125 results
Search Results
2. Spatial mobility and overeducation of young workers: New evidence from France.
- Author
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Fouquet, Florian and Sari, Florent
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG workers , *ROBUST control , *LABOR market , *EMPLOYEE education - Abstract
This paper explores the influence of spatial mobility on the risk of overeducation of French young workers. Mobilizing a survey following a cohort of young graduates entering the labour market from 2010 until 2013, our results reveal that interregional migration decreases the risk of (statistical and subjective) overeducation. We also evidence that migration to an economic centre (the Paris region) has an even stronger negative effect and that more educated workers benefit more from spatial mobility. These results are robust to controlling for self‐selection and the endogeneity of migration, as well as to various specifications of the model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. INTRODUCTION TO THE PROGRAMME OF THE CONFERENCE.
- Author
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Matthey, Jacques
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,CHRISTIAN missionary societies ,HERMENEUTICS ,IDEA (Philosophy) - Abstract
The article discusses the programme of the conference "Europe After the Enlightenment: Daring to Practise Mission in a Europe Still Trying to Construct Itself," held by the European member associations of the International Association for Mission Studies (IAMS) in Paris, France from August 24 to 28, 2006. It cites that the papers in the first part of the program are focused on the history of ideas, sociological analysis of changes and the change in models of interpretation.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. International Study Meeting on Selective Weed Control in Sugar Beet Crops.
- Author
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Cussans, G. W.
- Subjects
MEETINGS ,WEED control ,HERBICIDES ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Presents an overview of the International Study Meeting on Selective Weed Control in Sugar Beet Crops in Paris, France on March 9 to 10, 1967. Information on commercial and state-sponsored organizations that participated in the meeting; Factors which influence the efficiency of herbicides; Overview of discussion papers presented during the meeting.
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. How does transportation shape intrametropolitan growth? An answer from the Regional Express Rail.
- Author
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Garcia‐López, Miquel‐Àngel, Hémet, Camille, and Viladecans‐Marsal, Elisabet
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,RAILROADS ,METROPOLITAN areas ,EMPLOYMENT ,POPULATION density ,PUBLIC spaces ,TRANSPORTATION & society ,FRENCH economy - Abstract
This paper analyzes the influence of transportation infrastructure, and in particular of the Regional Express Rail (RER), on employment and population growth in the Paris metropolitan area between 1968 and 2010. In order to make proper causal inference, we rely on historical instruments and control for all other transportation modes that could be complement or substitute to the RER. Our results show that proximity to an RER station increases employment and population density and, in particular, employment and population growth. The latter effects are higher in municipalities located near RER stations and close to employment (sub)centers. They are also found to be particularly strong for jobs in the service sector, for factory workers, and for highly educated population. We find no impact of the RER expansion on employment growth during the first part of the period, while the effect on population growth appears earlier but declines over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. English-Language Newspapers in Revolutionary France.
- Author
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MACDONALD, SIMON
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,MASS media ,FREEDOM of the press ,FOREIGN news ,FRANCE-Great Britain relations - Abstract
This article examines a series of English-language newspaper ventures produced in revolutionary France and largely aimed at export to Britain. These enterprises, chief among which was the Paris Mercury (1792), sought to profit from heightened British interest in French events by dispatching ready-printed newspapers directly from Paris, thus achieving news priority over the domestic British press. New French press freedoms also enabled claims to be made about the superior editorial qualities of such extraterritorial newspapers. This article reconstructs these newspapers' publication history, reviews their contents, discusses their commercial and political rationale and their precursors, and offers explanations for their failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. “A World where Action is the Sister of Dream”: Surrealism and Anti-capitalism in Contemporary Paris.
- Author
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Fenton, Jill
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,CAPITALISM ,SURREALISM ,ANTI-capitalist movement - Abstract
In discussing the lifestyle and practices of the Paris group of the contemporary surrealist movement, this paper contributes to debates within economic and political geography that seek to develop the imagining of alternatives to neoliberal globalisation through practices of resistance, and spaces of political and policy engagement. The everyday life of the surrealist movement, in combining creativity with progressive choices and radical economic practices that oppose capitalism, while intellectually investigating ideas of revolution, a different society and utopia, suggests a perspective that contributes to the imagining of such alternatives. This paper outlines the deeply embedded nature of surrealist activity in opposing capitalism and illustrates, as one member of the surrealist group suggests, in quoting Baudelaire, surrealism's insistence for a world in which“action is the sister of dream”. The paper further contributes to discussion on the role of academics in facilitating spaces of political engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. 11th International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaology and Cultural Heritge: 8th Eurographics Workshop on Graphics and Cultural Heritage.
- Author
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Artusi, Alessandro, Joly, Morwena, Lucet, Geneviéve, Ribes, Alejandro, and Pitzalis, Denis
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,VIRTUAL reality ,COMPUTER graphics -- Congresses ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of the 11th International Symposium on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage (VAST2010), and 8th Eurographics Workshop on Graphics and Cultural Heritage held in Paris, France from September 21-24, 2010. The event addressed the integration of digital technology into the practice of Cultural Heritage and archaeology. The event presented a total of 54 full papers and 46 short papers.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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9. Capital Mobilization of Skilled Migrants: A Relational Perspective.
- Author
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Al Ariss, Akram and Syed, Jawad
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,IMMIGRANTS ,LABOR economics ,SKILLED labor ,FOREIGN workers ,RESOURCE management ,VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
A central issue for understanding skilled migration in the management literature is human capital. This emphasis ignores other important forms of capital mobilization that skilled migrants from developing countries deploy in dealing with the barriers to their international career mobility. There is therefore a need to develop a holistic understanding of capital mobilization of skilled migrants. In order to develop a more holistic picture, we deploy a relational and multilevel perspective to explore how skilled migrants from developing countries mobilize capital in their efforts to undertake an international career. Career is a central construct in this study. Drawing on a qualitative study of skilled Lebanese in Paris, the paper offers two main contributions to the research on human resource management, in particular to the literatures on skilled migration and self-initiated expatriation. First it extends our understanding of the strategies that skilled migrants use to relocate from a developing country to an industrialized country. Beyond the traditional human capital perspective, it offers insights about migrants' capital mobilization experiences of undertaking international mobility. Second, using Bourdieu's theory of capital, it offers a relational explanation of their capital mobilization in a way to encompass micro-individual, meso-organizational and macro-contextual influences that affect their career choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. Second European Weed Research Council Symposium on New Herbicides, Paris, 30th November to 1st December 1965.
