the crisis years, and a considerable impact of regional and national unemployment rates. Looking at job and health satisfaction we get similar though somewhat weaker results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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117. Characterizing barriers to care in migraine: multicountry results from the Chronic Migraine Epidemiology and Outcomes – International (CaMEO-I) study.
- Author
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Lanteri-Minet, Michel, Leroux, Elizabeth, Katsarava, Zaza, Lipton, Richard B., Sakai, Fumihiko, Matharu, Manjit, Fanning, Kristina, Manack Adams, Aubrey, Sommer, Katherine, Seminerio, Michael, and Buse, Dawn C.
- Subjects
MIGRAINE diagnosis ,MEDICAL care use ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,POPULATION geography ,PROFESSIONS ,PHYSICIANS ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MIGRAINE ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Objective: To assess rates of traversing barriers to care to access optimal clinical outcomes in people with migraine internationally. Background: People in need of medical care for migraine should consult a health care professional knowledgeable in migraine management, obtain an accurate diagnosis, and receive an individualized treatment plan, which includes scientific society guideline-recommended treatments where appropriate. Methods: The Chronic Migraine Epidemiology and Outcomes-International (CaMEO-I) Study was a cross-sectional, web-based survey conducted from July 2021 through March 2022 in Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States (US). Respondents who met modified International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition, criteria for migraine and had Migraine Disability Assessment Scale (MIDAS) scores of ≥ 6 (i.e., mild, moderate, or severe disability) were deemed to need medical care and were included in this analysis. Minimally effective treatment required that participants were currently consulting a health care professional for headache (barrier 1), reported an accurate diagnosis (barrier 2), and reported use of minimally appropriate pharmacologic treatment (barrier 3; based on American Headache Society 2021 Consensus Statement recommendations). Proportions of respondents who successfully traversed each barrier were calculated, and chi-square tests were used to assess overall difference among countries. Results: Among 14,492 respondents with migraine, 8,330 had MIDAS scores of ≥ 6, were deemed in need of medical care, and were included in this analysis. Current headache consultation was reported by 35.1% (2926/8330) of respondents. Compared with the US, consultation rates and diagnosis rates were statistically significantly lower in all other countries except France where they were statistically significantly higher. Total appropriate treatment rates were also statistically significantly lower in all other countries compared with the US except France, which did not differ from the US. All 3 barriers were traversed by only 11.5% (955/8330) of respondents, with differences among countries (P < 0.001). Conclusions: Of people with migraine in need of medical care for migraine, less than 15% traverse all 3 barriers to care. Although rates of consultation, diagnosis, and treatment differed among countries, improvements are needed in all countries studied to reduce the global burden of migraine. Trial registration: NA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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118. Effect of Face Mask on Lowering COVID-19 Incidence in School Settings: A Systematic Review
- Author
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Luka Viera
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The emergence of COVID-19 resulted in a substantial loss of education because of global school closures. Face masks are a potential measure to restrain the COVID-19 spread; therefore, this paper evaluated the effectiveness of face masks in reducing COVID-19 incidence in school settings. METHODS: A systematic review was conducted by searching the literature in the Cochrane COVID-19 Study Register and the World Health Organization COVID-19 global literature. Data were summarized in tabular forms, and the findings were presented as narrative synthesis. RESULTS: A total of 15,709 records were retrieved. The screening and selection led to the inclusion of 12 observational and 2 quasi-experimental studies. Nine studies were conducted in different states, counties, or districts of the United States, and the remaining 5 were reported from Germany, Finland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The results of 10 out of 14 studies favored mask use in reducing school COVID-19 incidence. Three studies found no link between mask use and COVID-19 incidences, whereas 1 quasi-experimental study noted a higher COVID-19 incidence with mask use in students aged 6-11 years than no use of mask among preschool children aged 3-5 years. CONCLUSION: Mask mandates may lessen the incidence of respiratory infectious diseases in school settings during a pandemic; more well-designed studies are warranted to clarify further the evidence regarding mask use in school settings.
- Published
- 2024
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119. The Dynamic Relationship Between Interest Rates and Inflation: An Empirical Investigation.
- Author
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Kugler, P.
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,PRICE inflation - Abstract
In this paper the dynamic relationship between short term interest rates and inflation is analyzed for five countries (U.S.A., UK, France, Germany and Switzerland), covering the period 1974-1980. The framework of analysis is the bivariate autoregressive representation of the interest and the inflation rate, which allows to test the traditional approach (interest rate as distributed lag of inflation) as well as the novel approach of Fama (the inflation rate as function of the one period lagged interest rate). In general, the hypotheses of both approaches are rejected by the data. An analysis of the variability of the real interest rate suggests that it contributes strongly to the variation of the nominal interest rate and that the nominal interest rate and inflation help to predict the ex ante real interest rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
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120. International Business Cycles and the ERM: Is There a European Business Cycle?
- Author
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Artis, M. J. and Zhang, W.
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange rates ,BUSINESS cycles ,BUSINESS - Abstract
Successful fixed exchange rate regimes impose policy disciplines that are likely to lead to conformity in the business cycles of the participating countries. This conjecture is borne out in the present paper by the evidence that the business cycle affiliation of ERM member countries has shifted from the United States to Germany since the formation of the ERM. This effect is bolstered by growing links in trade and finance between the European countries. The United Kingdom is conspicuous among these in that its business cycle affiliation did not change in the period of study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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121. How 'uniform' is financial reporting in Germany?- The example of foreign currency translation.
- Author
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Feige, Peter
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,MODELS & modelmaking ,ACCOUNTING policies ,FOREIGN exchange accounting ,CONSOLIDATED financial statements ,CHEMICAL industry - Abstract
In many standard textbooks on comparative international accounting, a separate chapter is devoted to classification models of national financial reporting systems. Typically, the authors of 'international accounting classification models' not only organize national financial reporting systems into certain groups and assign descriptive labels to these categories. Rather, they also tend to draw analogies with the disciplines of the natural sciences so as to justify the methodology which underlies their theoretical constructs. The validity of these methodological claims is indirectly being examined in this paper, which argues predominantly from an empirical angle. The focus of the essay is on the notion - usually advanced by the authors of the models under discussion - that German financial accounting practice can be described as 'uniform', thus forming a contrast to the 'fair-judgemental' approach to financial reporting which is commonly held to prevail in the United Kingdom. In order to test these propositions, the accounting policies in the area of foreign currency translation in the consolidated accounts of a sample of British and German chemical companies are subjected to scrutiny. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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122. Balancing cost and justice concerns in the energy transition: comparing coal phase-out policies in Germany and the UK.
- Author
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Bang, Guri, Rosendahl, Knut Einar, and Böhringer, Christoph
- Subjects
- *
COAL , *JUSTICE , *POLITICAL participation , *COMMUNITIES ,PARIS Agreement (2016) - Abstract
Europe's two largest economies – Germany and the UK – are phasing out coal from electricity production as part of European efforts to fulfil increased climate policy ambitions that require comprehensive energy system transitions. German and UK governments varied in the ways they sought support from diverse societal interests to make the transition socially acceptable and politically feasible. Drawing on 22 expert interviews and process-tracing methods, this paper compares and explains how political and economic institutional differences influenced efforts to balance energy transition concerns, like speed and cost-effectiveness with justice for companies, workers and communities most adversely affected by the transition. We find that the increasing attention to just transition perspectives after the Paris Agreement affected the design of coal phase-out processes in different ways in the two countries. Just transition concerns were given priority by policymakers in Germany, but more so if they overlapped with the interests of incumbents. In the end, politically powerful stakeholders dominated the policy outcome. In the UK, policymakers and stakeholders gave only weak attention to just transition concerns, mainly because coal's market position had collapsed. Coal interests did not have strong representation in the decision-making process. But we find that just transition concerns are likely to gain more attention in the UK because a more challenging transition away from gas will take place over the next two decades. Key policy insights Policymakers must balance the objective of a fast decarbonization process against two other important concerns: cost-effectiveness and a just transition. Political-economic institutional design and capacity shape the extent to which just transition concerns are given weight in coal phase-out processes. State capacity for including just transition concerns in coal phase-out processes is higher when political and economic institutions strongly mediate government-stakeholder interaction in the policy process, and broad stakeholder participation increases the political feasibility and legitimacy of policy change. In Germany, the government's attention to just transition concerns was strong because broad stakeholder representation in the formal process, and transition assistance policies to target potential losers in the transition, became crucial to enhance the legitimacy of coal phase-out policies. In the UK, cost-effectiveness trumped just transition concerns in the coal phase-out process, but just transition issues have increasing salience and will likely become pertinent in the upcoming gas phase-out process because more jobs and key economic interests are at stake. Our findings are relevant for policymakers in countries struggling with balancing speed, cost-effectiveness and just transition concerns in similar transition processes: phasing out coal, gas, or oil from their energy system. The findings may also inform future energy transition research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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123. The platform effect: How Amazon changed work in logistics in Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Hassel, Anke and Sieker, Felix
- Subjects
THIRD-party logistics ,LABOR laws ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,LABOR contracts ,GIG economy ,CONTRACT employment ,BUSINESS models ,LOGISTICS - Abstract
While the effects of the platform economy on work are mainly studied through the lens of gig or cloud workers, many more employees are likely to be affected in non-platform firms or sectors. We discuss the mechanisms of platform economy's impact on the employment relationships and indirect effect on employment trends. Platform firms enter the service economy with business models that put existing service providers under pressure and advance a platform model of employment relationship. However, their transformative force is limited by three factors: employment regulations, access to welfare provisions and the employment relations at legacy firms. We examine the case of Amazon logistics in the US, Germany and the UK and find that the employment contract, as a legal institution, prevents the dissemination of independent contracting as the preferred employment model. Moreover, the welfare state has a paradoxical effect on platform work: universal welfare and liberal employment law facilitate the rise of precarious work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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124. Offshoring and well-being of workers.