- Author
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Holly, K.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,HERBICIDES ,BENZOIC acid ,WEEDS - Abstract
Focuses on the topics discussed during the Second Symposium on New Herbicides held in the Maison de la Chimie in Paris, France, on November 30 and December 1, 1965. Properties of the phenylureides of benzoic acid; Killer of germinating grass weeds; Developments in the dinitrophenol group of herbicides.
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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11. From Politicization to Policing: The Rise and Decline of New Social Movements in Amsterdam and Paris.
- Author
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Uitermark, Justus and Nicholls, Walter
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,ACTIVISM ,HISTORY of the police ,CITIES & politics ,HISTORY ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This paper analyzes the rise and decline of social movements in Amsterdam and Paris, focusing in particular on the organizations of left-wing immigrant workers. These organizations performed crucial roles for new social movements in the 1970s and 1980s but were isolated and coopted in the 1990s and early 2000s. To explain why this is so, we engage in a dialogue with Jacques Rancière and develop an understanding of cities as strategic sites for both politicization and policing. Cities serve as sites of politicization because they are incubators of the relational conduits that enable activists from different sectors to engage with one another's struggles and look beyond narrow temporal and spatial horizons. However, cities also serve as sites of policing because authorities constantly attempt to reconfigure governmental arrangements in such a way that civil society serves as an extension of the government and comes to fulfill an instrumental role in the development and implementation of policy. Just as politicizing implies the widening of temporal and spatial horizons, policing implies the narrowing of such horizons. The analysis shows the social movements of the 1960s lost steam in two of the major hubs of the new left and reveals some of the more universal mechanisms through which cities generate or quell dissent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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12. Smells, Bells and Touch: Iconoclasm in Paris during the French Revolution.
- Author
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CLAY, RICHARD
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,ICONOCLASM ,SENSES ,CHURCH bells ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article examines the ways in which Parisians mobilised sight, smell, touch and sound to alter their city's 'signscape' and mediate power relations during the ancien régime and French Revolution. It uses contemporary sources to explore disputes about the treatment of statues of kings, busts of Jean-Paul Marat, and church bells. Given that impingements on visual signifiers' physical integrity often generated multi-sensory connotations that were readily understood by contemporaries, it is argued that the historiography of revolutionary iconoclasm has been too oculcentric. The paper ends by concluding that iconoclasm might be productively re-conceived as a form of sign transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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13. A daily series of mean sea-level pressure for Paris, 1670-2007.
- Author
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Cornes, Richard C., Jones, Phil D., Briffa, Keith R., and Osborn, Timothy J.
- Subjects
SEA level ,ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,BAROMETERS - Abstract
It has been known for some time that the potential exists to construct a long daily series of surface pressure for the city of Paris because of the existence of various instrumental series that might be pieced together. The remarkable weather diary kept by the physician, Louis Morin, sets the start of the potential series to 1670, and various other series have now been digitized and corrected to allow the formation of a daily series of Mean Sea-Level Pressure (MSLP) that spans the greater part of 300 years. Unfortunately, a gap in the series still exists for the period 1726-1747, where it appears that no barometer observations have survived. This paper discusses the sources of the various pressure data used in the Paris daily MSLP series, and describes how these observations have been corrected and amalgamated to form a near-continuous, homogeneous series. The data are compared with a similar long daily series that has been independently constructed for the city of London (1692-2007). This comparison indicates that the two MSLP series are of a sufficient quality to provide useful information about the atmospheric circulation across western Europe over the last 300 years. Copyright © 2011 Royal Meteorological Society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Monitoring healthcare quality in an obstetrics and gynaecology department using a CUSUM chart.
- Author
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Boulkedid, R., Sibony, O, Bossu-Salvador, C, Oury, JF, and Alberti, C
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,CUSUM technique ,HOSPITAL maternity services ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,TEACHING hospitals - Abstract
Please cite this paper as: Boulkedid R, Sibony O, Bossu-Salvador C, Oury J, Alberti C. Monitoring healthcare quality in an obstetrics and gynaecology department using a CUSUM chart. BJOG 2010;117:1225–1235. Objective To use cumulative sum (CUSUM) charts for the early detection of variations in quality of care in a maternity department. Design Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data. Setting Maternity department of a teaching hospital in Paris (France). Population Data from 20 519 women and 21 448 infants were collected between January 2000 and December 2007. Methods CUSUM charts were used to monitor the rate of 19 pre-selected quality indicators over 3 years (2005–2007), against standards developed by department obstetrician gynaecologists. Periods with adverse event rates that did not meet the standards were identified. Main outcome measures Quality indicator rates. Results Indicators fell into three groups based on the number of periods with unacceptable rates: less than one per year [e.g. the rate of intensive care unit (ICU) admission of mothers and rate of third- or fourth-degree perineal tears]; one every 2–12 months on average (e.g. blood transfusion and sulprostone use in the overall population of women); and at least one per month (insufficient availability of epidural analgesia). Conclusion CUSUM charts for a broad range of quality indicators can be used to monitor the quality of care in an obstetrics department. A prospective study investigating the ability of CUSUM-based monitoring to improve maternal and neonatal outcomes would be of interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Minutes from the round table held at Paris on July 6, 2007.
- Author
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Laveille, Christian and Vis, Peter
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,DRUG development ,GUIDELINES - Abstract
A symposium called “Contribution of modelling in the paediatric drug development” was organized at Paris on July 5-6, 2007 under the auspices of INSERM. The following issues were highlighted and discussed by the participants at the end of the meeting during a round table: • What is the place of modelling at a preclinical stage in the paediatric development? • What is the place of modelling at a clinical stage in the paediatric development? • What are the requirements for an evaluation based on modelling? • What are the recommendations and guidelines need to be established to facilitate the use of modelling techniques in paediatrics? This paper summarizes the discussion around these four questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The project of an International Congress of Psychology by J. Ochorowicz (1881).
- Author
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Nicolas, Serge and Söderlund, Hedvig
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,SPECIAL events ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Psychology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell 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
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The rise of the small household: demographic change and household structure in Paris.