- Author
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Akay, Alpaslan and Savsin, Selen
- Subjects
- *
OFFSHORE outsourcing , *ELECTIONS , *SUBJECTIVE well-being (Psychology) , *WELL-being , *JOB descriptions , *ECONOMIC shock - Abstract
Using long panels of industry-specific offshoring information and subjectively reported well-being datasets mainly from Germany, which is also supported by datasets from the UK and Australia, this paper aims to investigate the relationship between offshoring and workers' subjective well-being in the source country. We employ panel data fixed-effects models with time-variant personality measures and industry-specific measures to alleviate the bias stemming from the non-random sorting of individuals in industries. Our findings suggest that offshoring negatively relates to workers' subjective well-being. The result is unexceptionally consistent across Germany, the UK, and Australia, and the effect is larger in business services and among high-skilled workers. We extensively discuss how contextual "fear-factors" prevailing in the source countries interact with the angst generated by the negative framing of offshoring. To single out such angst, we first show that objective and subjective job security concerns, job characteristics, and labor market conditions only marginally relate to the well-being effect of offshoring. Then, we investigate how the effect of offshoring on well-being is amplified by a larger set of contextual factors pertaining to temporary economic shocks, negative narratives about offshoring during electoral cycles, partisan political preferences, and high immigration rates. Finally, we show that a recent skill upgrade significantly diminishes the negative effect of offshoring on well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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125. How to liberalise rail passenger services? Lessons from european experience.
- Author
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Nash, Chris, Smith, Andrew, Crozet, Yves, Link, Heike, and Nilsson, Jan-Eric
- Subjects
- *
SERVICES for passengers , *LETTING of contracts , *PUBLIC contracts , *CONTRACT employment , *ECONOMETRIC models , *ROLLING stock - Abstract
This paper studies the experience of Europe's three most liberalised railways - Sweden, Germany and Britain - in opening-up rail passenger services to competition by means of competitive tendering, and seeks to draw lessons for countries that are just starting the process, such as France. It also comments on experience of competition in the market in these and other countries (this form of competition has been taken furthest in other countries - notably Italy and the Czech Republic, as well as on a single route in Austria). The paper fills an important gap in the literature - that has so far focused on econometric modelling of the impact of rail reforms - by considering how competition can best be introduced in practice. This investigation is important and timely given the requirements of EU legislation (4th Railway Package) which will require competition to be introduced into passenger rail services (by 2020 for commercial services, and 2023 for public transport contracts) across the whole of the EU. It finds evidence that competitive tendering has helped increase demand for and reduce subsidies to the rail passenger sector, but that there are many decisions that have to be taken as to how it is to be implemented. Short gross cost contracts may work well for regional services where the tendering authority takes the lead in planning and marketing such services. If services where ticket revenue recovers a larger share of costs – "more commercial services" – are to be tendered, long net cost contracts may make more sense. An alternative is to leave them operated by the incumbent but with open access for competitors to enter the market. Two particular issues face countries starting on the liberalisation process. Firstly, if existing rolling stock is owned by the incumbent rather than the franchising authority or an independent company; that remains a major barrier to entry. The second is the position of existing staff. If new operators are required to take them on at existing wages and conditions; that is a barrier to improved efficiency, but for new operators to recruit their own staff may also be problematic, particularly where the pace of change is fast. • In all three liberalised countries (GB, Sweden and Germany) there has been rapid growth in demand for regional services. • Subsidies per train-km and passenger-km have also fallen in all three countries, though in GB unit costs rose post-reforms. • Gross-cost contracts useful where regional body controls marketing/services; otherwise net-cost contracts may be preferred. • Where large-scale competition introduced for first time, treatment of rolling stock and existing staff biggest issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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126. What about the people? Developing measures of perceived accessibility from case studies in Germany and the UK.
- Author
-
van der Vlugt, Anna-Lena, Curl, Angela, and Wittowsky, Dirk
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,CASE studies ,TIME travel - Abstract
As a primary objective in transport planning urban neighbourhood accessibility plays an essential role in the sustainable transformation of cities and their infrastructure. In most studies, accessibility is objectively measured using aggregate travel time or generalised costs as an indicator of the separation of people from places. However, this approach does not reflect perceptions of residents, which ultimately shape mobility decisions and represent the "lived reality" of accessibility. This paper addresses this research gap, adding to a growing evidence base on understanding the relationship between perceived and objective measures of accessibility, and discusses opportunities for incorporating perceptions into measures of accessibility. We offer suggestions for how and why individual perceptions of accessibility differ from objective measures using data from Germany and the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
127. Deductive development and validation of a questionnaire to assess sensitivity to very low and very high frequency sounds: SISUS-Q (Sensitivity to Infra-Sound and Ultra-Sound Questionnaire).
- Author
-
Ascone, Leonie, Uppenkamp, Stefan, Behler, Oliver, Lineton, Ben, Burke, Elisa, Koch, Christian, Kühn, Simone, and Geršak, Gregor
- Subjects
AUDIO frequency ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,FACTOR analysis ,AUDITORY perception ,HEARING ,AUDITORY perception testing ,HEARING levels ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ACOUSTIC stimulation - Abstract
Objective: Auditory research and complaints about environmental noise indicate that there exists a significant, small subgroup within the population which is sensitive towards infra- and low-frequency or ultra- and high-frequency sounds (ILF/UHF). This paper reports on the development, factorization and validation of measures of sensitivity towards frequencies outside the common hearing range.Design: A multinational, cross-sectional survey study was run. Principal component analyses and exploratory factor analyses were conducted in a sample of 267 Europeans (from the UK, Slovenia, and Germany).Results: The factor analyses suggested that ILF versus UHF sensitivity constitute different factors, each characterized by sensory perception, stress-responsivity, and behavioral avoidance. A third factor comprising beliefs of dangerousness of ILF and UHF emerged. The factors explained 72% of the variance. The factor-solution was replicated separately for the English (n = 98) and German (n = 169) versions of the questionnaire (Slovenians and UK residents filled out the English version). Acceptable to excellent reliability was found. ILF and UHF sensitivity were moderately related to noise sensitivity in the normal hearing range, suggesting the new measures are not redundant. Correlations with psychiatric and somatic symptoms were small to moderate. ILF sensitivity correlated with neuroticism (small effect) and daytime sleepiness (moderate effect). ILF and UHF sensitivity were related to agreeableness (small effects). Overall, the novel ILF and UHF sensitivity scales seems to provide a solid tool for conducting further research on the role of sensitivity concerning adverse effects of ILF and UHF sound (e.g. health outcomes, annoyance ratings). The questionnaire consortium recommends using the new scales in combination with established measures of normal hearing range sensitivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
128. Path creation, global production networks and regional development: A comparative international analysis of the offshore wind sector.
- Author
-
MacKinnon, Danny, Dawley, Stuart, Steen, Markus, Menzel, Max-Peter, Karlsen, Asbjørn, Sommer, Pascal, Hansen, Gard Hopsdal, and Normann, Håkon Endresen
- Subjects
GLOBAL production networks ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC geography ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INSTITUTIONAL environment - Abstract
• Paper highlights the role of wider extra-regional factors in regional path creation. • Develops an analytical framework based on the interplay between four factors. • Adopts an international comparative approach, covering Germany, the UK and Norway. • Outlines the qualitative characteristics of the paths created. • Emphasises the role of national states in the strategic coupling process. The question of how regions and nations develop new sources of industrial growth is of recurring interest in economic geography and planning studies. From an evolutionary economic geography (EEG) perspective, new growth paths emerge out of existing economic activities and their associated assets and conditions. In response to the micro-economic and endogenous focus of much EEG research, this paper utilises a broader evolutionary perspective on path creation which stresses the dynamic interplay between four sets of factors: regional assets; key economic and organisational actors; mechanisms of path creation; and multi-scalar institutional environments and policy initiatives. Reflecting the importance of extra-regional networks and institutions, this framework is also informed by the Global Production Networks (GPN) approach, which highlights the process of strategic coupling between firms and regions and its political and institutional mediation by state institutions at different spatial scales. We deploy this framework to investigate regional path creation in the context of renewable energy technologies, focusing specifically on the offshore wind industry. We adopt a comparative cross-national approach, examining the evolution of offshore wind in Germany, the UK and Norway. Of the three cases, Germany has developed the most deep-rooted and holistic path to date, characterised by leading roles in both deployment and manufacturing. By contrast, path creation in the UK and Norway has evolved in more partial and selective ways. The UK's growth path is developing in a relatively shallow manner, based largely upon deployment and 'outside in' investment, whilst Norway's path is emerging in an exogenous, 'inside-out' fashion around a fairly confined set of actors and deployment and supply functions. In conclusion, the paper emphasises the important role of national states in orchestrating the strategic coupling of regional and national assets to particular mechanisms of path creation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
129. Deriving health utilities from the MacNew Heart Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire.
- Author
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Chen, Gang, McKie, John, Khan, Munir A., and Richardson, Jeff R.
- Subjects
CORONARY heart disease treatment ,QUALITY of life ,ALGORITHMS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,GOODNESS-of-fit tests ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STATISTICS ,SURVEYS ,VISUAL analog scale ,INTER-observer reliability ,DATA analysis software ,MANN Whitney U Test ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test - Abstract
Introduction: Quality of life is included in the economic evaluation of health services by measuring the preference for health states, i.e. health state utilities. However, most intervention studies include a disease-specific, not a utility, instrument. Consequently, there has been increasing use of statistical mapping algorithms which permit utilities to be estimated from a disease-specific instrument. The present paper provides such algorithms between the MacNew Heart Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire (MacNew) instrument and six multi-attribute utility (MAU) instruments, the Euroqol (EQ-5D), the Short Form 6D (SF-6D), the Health Utilities Index (HUI) 3, the Quality of Wellbeing (QWB), the 15D (15 Dimension) and the Assessment of Quality of Life (AQoL-8D). Methods: Heart disease patients and members of the healthy public were recruited from six countries. Non-parametric rank tests were used to compare subgroup utilities and MacNew scores. Mapping algorithms were estimated using three separate statistical techniques. Results: Mapping algorithms achieved a high degree of precision. Based on the mean absolute error and the intra class correlation the preferred mapping is MacNew into SF-6D or 15D. Using the R squared statistic the preferred mapping is MacNew into AQoL-8D. Implications for research: The algorithms reported in this paper enable MacNew data to be mapped into utilities predicted from any of six instruments. This permits studies which have included the MacNew to be used in cost utility analyses which, in turn, allows the comparison of services with interventions across the health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