- Author
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Philip E. Ogden and François Schnoebelen
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLDS ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,HUMAN geography - Abstract
This paper examines the changing numbers and structure of households in the City of Paris during the 1980s and 1990s. It sets the findings in the context of the Paris agglomeration and considers the results in the light of broader demographic trends associated with the second demographic transition. Although part of a longer‐term historical process of declining household size, the growth of one‐person households was rapid in this period, accounting for most of the growth in numbers of households. Over 50% of all households were one‐person in 1999 in the City of Paris, and four‐fifths consisted of just one or two people. The greatest increase was in the pre‐retirement age groups. The paper examines the demographic structure of these households and their geographical distribution, raising questions about the relationship between household changes, occupational structure, housing markets and patterns of residential mobility. Whilst the analysis confirms the well‐established concentration of one‐person households in the central city, it indicates considerable dispersion of new household forms to the rest of the agglomeration. Moreover, although young adults continue to play an important role in the City of Paris, the effects of previous demographic change on the size of generations points to a sharp increase in older adults in their forties and fifties during the 1990s. As in other leading French cities, gender, occupational status and housing are found to be important ingredients in the explanation of one‐person households, with the increase in women in professional employment a particular feature. A case study of one quartier exemplifies these relationships. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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18. REPORT ON THE ELEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE I.A.A.P. (PARIS).
- Author
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Powell, Sheila
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,JUNGIAN psychology ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Shares the personal account of the author regarding his experiences in attending a congress of the International Association for Analytical Psychology in Paris, France. Topics discussed in the congress; Citation of famous people who attended the congress; Lessons learned by the author from the convention.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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19. Report on the EWRC-COLUMA Symposium on Herbicides, Paris, 13th-14th December 1961.
- Author
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Van Der Zweep, W.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,HERBICIDES ,WEED control ,PESTICIDES ,BIPYRIDINIUM compounds - Abstract
Presents information on papers presented at a symposium on herbicides organized by the European Weed Research Council and the Comité francais de Lutte contre les Mauvaises Herbes from December 13-14, 1961 in Paris, France. Herbicides developed by Amchem Products Inc.; Advances in the field of triazine herbicides; Discussion on bipyridilium herbicides diquat and paraquat.
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
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20. On the status of greylag geese in Roman Paris: A linear and 2D geometric morphometric approach.
- Author
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Oueslati, Tarek and Gruwier, Ben
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,GEOMETRIC approach ,GEESE - Abstract
We investigate here the domestic status of goose remains from archaeological excavations of the Roman urban settlement of Paris Lutecia. Within the diet of the Parisii adult goose competes with chicken in importance, thus offering abundant material for exploring the question of the domesticity of this bird. We first use linear and geometric morphometrics on modern tarsometatarsi of wild and domestic greylag geese to investigate potential morphological differences between the two forms. Afterwards, we apply this model on a Roman sample from Lutecia. The modern domestic breed shows notable differences in length and gracility of the tarsometatarsus compared with the wild specimens. In domestic males, the tarsometatarsi appear significantly longer and more robust compared with females. In wild greylag geese, we do not observe significant differences between males and females. Geometric morphometric analysis shows a modification of the shape in the domestic form, with increased robusticity and a bend of the shaft towards the distal end. Following this analysis, we examine the metrical specificities of the archaeological sample that shows only an increase in robusticity and no modification of length relative to the wild form. Our linear and geometric morphometric models clearly indicate that the majority of the Roman geese are domestic. Nevertheless, a smaller number of wild greylag geese are also present and must be considered as being sourced from hunting activities in the surroundings of Lutecia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Genomic diversity of mpox virus in Paris area (France) during the 2022 outbreak.
- Author
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Piorkowski, Géraldine, Ghosn, Jade, Coppée, Romain, Mailhé, Morgane, Ferré, Valentine Marie, Houhou‐Fidouh, Nadhira, Yazdanpanah, Yazdan, Le Hingrat, Quentin, Raoul, Hervé, Charpentier, Charlotte, Descamps, Diane, and de Lamballerie, Xavier
- Subjects
VIRUS diversity ,MONKEYPOX ,HIV ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis - Abstract
In May 2022, several countries reported mpox cases from patients without history of traveling to endemic areas. France was one of the most affected European countries by this outbreak. In this study, the clinical characteristics of mpox cases in France were described, and the genetic diversity of the virus was studied. Patients diagnosed with mpox infection (quantitative polymerase chain reaction ct < 28) between May 21, and July 4, 2022 and between 16th August and 10th September 2022 were included to this study. Twelve amplicons corresponding to the most polymorphic regions of the mpox genome and covering ~30 000 nucleotides were generated and sequenced using the S5 XL Ion Torrent technology to evaluate the genetic diversity of mpox sequences. One hundred and forty‐eight patients were diagnosed with mpox‐infection. 95% were men, 5% transgender (M‐to‐F), 50% were taking human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pre‐exposure prophylaxis, and 25% were HIV seropositive. One hundred and sixty‐two samples (some patients had two samples) were sequenced and compared to GenBank sequences. Overall, low genetic diversity of mpox sequences was found compared with pre‐epidemic Western‐African sequences, with 32 distinct mutational patterns. This study provides a first glance at the mutational landscape of early mpox 2022 circulating strains in Paris (France). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Specifying subsistence strategies of early farmers: New results from compound‐specific isotopic analysis of amino acids.
- Author
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Rey, Léonie, Naito, Yuichi I., Chikaraishi, Yoshito, Rottier, Stéphane, Goude, Gwenaëlle, and Ohkouchi, Naohiko
- Subjects
HUNTER-gatherer societies ,AMINO acid analysis ,ISOTOPIC analysis ,PLANT-based diet ,FOOD waste ,DIETARY proteins - Abstract
Understanding the contribution of fish to the human diet is an important debate in past population studies as it implies specific organization (e.g., adapted techniques and gender‐based activities) and relationship with the local or sublocal environments (e.g., mobility and seasonal‐based exploitation). In the Paris Basin, the role of fish has been discussed mainly from rare but obvious archaeological remains such as fish bones or hooks. Previous isotopic data from Neolithic human bone bulk collagen highlighted the potential of freshwater resources in protein diet but were not able to quantify it or even confirm its role. In this study, we conducted, for the first time on early farmers from France, compound‐specific isotope analysis on bone collagen amino acids (CSIA‐AA). Results indicate a particularly high trophic level of some humans with protein intake mainly based on terrestrial animal resources (domestic cattle and pig), whereas others rather have a plant‐based diet. Freshwater resources appeared to be not significant, and several possible food combinations are discussed. Pig particularly appears more herbivorous than previously assumed and has possibly consumed manured cereals from human food waste. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. New comparative measures of income, material deprivation, and well-being.