130. The Origins of Parliamentary Agenda Control: A Comparative Process Tracing Analysis.
- Author
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Koß, Michael
- Subjects
EUROPEAN politics & government ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
This paper aims to explain the origins of the rules of parliamentary agenda control, which can be regarded as the single most important institutional determinant of parliamentary power. Based on the premises of distributive bargaining, the paper develops a causal mechanism for the delegation of agenda control to the government majority. Given that only anti-system or anti-establishment parties strictly prefer to participate in plenary proceedings, these ‘anti’-parties potentially obstruct legislation. Such legislative obstruction by ‘anti’-parties causes establishment parties to commit themselves to procedural reform and thus triggers attempts to centralise agenda control. The delegation of parliamentary agenda powers is successful if opposition to procedural reform is confined to anti-system parties. The causal leverage of this mechanism is assessed in a process-tracing of three reform attempts in two most different cases: the initially ineffective, but then successful introduction of a closure procedure in the United Kingdom and the failed attempt to facilitate the closure in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
131. Integrative approaches to environmental sustainability at universities: an overview of challenges and priorities.
- Author
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Filho, Walter Leal, Shiel, Chris, and Paço, Arminda do
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,HIGHER education ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The principles of sustainable development are becoming extremely relevant for organisations. In the case of universities, these institutions can act as agents in promoting these principles within society. The literature contains a wide range of studies which show how universities may play a critical role in disseminating sustainability principles on the one hand, and their translation into practice, on the other. At present, many higher education institutions are becoming more aware of their impact on the environment, and trying to understand the environmental needs and implications of their operations. Going further, some universities are incorporating sustainability principles into their activities. One of the questions that universities are now facing is how education for sustainable development can be translated into practice so that it can be effective in transforming society. This paper will discuss the need for and the usefulness of integrative approaches to implement sustainable development in higher education. In addition to a theoretical review of the state of the art, the paper will use case studies from the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences (Germany) and Bournemouth University (UK) to illustrate the effectiveness of integration of sustainable development principles in university research and teaching activities, and the many benefits integrative approaches may bring about. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
132. Discussion of The Effects of Accounting Diversity: Evidence from the European Union.
- Author
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Frost, Carol A.
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,ACCOUNTING methods ,ACCOUNTING standards ,CORPORATE finance ,FINANCIAL statements - Abstract
The article reports on the effects of accounting diversity on the financial ratios and stock market valuation of the accounting data given by companies in France, Germany, and Great Britain. Also, the effectiveness of the European Union's efforts to lower diversity in accounting standards is looked at. Using a capital markets strategy and creating capital-markets-based measures for diversity in the accounting measurement practices the effects of measurement differences are discussed. The EU directives include minimizing the choices in accounting measurement principles, requirement of a specified set of annual report disclosures, and emphasis of the true and fair view in comparability and transparency.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
133. Designing a Quality Product.
- Author
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Besford, John
- Subjects
NEW product development ,PRODUCT design ,MANUFACTURING processes ,MARKETING ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,INDUSTRIAL research ,QUALITY ,PRODUCT management - Abstract
Contrasts some approaches to quality and design, comparing Japan, Germany, Italy and the UK. The case for design is discussed and various types of design are covered in relation to the product development process. The author describes how to manage the design process to achieve quality products; four important areas are highlighted--management commitment, employee involvement, appropriate use of technology, and emphasis on the customer. Finally the paper looks briefly at the management of new product development and the formation and composition of the product development team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
134. Risk of Job Automation and Participation in Adult Education and Training: Do Welfare Regimes Matter?
- Author
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Ioannidou, Alexandra and Parma, Andrea
- Abstract
This study explores the relation between risk of job automation and participation in adult education and training (AET) and examines variation in that relation across welfare regimes distinguishing between situational and institutional barriers. Using microdata of PIAAC, we analyze participation in formal or nonformal AET for job-related reasons in relation to the risk of automation of the respondents' occupation after controlling for main sociodemographic characteristics. Logistic regression models are run on respondents from 14 European countries representing different welfare regimes: Denmark, Norway, and Sweden (Scandinavian countries); Italy, Greece, and Spain (Southern European); Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland (Central and Eastern Europe), Belgium, France, and Germany (Continental); and United Kingdom and Ireland (Anglo-Saxon countries). Our findings confirm that workers in occupations at high risk of automation were found to be consistently less likely to participate in job-related AET, quite irrespective of welfare regime. [The paper was presented at XIII Conferenza Espanet Italia--Il welfare state di fronte alle sfide globali (Venezia, 17 September 2020).]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
135. Covid (in)equalities: labor market protection, health, and residential care in Germany, Sweden, and the UK.
- Author
-
Ellison, Nick, Blomqvist, Paula, and Fleckenstein, Timo
- Subjects
RESIDENTIAL care ,INCOME inequality ,EQUALITY ,LABOR market ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INSTITUTIONAL environment - Abstract
How have differently institutionalized welfare regimes dealt with the Covid-19 crisis? In particular, how have they confronted the social and economic inequalities exposed by the virus? Taking three European countries--Germany, Sweden, and the UK, corresponding broadly to conservative-continental, social democratic, and liberal regime types--this paper tracks the virus response in the areas of income and employment protection and health and residential care. With attention paid to issues of "capacity" and the institutional arrangements in each case, we find that institutional histories in Germany and Sweden permitted a certain recidivistic reliance on established practices in the areas of employment and social protection. In sum, certain social and economic inequalities were mitigated as these countries set aside recent trends toward "liberalization" and mobilized longer-standing institutional capacities to protect some groups, although by no means all. Evidence of this trend is less clear in the health and residential care sectors, where Germany had existing capacity, allowing its older population to weather the crisis in better order than its counterparts in Sweden and the UK. In the UK, welfare liberalization has led to increased social and economic inequalities and funding reductions in health and residential care--all of which have reduced the country's ability to deal with severe crisis. The Covid response in this case was agile, but also chaotic, with little being done to ameliorate the positions of the most vulnerable groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
136. A Typology of Ideological Attitudes Towards Social Solidarity and Social Control.
- Author
-
Likki, Tiina and Staerklé, Christian
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL control ,SOCIAL justice ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
ABSTRACT Research on ideological attitudes has identified two main dimensions that refer to two fundamental features of group organization: social solidarity and social control. In response to prior research that has studied their relationship mainly from a correlational perspective, this paper introduces a social reality model based on psychological functionality of ideological attitudes. Social position variables (education, income and material vulnerability) and insecurity variables (fear of crime and distrust) are used to predict the interplay between ideological attitudes towards social solidarity and social control. Using K-means cluster analysis, a typology with four patterns of support for solidarity and control ('socials', 'repressives', 'minimalists' and 'social-repressives') was created, on the basis of representative survey data for the UK, France and Germany ( N = 7034). Results from logistic regression analyses show that the proposed social reality model explains membership in typology categories, with similar results across the three countries. Overall, the model underscores the social origins of ideological attitudes as functional responses to perceived social reality. The paper illustrates how the social psychological study of ideological attitudes may be enriched by a typological approach that examines patterns of attitudes rather than single dimensions. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
137. Assessing the Localization Pattern of German Manufacturing and Service Industries: A Distance-based Approach.
- Author
-
Koh, Hyun-Ju and Riedel, Nadine
- Subjects
MANUFACTURING industries ,SERVICE industries ,INDUSTRIAL clusters - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
138. Multi-Level Classification of Literacy of Educators Using PIAAC Data
- Author
-
Yalcin, Seher
- Abstract
This study aims to identify the literacy skills of individuals whose highest level of education was in the field 'teacher training and educational sciences'. The study sample comprised 10,618 individuals in the field of teacher training and educational sciences, selected from 31 countries (participating in the International Adult Skills Assessment Programme during the 2014-2015 survey) using a multi-stage sampling method. The study employed multi-level latent class analysis and three-step analysis in order to determine both the number of multi-level latent classes of educators' literacy scores as well as the selected independent variables' success in predicting those latent classes. The analysis revealed that educators in Germany constituted the group with the highest literacy skills while educators from Singapore comprised the group with the lowest literacy skills. [This study was presented at the 9th International Congress of Educational Research. Ordu University, Ordu, Turkey.]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
139. Building Size among Economists: How Academic Career Trajectories Pave the Way to Symbolic Visibility
- Author
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Maesse, Jens
- Abstract
Economists receive high social recognition in media, politics and business discourses where they often obtain a status as 'star economists' and 'financial prophets'. This paper investigates the social conditions that make the formation of size in the economic sciences possible. It analyses the "institutional constraints," "professional networks," "forms of academic knowledge" and "publication strategies" of early career economists as part of an academic dispositif. A position of 'size' is achieved when academics take a privileged scientific discourse position via publications, presentations and various evaluation reports for journals, funds and other academic institutions. To understand the formation of privileged academic discourse positions, we need to investigate the entire construction processes that start already at the "earlier phases of the professional biography." Based on narrative-biographical interviews with economists in UK and Germany, this paper will focus on "four sorts of resources" that are analysed as 'biographical discourse capital'. Biographical resources as 'discourse capital' are mobilised by early career researchers to solve practical problems in their daily life. The paper shows how specific tacit and conceptual knowledge interact with access to professional networks in order to find a 'proper topic' that help young economists to finally publish an A+ or 'Four*' paper.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
140. The Role of Universities in Modern Society
- Author
-
Moscardini, A. O., Strachan, R., and Vlasova, T.