- Author
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Smeeding, Timothy M.
- Subjects
POVERTY ,PROGRESS ,INCOME inequality ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL marginality ,WEALTH - Abstract
The article focuses on the measurement of poverty in absolute and relative terms as discussed in the conference "Measuring Poverty, Income Inequality, and Social Exclusion: Lessons from Europe," in Paris, France jointly hosted by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the University of Maryland. The author describes that absolute measurement of poverty is in a fixed line with respect to income changes and while relative fully changes with income. He then discusses the arguments of the proponents of both fixed and relative measures. Moreover, he explores the inclusion of broader measures of poverty such as material deprivation and well-being.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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24. Reconsidering the Migration--Development Link: Capability and Livelihood in Filipina Experiences of Domestic Work in Paris.
- Author
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Briones, Leah
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,SOCIAL development ,WOMEN immigrants ,FILIPINO women ,WOMEN migrant labor ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
The article focuses on the reconsideration of the migration-development relationship in order to unify current research and policy for the protection of migrant domestic workers. It draws from the experiences of Filipina domestic workers in Paris, France. It applies the Martha Nussbaum's Capabilities Approach to explain the experiences of migrant workers as actively produced through inteconnectivity of their migration with development process. Moreover, the article reveals the process of evaluation and promotion concerning the capabilities of migrant domestic workers and the existing approaches to ensure rights with sustainable livelihood choices at the immediate, individual migrant worker level.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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25. Topsoil characteristics of forests and lawns along an urban–rural gradient in the Paris region (France).
- Author
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Foti, Ludovic, Barot, Sébastien, Gignoux, Jacques, Grimaldi, Michel, Lata, Jean‐Christophe, Lerch, Thomas Z., Nold, François, Nunan, Naoise, Raynaud, Xavier, Abbadie, Luc, and Dubs, Florence
- Subjects
URBAN soils ,TOPSOIL ,PUBLIC spaces ,COOLING of water ,LAWNS ,FOREST soils ,SOIL infiltration - Abstract
Urban soils are a crucial component of urban ecosystems, especially in public green spaces, because of the ecosystem services they provide (e.g. public recreation, urban cooling or water infiltration). In this study, we describe the chemical, physical and hydrostructural characteristics of 180 forest and lawn surface soil samples, taken along an urban–rural gradient in the Paris region. This was done in order to identify how these soils have been affected by urbanization. Forests and lawns are the main vegetation types found in this region and represent 21% and 22.2% of the territory's surface area, respectively. Many of the properties of urban forest soils differed from those of other sites (e.g. texture, organic carbon content, total nitrogen and carbonate contents), possibly because the urban forests are much older than the lawns and because of the legacy of the historical management of soils in this region (Haussmann period). Urban lawn soils were more compacted than urban forests, probably due to higher foot traffic. The effects of urbanization were, at times, confounded with other factors (e.g. sandier texture of urban forests), which suggests that surface soil characteristics were influenced by past urban planning. Finally, this study constitutes a baseline analysis for the monitoring of soil quality in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Early‐ and late‐onset postpartum depression exhibit distinct associated factors: the IGEDEPP prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Tebeka, S, Le Strat, Y, Mandelbrot, L, Benachi, A, Dommergues, M, Kayem, G, Lepercq, J, Luton, D, Ville, Y, Ramoz, N, Mullaert, J, Dubertret, C, Bertin, Emmanuelle, Bourneuf, Cecile, Colombe, Jeanne, Couppa, Laura, Georges, Fanny, Hebbache, Celine, Le Bars, Marie, and Madhavi, Julie Guiot
- Subjects
POSTPARTUM depression ,LIFE change events ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,LONGITUDINAL method ,COHORT analysis ,PERIPARTUM cardiomyopathy - Abstract
Objective: To identify risk factors for early‐ and late‐onset postpartum depression (PPD) among a wide range of variables, including sociodemographic characteristics, childhood trauma, stressful life events during pregnancy and history of personal and family psychiatric disorders, and to assess the contribution of each risk factor. Design: Nested case–control study in a prospective longitudinal cohort study. Setting: Eight maternity departments in the Paris metropolitan area, France. Sample: A cohort of 3310 women with deliveries between November 2011 and June 2016. Methods: Cases were women with early‐ or late‐onset PPD. Controls were women without depression during pregnancy or the postpartum period. Logistic regression adjusted on sociodemographic variables was performed for each outcome and a multivariable model was proposed based on a stepwise selection procedure. Main outcome measures: Early‐ and late‐onset PPD assessed at 2 months and 1 year postpartum, respectively. Results: Stressful life events during pregnancy have a dose–response relationship with both early‐ and late‐onset PPD. Conclusions: Early‐ and late‐onset PPD presented distinct patterns of determinants. These results have important consequences in terms of prevention and specific care. Early‐ and late‐onset postpartum depression are associated with stressful life events and psychiatric history. Early‐ and late‐onset postpartum depression are associated with stressful life events and psychiatric history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A MAYOR FOR PARIS -- AN EARLY EXAMPLE OF DECENTRALIZATION.
- Author
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Townshend, J. V.
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL government ,MAYORS ,POLICY sciences ,LOCAL government ,FRENCH politics & government, 1945- ,PARIS (France) politics & government - Abstract
This paper analyses the 1975 municipal reform which gave Paris its first elected Mayor since the days of the revolutionary Commune. Local government reform has proved notoriously difficult in France and the policy-making process in this case was complicated by the political situation, following the death of President Pompidou, in April 1974. His successor, Giscard d'Estaing, attempted to marginalize the Gaullist Party and to govern from the centre. Paris was the testing ground for this political strategy. The capture of the mayorship by the Gaullist Jacques Chirac was a personal humiliation for the President. The reform demonstrates the reluctance of French governments, compared with their British counterparts, to radically remould their local government institutions. In particular, the constant reference during the debate to the words 'Mayor' and 'Commune', which have great symbolic power in France, arguably prevented the elaboration of an institutional structure adapted to the peculiar needs of the Paris urban area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Research and Discussion Around Family Life Cycle: An Account of the 13th Seminar on Family Research.