- Abstract
This is a conceptual paper that examines the origin and development of universities and their current role in global society. There has been an unprecedented and exponential growth of technology and artificial intelligence capabilities over the past ten years which is challenging current working practices and affecting all areas of society. The paper examines how this role may change to match the new demands placed on them by a digitally enabled society that has greater leisure time. The design of the paper is first to detail some of the changes in work practices that are taking place and how these will impact on society. It then offers several ways in which universities could modify their role to respond to these emerging challenges. This could include new courses, new organisational structures and new pedagogical practices. The paper provides a platform for discussion and debate around the strategic vision and direction of travel for higher education.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
141. Special Issue: 'Getting of Wisdom', Learning in Later Life
- Author
-
Krašovec, Sabina Jelenc, Golding, Barry, Findsen, Brian, and Schmidt-Hertha, Bernhard
- Abstract
This specially themed ""Getting of Wisdom," Learning in Later Life" Edition of the "Australian Journal of Adult Learning" ("AJAL") is not so much concerned with the issue of ageing itself, but more about quality of life regardless of age. It is about taking, but also giving back as best as possible at any age. This special issue is a result of the one week "The Getting of Wisdom Exchange", a collaboration between around 100 adult education practitioners and researchers from ten countries from Australia, New Zealand, Asia and Europe. In this issue, papers are presented from Sweden, Ireland, Aotearoa/New Zealand, Australia, Slovenia, Poland, Germany, Portugal and the United Kingdom. Papers cover different topics and open questions about various issues in older people's learning.
- Published
- 2017
142. Collaborations: The rise of research networks.
- Author
-
Adams, Jonathan
- Subjects
COOPERATIVE research ,AUTHORSHIP ,KNOWLEDGE transfer - Abstract
The author discusses the rise of regional research collaboration which is changing the balance of science worldwide. The author states that collaboration is a good practice, in which knowledge is better transferred and co-authored writings are cited more frequently. The author also mentions co-authorship as a valid alternative for collaboration that reflects tangible engagement between countries such as Germany and Great Britain as well as China and the U.S.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
143. On Turks and Turkey: Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
-
Micallef, Roberta and Yavuz, M. Hakan
- Subjects
TURKIC peoples ,DIASPORA ,MINORITIES ,ETHNIC groups - Abstract
Provides an overview of the topics discussed in the October 2004 issue of "Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs." Evaluation of the Turkish diaspora community in the U.S.; Examination of the Turkish-Muslim diaspora in Great Britain; Presentation of the essay exploring the situation of the Turks in Germany who are claiming a particular Islamic identity.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
144. A typology of evaluative health platforms: Commercial interests and their implications for patient voice.
- Author
-
Reilley, Jacob, Pflueger, Dane, and Huber, Christian
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH information services , *MOBILE apps , *WORLD Wide Web , *SELF-efficacy , *PATIENT psychology , *STRATEGIC planning , *BUSINESS , *ADVERTISING , *PATIENT decision making , *APPLICATION software , *ECONOMIC competition , *FRAUD , *MEDICINE information services , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Interactions in the healthcare system today involve an important new set of actors: evaluative health platforms (EHPs). These platforms are not neutral intermediaries, but active moderators of how patients express opinions, choose providers, and consume health-related information. This paper adds to our understanding of the varied and evolving commercial interests of EHPs and the implications these have for patient voice. We analyze 71 platforms in the USA, UK, and Germany and identify five ideal types: subscribers, analyzers, advertisers, regulators, and scammers. Each platform type enacts a unique competitive strategy through an evaluative infrastructure which constrains but also generates possibilities for patient voice. Based on our typology, we develop three contributions. First, we nuance universalizing claims about the consequences of platform capitalism by specifying the diverse strategies underpinning competition between EHPs in different countries, and showing how each strategy leads evaluative infrastructures to develop in ways that impact patient voice. Second, we show how patients can navigate the challenges of a complex EHP space by exercising their ability to choose between platforms. Finally, we outline the conditions platforms need to fulfil to become empowering. Overall, this study highlights the varied and complex relationship between platform business models and user voice, which exists not only in healthcare, but also in many other fields. • Typology of evaluative health platforms (EHPs) in the US, the UK, and Germany. • EHP business models and content moderation techniques vary considerably. • EHPs have a wide range of implications for patient voice. • More transparency and competition can help platforms increase patient empowerment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
145. Interrogating Theoretical and Empirical Approaches to Employability in Different Global Regions
- Author
-
Fakunle, Omolabake and Higson, Helen
- Abstract
This special issue expands the scope of a panel presentation at the Society for Research into Higher Education Annual Conference 2019 and makes two identified contributions to the field. First, drawing from existing literature, this introductory paper proposes three categorisations of employability as: outcomes approach, process approach and conceptual approaches. This moves beyond normative conceptualisation of employability from mostly the outcomes approach. The applicability of the categorisation is further enumerated by the diversity of contributions in this special issue that highlights (a) the complexity in the field and (b) the interrelatedness of the categories. Second, the special issue puts together a rarely combined collection of global perspectives on conceptualisations of employability, and insights from research on little studied groups in Western and non-Western contexts (the UK, Portugal, Australia, the Indo-Pacific Region, Germany, Kenya and Kazakhstan). The papers, therefore, illustrate the need to widen our scope of understanding employability beyond current dominant perspectives. The broadening that is required in employability discourses is further needed in view of unprecedented disruption brought on higher education during the COVID-19 pandemic. This suggests the need to rethink our conceptualisations of employability amidst uncertainty and potential disruption to the future of work.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