- Author
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Segalen, Martine
- Subjects
FAMILY research ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIAL institutions ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL structure - Abstract
The article reports on the 13th Seminar on Family Research and its focus on the family life cycle as a social system. The conference, organized by the International Sociological Association's Committee on Family Research and the Centre d'Ethnologie Francaise, was held in Paris, France in September 1973. Four themes prevailed: changes in family cycle in Europe since the 18th century, social stratification and urban-rural differences, family life cycle theory, and research methods in social science.
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. News.
- Subjects
NURSING ,NURSES ,MEDICAL care ,SICK people - Abstract
This article presents various news items related to nursing. Nurses attending the 19th Congress of the International Council of Nurses in Seoul, Korea, from May 28, 1989 to 2 June, 1989, will try to answer many questions about the future of nursing. Training in Family planning for physicians, nurses, midwives and other health staff appears to be very unsatisfactory in most countries of the World Health Organization's (WHO) European Region, according to a recent report "Training in Family Planning for Health Personnel." The publication based on a WHO meeting held in Paris, France during July 6-11, 1981, has been published by the WHO European Office, Copenhagen.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The anthropology of international institutions.
- Author
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Mosse, David
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ANTHROPOLOGY -- Congresses ,INTERNATIONAL agencies - Abstract
The article offers information on the workshop attended by a group of 17 anthropologists held at Paris, France in March 2008. The workshop explored on new ethnographic sites and contemporary knowledge practice. Participants illustrated the performative power of texts and the characteristic disarticulation between the practices of institution and their rationalizing models. Further discussion was given to the relationship between international institutions and various nation-state players.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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31. Minutes.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,FINANCE ,COST accounting ,RESEARCH conferences - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the International Association for Scientific Study of Intellectual Disabilities (IASSID) council meeting at Novotel Hotel in Paris, France on May 28, 2007 is presented. D. Felce talked about obtaining supplemental budget for the 2008 Congress. M. Janicki presented the Finance Committee Report to Council which included a report on IASSID Comparable Financials from 2001-2007. A discussion about the rising expenses of the organization was also tackled.
- Published
- 2007
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32. Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children rose and fell with the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in France.
- Author
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Carbajal, Ricardo, Lorrot, Mathie, Levy, Yael, Grimprel, Emmanuel, Lecarpentier, Thibault, Heritier, Sebastien, Faivre, Judith, Schnuriger, Aurélie, Parisot, Pauline, Blondiaux, Eléonore, Loschi, Solene, Rivière, Simon, Guilbert, Julia, Romain, Anne‐Sophie, Leger, Pierre‐Louis, Guedj, Romain, Romain, Anne-Sophie, and Leger, Pierre-Louis
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MUCOCUTANEOUS lymph node syndrome ,SYNDROMES in children ,PEDIATRIC intensive care ,COVID-19 ,INTENSIVE care units - Abstract
Aim: This study determined the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on the occurrence of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) and compared the main characteristics of MIS-C and Kawasaki disease (KD).Methods: We included patients aged up to 18 years of age who were diagnosed with MIS-C or KD in a paediatric university hospital in Paris from 1 January 2018 to 15 July 2020. Clinical, laboratory and imaging characteristics were compared, and new French COVID-19 cases were correlated with MIS-C cases in our hospital.Results: There were seven children with MIS-C, from 6 months to 12 years of age, who were all positive for the virus that causes COVID-19, and 40 virus-negative children with KD. Their respective characteristics were as follows: under 5 years of age (14.3% vs. 85.0%), paediatric intensive care unit admission (100% vs. 10.0%), abdominal pain (71.4% vs. 12.5%), myocardial dysfunction (85.7% vs. 5.0%), shock syndrome (85.7% vs. 2.5%) and mean and standard deviation C-reactive protein (339 ± 131 vs. 153 ± 87). There was a strong lagged correlation between the rise and fall in MIS-C patients and COVID-19 cases.Conclusion: The rise and fall of COVID-19 first wave mirrored the MIS-C cases. There were important differences between MIS-C and KD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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33. Editorial.
- Author
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Aliabadi, M. H., Gatmin, B., and Sellier, A.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *BOUNDARY element methods , *ELASTOPLASTICITY , *MESHFREE methods , *MATHEMATICAL optimization - Abstract
Owing to a technical problem in the submission process, selected presentations from the 7th International Conference on Boundary Elements, which took place in Paris, France, in September 2006 (
http://beteq.engineeringconferences.net/ ), will not be published in a separate special issue. Links to these papers as they were published in the journal are listed at the end of this editorial. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Central-line-associated bloodstream infections in a surgical paediatric intensive care unit: Risk factors and prevention with chlorhexidine bathing.
- Author
-
Martinez, Thibault, Baugnon, Thomas, Vergnaud, Estelle, Duracher, Caroline, Perie, Anne C, Bustarret, Olivier, Jugie, Myriam, Rubinsztajn, Robert, Frange, Pierre, Meyer, Philippe, Orliaguet, Gilles, and Blanot, Stéphane
- Subjects
INTENSIVE care units ,ASEPSIS & antisepsis ,CATHETER-related infections ,SURGICAL intensive care ,BATHS ,CENTRAL venous catheters ,ODDS ratio ,INFECTION control ,BACTEREMIA prevention ,CROSS infection prevention ,BACTEREMIA ,CENTRAL venous catheterization ,ARTHRITIS Impact Measurement Scales ,CROSS infection ,PEDIATRICS ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SEPSIS ,STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,CHLORHEXIDINE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,INFECTION prevention - Abstract
Aim: The aims of the study are to evaluate the impact of a 4% chlorhexidine (CHG4%) bathing on the occurrence of central-line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) and to identify risk factors (RFs) for CLABSI in our population. This is a retrospective monocentric cohort study in the paediatric surgical intensive care unit at the Necker Enfants Malades Hospital, Paris, France.Methods: All hospitalised patients with central venous catheters (CVCs) in 2015 were included. CHG4% bathing was prescribed in CLABSI high-risk patients, defined by the presence of exposition factors (EFs): constitutive or acquired immunosuppression, presence of an invasive medical device (IMD) and the carriage of Staphylococcus aureus. The overall 2015 CLABSI incidence rate was compared with 2014 CLABSI incidence rate (before CHG4% bathing).Results: In all, 775 patients were analysed. Some 182 had at least one EF, and 49 received CHG4%. The incidence rates of CLABSI in 2014 and 2015 were, respectively, 6.1 and 2.3/1000 days CVC (P < 0.01). The presence of at least one EF was associated with the CLABSI's occurrence: odds ratio = 15.13 (95% confidence interval: 4.26-53.71; P < 0.0001), particularly acquired immunosuppression, IMD and S. aureus colonisation. Other RFs were age <1 year and carrying duration >16 days.Conclusions: This study showed a significant reduction in incidence of CLABSI after introduction of a targeted CHG4% bathing protocol. Presence of IMD, S. aureus colonisation, immunosuppression, age <1 year and carrying duration >16 days were CLABSI RFs. Regarding the literature, the presence of IMD seems to be underestimated in CLABSI prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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35. Classifying chalk microtextures: Sedimentary versus diagenetic origin (Cenomanian–Santonian, Paris Basin, France).
- Author
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Saïag, Jessica, Collin, Pierre‐Yves, Sizun, Jean‐Pierre, Herbst, Frédéric, Faÿ‐Gomord, Ophélie, Chateau Smith, Carmela, Caline, Bruno, Lasseur, Éric, and Reijmer, John
- Subjects
LIMESTONE ,CHALK ,PETROPHYSICS ,RESERVOIR rocks ,ROCK properties ,SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
Microtexture describes the type of particles and their arrangement in matrix samples at scanning electron microscopy scale. Although a microtexture classification exists for micritic limestone, it cannot be directly applied to chalk. This study therefore proposes a classification of chalk microtextures and discusses the origin of microtexture variability. Chalk was sampled at thirteen spatio‐temporal locations along the coastline of northern France (Cenomanian–Santonian). Four criteria are defined to describe, characterize and determine chalk matrix microtexture: (i) mineralogical content; (ii) biogenic fraction; (iii) micritic fraction; and (iv) cement fraction. From these criteria, two major groups are defined: Pure Chalk Microtexture Group, with seven classes, and Impure Chalk Microtexture Group, divided into two subgroups: Argillaceous Microtexture with four classes and Siliceous Microtexture with two classes. Microtexture variability is related both to initial sedimentation and to diagenesis. Sedimentological conditions (for example, climate and distance from shore) affect chalk composition (carbonate content and type of insoluble particles), thus influencing microtexture. Changes in Pure Chalk Microtexture are the result of increasing diagenetic intensity. This classification can also be used to characterize the microtexture of subsurface chalk reservoirs. Reservoir quality depends on the petrophysical and mechanical properties of reservoir rocks, which can be better understood by exploring their sedimentary and diagenetic history, revealed by the study of chalk microtexture variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
36. Sixth General Assembly of the International Social Science Council.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIAL science conferences ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Information about the topics discussed at the Sixth General Assembly of the International Social Science Council held in Paris, France in April 1965 is presented. Accordingly, the general assembly effected the council's partial renewal which replaced the expired mandates of the members and conducted election of new members to complete the council. The assembly features the delegates of national disciplinary associations, co-opted members, and associate members.
- Published
- 1965
37. Fear, Anger, and Voting for the Far Right: Evidence From the November 13, 2015 Paris Terror Attacks.
- Author
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Vasilopoulos, Pavlos, Marcus, George E., Valentino, Nicholas A., and Foucault, Martial
- Subjects
TERRORISM ,SUFFRAGE ,ANGER ,SOCIAL order ,FEAR ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
The conjecture that negative emotions underpin support for far‐right politics is common among pundits and scholars. The conventional account holds that authoritarian populists catalyze public anxiety about the changing social order and/or deteriorating national economic conditions, and this anxiety subsequently drives up support for the far right. We propose that while emotions do indeed play an independent causal role in support for far‐right parties and policies, that support is more likely built upon the public's anger rather than fear. This article explores the relative impact of fear and anger in reaction to the 2015 Paris terror attacks on the propensity to vote for the French far‐right party, the Front National, in the 2015 regional elections. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we find that anger is associated with voting for the Front National, while fear is associated with voting against the Front National. Moreover, anger boosts the Front National vote most powerfully among far‐right and authoritarian voters. On the other hand, fear reduces support for the far right among those same groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Price formation on clandestine markets: the case of the Paris gold market during the Second World War.
- Author
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Gallais‐Hamonno, Georges, Hoang, Thi‐Hong‐Van, and Oosterlinck, Kim
- Subjects
COIN sales & prices ,GOLD markets ,WORLD War II ,GOLD coins ,ECONOMIC seasonal variations ,BLACK market laws ,HISTORY of Paris, France ,HISTORY of Switzerland ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Because of the scarcity of data, there are few quantitative analyses dealing with clandestine markets, despite their prime importance during wartime. This article exploits a unique database of daily prices of gold coins traded in occupied Paris in order to gain insights into the price formation on such a market. First, using data from Switzerland, we show that arbitrage took place, despite the costs and risks involved, and led to a gradual (but incomplete) convergence of gold prices. Furthermore, a study of price seasonality reveals that less strict borders controls during the weekends made the volatility of returns higher at the start of the following week. Second, on the basis of an event study, we provide evidence that laws related to black markets did not have a significant impact on the gold price, except for the most severe law passed on 8 June 1943 which greatly increased the sentences for involvement. Finally, we assess whether the so‐called coin premiums existed on this clandestine market, and show that the large price variations for one gram of fine gold contained in different coins were due to market participants' preferences for specific gold coins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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39. Women and academic careers in obstetrics and gynaecology: aspirations and obstacles among postgraduate trainees – a mixed‐methods study.