146. Concentration of political power: Can we improve its measurement?
- Author
-
Avila-Cano, Antonio and Triguero-Ruiz, Francisco
- Subjects
POWER (Social sciences) ,MATHEMATICAL transformations ,POLITICAL parties - Abstract
We define two indices with which to measure the concentration and fragmentation of political power. Concentration (or fragmentation) indices comply with the cardinality property if they are based on mathematical distance, which makes homogeneous comparisons possible because the indices maintain proportions of values. These indices also operate under the unit interval, so the measurements can be interpreted as percentages, and the differences and ratios between measurements have an understandable meaning. Our indices indeed comply with the cardinality property, which allows us to reinterpret the well-known Gallagher disproportionality index as the transformation of mathematical distance. Our concentration index can be interpreted as the large political party's share of power, while our fragmentation index determines the smaller parties' share. We apply both indices to election results over the last four decades from the UK, Germany and Spain, revealing that vote fragmentation has significantly increased in Germany and Spain, but it does not have a steady trend in the UK. Further, whilst seat fragmentation has been observed in Germany and the UK since 2000, this phenomenon is more recent in Spain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
147. Recall of MPs in the UK: ‘If I Were You I Wouldn't Start from Here’.
- Author
-
Judge, David
- Subjects
CABINET officers ,RECALL elections ,CONSTITUTIONS ,REPRESENTATIVE government - Abstract
The publication of a White Paper, Recall of MPs, and a draft Bill for pre-legislative scrutiny, by the UK Government in December 2011 was greeted with almost universal antipathy. In bringing forward the draft Bill Cabinet Office ministers declared their intention to ‘trigger a debate on what would be the best model for a recall mechanism’ and they expressed a willingness ‘to consider alternative models’ or even to contemplate ‘adopting a completely different approach’. Yet, they made it clear any such proposals ‘must work within our unique constitutional framework’ and be ‘suitable for our system of representative democracy’. The objective of this article, therefore, is to do precisely what Cabinet Office ministers asked: to examine comparative experience and to apply lessons from that experience to the UK's ‘unique constitutional framework’. Three questions guide the analysis: first, what is the problem to be addressed in introducing recall?; secondly, what does comparative experience reveal about the operation of recall? and thirdly how unique is the UK's constitutional framework? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. Overcoming the Upfront Investment Barrier - Comparing the German CO2 Building Rehabilitation Programme and the British Green Deal.
- Author
-
Rosenow, Jan, Eyre, Nick, Bürger, Veit, and Rohde, Clemens
- Subjects
ENERGY consumption of buildings ,ENERGY conservation in buildings ,GOVERNMENT policy on energy consumption ,ENERGY policy - Abstract
This paper compares two flagship policies in the area of energy efficient building refurbishment, the German CO2-Building Rehabilitation Programme and the Green Deal in the UK. Although both policies are essentially loan programmes to finance energy efficiency measures, the nature of the two policies is very different regarding scope, financial architecture, integration with other policies, and carbon reductions. The paper draws out the main differences of the programmes as well as similarities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Young firm internationalization and survival: Empirical tests on a panel of ‘adolescent’ new technology-based firms in Germany and the UK.
- Author
-
Coeurderoy, Regis, Cowling, Marc, Licht, Georg, and Murray, Gordon
- Subjects
NEW business enterprises ,HIGH technology industries ,GLOBALIZATION ,ABSORPTIVE capacity (Economics) ,FINANCIAL performance ,BUSINESS networks - Abstract
This paper uses a unique, longitudinal data set of UK and German new technology-based firms (NTBFs) to investigate the determinants of internationalization and firm survival. Specifically, it tests the influence of absorptive capacity, inter-firm specific relationships and international exposure on survival. Its key findings are that high absorptive capacity increases survival probabilities; specific customer-supplier relationships enhance survival; and the greater the firm's exposure to internationalization activity, the higher its subsequent chance of survival. Thus, the paper provides evidence that young firms are more likely to survive when they pursue an internationalization strategy based on resource consolidation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT DYNAMICS AND (PARTIAL) LABOUR MARKET REFORMS.
- Author
-
Jiménez-Rodríguez, Rebeca and Russo, Giuseppe
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,LABOR market - Abstract
ABSTRACT European labour markets have undergone several important innovations over the last three decades. Most countries have reformed their labour markets since the mid-1990s, with the liberalization of fixed-term contracts and temporary work agencies being the common elements to such reforms. This paper investigates the existence of a change in the dynamic behaviour of the aggregate employment for major European Union countries - France, Germany, Italy and Spain. According to our results, partial labour market reforms have made the response of the aggregate employment to output shocks larger and quite comparable to that found for the UK - the most flexible labour market in Europe since the Thatcher reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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