- Author
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Berlingo, L, Girault, A, Azria, E, Goffinet, F, and Le Ray, C
- Subjects
EDUCATORS ,SEX discrimination ,ROLE models ,GYNECOLOGY ,GENDER stereotypes - Abstract
Objective: To examine the relationship between gender and a career in academic medicine. Design: Mixed‐methods study. Setting: Obstetrics–gynaecology postgraduate training programme in Paris, France. Sample: Postgraduate trainees in obstetrics–gynaecology (n = 204). Methods: Statistical analysis of quantitative survey data, thematic analysis of qualitative interview data and integrative analysis. Main outcome measures: Women's aspirations and obstacles related to their decision about a career in academic medicine. Results: A career in academic medicine was envisaged by 13% of the women residents and 27% of the men (P = 0.01). Women reported receiving advice from a mentor less often than men (38.8% versus 52.9%, P = 0.002). Overall, 40.6% of women and 2.9% of men reported experiencing gender discrimination (P < 0.001). In response to the question 'Do you have doubts about your ability to pursue or succeed at an academic career?', 62.4% of the women and only 17.7% of the men answered yes (P < 0.001). The global analysis identified the following obstacles: persistent gender stereotypes that produce everyday sexism, lack of identification with male role models, lack of mentors, perceived discrimination, an ideal of professional excellence that is difficult to attain, constraining professional organisational norms, inequality between men and women in the domestic and family spheres, and finally self‐censorship and important doubts about their ability to combine a demanding career and a fulfilling personal life. Conclusions: Women reported the desire to follow a career in academic medicine half as often as men. Improving the presence and visibility of role models for residents and combating workplace discrimination will address some of the barriers to women choosing a career in academic medicine. Women obstetric trainees in France are only half as likely as men to envisage following an academic path. Women obstetric trainees in France are only half as likely as men to envisage following an academic path. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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40. RELIGIOUS HOMOPHILY IN A SECULAR COUNTRY: EVIDENCE FROM A VOTING GAME IN FRANCE.
- Author
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Adida, Claire L., Laitin, David D., and Valfort, Marie‐Anne
- Subjects
HOMOPHILY theory (Communication) ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,VOTING ,RELIGIOUS identity ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,SECULARISM ,SOCIAL networks ,RELIGION - Abstract
Homophily-the tendency individuals have to associate with similar-others-is a powerful determinant of social networks. Yet research to date does not allow us to determine which dimension, e.g., ethnic, religious, gender, age, or class similarity, drives association. Tests demonstrating homophily are flawed by restricting the range of dimensions in the choice set. We introduce an experimental game in which we exogenously expose subjects to diverse partners to determine which dimension dominates. We find that in a socio-demographically diverse district of Paris, despite expectations of secularization, religious similarity significantly predicts homophily. Moreover, we provide tentative evidence that religious homophily is taste-based. ( JEL C91, D03, D72, J71, Z12) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Huguenot Belief and Practice in Eighteenth-Century Paris.
- Author
-
Garrioch, David
- Subjects
FRENCH Huguenots ,PROTESTANT history ,ECUMENICAL movement ,18TH century French history ,EIGHTEENTH century ,HISTORY ,RELIGION - Abstract
Protestantism was illegal in eighteenth-century France, yet many French Reformed Protestants, better known as Huguenots, managed to maintain their religion and identity until the French Revolution granted religious freedom. Several thousand of them lived in Paris, but remained a tiny minority in a very Catholic city. Given this context, and little access to pastors or collective worship, what kind of Protestantism did they observe? This article suggests that, like other minority groups, their religious practice and thinking were influenced both by the Catholic environment in which they lived and by the culture of the late eighteenth-century city. By 1789 they had moved away from certain Calvinist traditions, and some of them had adopted a surprising ecumenism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. School Choice in London and Paris - A Comparison of Middle-class Strategies.
- Author
-
Benson, Michaela, Bridge, Gary, and Wilson, Deborah
- Subjects
SCHOOL choice ,MIDDLE class ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,BRITISH education system ,CULTURAL production theory (Education) ,CONSUMER preferences ,EDUCATIONAL accountability ,PRIVATE schools - Abstract
Education is one major public service in which quasi-markets and other choice-based mechanisms are now established methods of delivery. The types of school people choose, and the extent to which their choices are realized, have a fundamental impact on the outcomes of any mechanism of school choice. In this article, we provide a comparative analysis of the school choice strategies of middle-class families in London and Paris. We draw on approximately 200 in-depth interviews carried out across the two cities. This enables us to investigate the extent to which middle-class school choice strategies transcend the institutional context provided by both the local (state and private) schools market and national education policy in England and France. We discuss these findings in the context of current school choice policy and consider their implications for future policy design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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43. Adventures in Infrastructure: Making an African Hub in Paris.
- Author
-
KLEINMAN, JULIE
- Subjects
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,AFRICANS ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,IMPERIALISM ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) - Abstract
Based on ethnographic research at one of the largest transit hubs in the world- Paris's Gare du Nord railway station-this article examines how the practices of West African migrants transform the French urban environment. I argue that migrants create social ties outside of kin and village networks by rerouting and combining the channels of two types of infrastructures: French transportation systems and West African systems of exchange and obligation. While this infrastructural practice relies on a shared cultural repertoire, it also helps create new channels that circumvent the pathways for social becoming prescribed by either the French state or their home communities. The Gare du Nord as a social environment shapes these practices but is also reshaped by them, a process I illuminate by examining how the station becomes an African hub: not an enclave of ' Little Africa' but rather a node of communication and exchange. This process sheds light on how strategies for creating relations across difference and through infrastructure form transnational communities in urban spaces. [ West Africa, Paris, migration, railway, transnationalism] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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44. International.
- Subjects
RESEARCH institutes ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,LEARNED institutions & societies ,CENTRAL economic planning ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The article provides information about the International Institute for Economic Planning in Paris, France. The institute, which was established in 1963, was a semi-autonomous body under the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). It was funded by Unesco, the World Bank, and the Ford Foundation. The board was internationally composed and includes six elected members and five statutory members' representing organizations in the United Nations system with major responsibilities for education, human resources and development. The primary objective of the institute is to promote instruction and research on educational planning economic and social development.
- Published
- 1965
45. The Middle Class 'at Home among the Poor' - How Social Mix is Lived in Parisian Suburbs: Between Local Attachment and Metropolitan Practices.
- Author
-
Bacqué, Marie‐Hélène, Charmes, Eric, and Vermeersch, Stéphanie
- Subjects
SUBURBS ,MIDDLE class ,SOCIAL participation ,TWENTY-first century ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
How do households belonging to the middle classes decide to come live in a 'poor' city in the Parisian suburbs? What makes them stay? What are the judgements and strategies that have been brought to bear both individually in their daily lives and as a social group in terms of their collective involvement and their relationships with other social groups? What does this kind of 'social mix' imply in terms of social practices, local and social belonging? This article shows that attitudes towards social mixing have to be considered in terms of their sociological dimensions. This analysis thus takes into account middle-class diversity in socio-residential terms, in terms of trajectories, values and attachment to a particular area. The article also emphasizes the importance of distinguishing between different dimensions of attitudes towards social mixing: depending on the issues at stake, people can accept and sometimes promote a form of cohabitation, or, quite to the contrary, reject it. Finally, the article emphasizes the importance of local contexts and their temporality: for someone belonging to the middle classes, living in a poor city may also mean holding a relatively higher position than elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Gatekeepers of the Urban Commons? Vigilant Citizenship and Neoliberal Space in Multiethnic Paris.
- Author
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Newman, Andrew
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,WEST Africans ,NEOLIBERALISM ,NEIGHBORS ,PUBLIC spaces & society ,CITIZENSHIP ,PARKS ,PARKS -- Social aspects ,TWENTY-first century ,POLITICAL participation ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article draws from ethnographic research on a recently built park in one of Paris' predominately West African and Maghrebi districts. It demonstrates how urban design is used to 'build-in' neoliberal subjectivities to the city. This design approach appropriates a tradition of street democracy held by neighborhood associations and redirects their disproportionately middle class, French membership into managerial roles traditionally held by municipal agencies. This neoliberal political subjectivity, which I term vigilant citizenship, makes monitoring and controlling the social composition of the urban commons a form of civic engagement for middle class urbanites. In Paris, this vigilance is fueled by anxieties over the presence of West African and Maghrebi youth in public spaces. Activists do not passively adopt this neoliberal role; they strike a delicate balance as gatekeepers, weighing inclusion against an expectation to maintain a 'successful' public space conforming to a republican model of citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Tribute to Cuong Le Van.
- Author
-
Grandmont, Jean‐Michel
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,RESEARCH institutes ,CIVIL engineering ,MACROECONOMICS ,MATHEMATICS - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. How much can air conditioning increase air temperatures for a city like Paris, France?
- Author
-
de Munck, Cécile, Pigeon, Grégoire, Masson, Valéry, Meunier, Francis, Bousquet, Pierre, Tréméac, Brice, Merchat, Michèle, Poeuf, Pierre, and Marchadier, Colette
- Subjects
AIR conditioning ,EVAPORATIVE cooling ,HEAT release rates ,VENTILATION ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
A consequence of urban heat islands in summer is an increase in the use of air conditioning in urbanized areas, which while cooling the insides of buildings, releases waste heat to the atmosphere. A coupled model consisting of a meso-scale meteorological model (MESO-NH) and an urban energy balance model (TEB) has been used to simulate and quantify the potential impacts on street temperature of four air conditioning scenarios at the scale of Paris. The first case consists of simulating the current types of systems in the city and was based on inventories of dry and evaporative cooling towers and free cooling systems with the river Seine. The other three scenarios were chosen to test the impacts of likely trends in air conditioning equipment in the city: one for which all evaporative and free cooling systems were replaced by dry systems, and the other two designed on a future doubling of the overall air conditioning power but with different technologies. The comparison between the scenarios with heat releases in the street and the baseline case without air conditioning showed a systematic increase in the street air temperature, and this increase was greater at nighttime than day time. It is counter-intuitive because the heat releases are higher during the day. This is due to the shallower atmospheric boundary layer during the night. The increase in temperature was 0.5 °C in the situation with current heat releases, 1 °C with current releases converted to only sensible heat, and 2 °C for the future doubling of air conditioning waste heat released to air. These results demonstrated to what extent the use of air conditioning could enhance street air temperatures at the scale of a city like Paris, and the importance of a spatialized approach for a reasoned planning for future deployment of air conditioning in the city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A Treatment Effect Method for Merger Analysis with an Application to Parking Prices in Paris A Treatment Effect Method for Merger Analysis with an Application to Parking Prices in Paris.
- Author
-
Choné, Philippe and Linnemer, Laurent
- Subjects
MERGERS & acquisitions ,PRICE regulation ,ECONOMIC competition ,CONTROL groups - Abstract
We propose a method of building control groups for retrospective merger evaluation. The procedure involves two parameters: a distance or radius, and an 'order of exposure' reflecting the notion that a merger can affect an outlet in a more or less direct way. We implement the method of estimating the price effect of a merger in the Paris parking market and illustrate the consequences of including indirectly exposed outlets in the control group. The methodology applies to any industry with spatial competition and allows one to check the sensitivity of the results to the choice of the control group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Paris financial market in the nineteenth century: complementarities and competition in microstructures.
- Author
-
Hautcoeur, Pierre‐Cyrille and Riva, Angelo
- Subjects
FINANCIAL markets ,MONOPOLIES ,STOCK exchanges ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY ,FRENCH economy - Abstract
This article sets out to explain why the Paris Bourse was highly successful in the nineteenth century in spite of the supposedly inefficient monopoly of the official market, the Parquet. The literature argues that the official monopoly was sidelined by a free, innovative market known as the Coulisse, but it fails to explain how the Coulisse emerged despite the monopoly and how the two markets persisted alongside each other during the entire century. We provide a detailed history of how these two markets emerged and interacted. The Parquet increasingly developed as a high-end market, providing security, transparency, and effective settlement-delivery to unsophisticated investors trading on the spot market. The Coulisse provided liquidity, immediacy, and opacity to professional investors trading mostly forward. In line with recent theoretical developments, we argue that the juxtaposition of heterogeneous organizations had important virtues for market participants, since it allowed the exchanges to specialize in different investors and services and made the exchanges complementary to each other. We demonstrate our claim by looking at both the formal rules and the actual functioning of the Parquet, drawing on its archives which we have recently classified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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