750 results
Search Results
2. Trauma-informed responses in addressing public mental health consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic: position paper of the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS).
- Author
-
Javakhishvili, Jana Darejan, Ardino, Vittoria, Bragesjö, Maria, Kazlauskas, Evaldas, Olff, Miranda, and Schäfer, Ingo
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *MENTAL health , *COVID-19 , *PUBLIC health , *CAPACITY building , *EMOTIONAL trauma - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life in Europe and globally. The pandemic affects both individuals and the broader society across many domains, including physical and psychological health, the economy and general welfare. The measures taken to counteract the pandemic have significantly altered daily life and, along with the threat of contracting the coronavirus and uncertainties surrounding future developments, created a complex system of stressors with a negative impact on public mental health. This paper aims to outline the ESTSS strategy to address mental health issues related to COVID-19 and focuses on (1) trauma-informed policies, (2) capacity building, (3) collaborative research and (4) knowledge-exchange. To facilitate implementation of a trauma-informed approach and appropriate measures, ESTSS has developed a toolkit of recommendations on mental health and psychosocial assistance to be provided during the different phases of crisis and its aftermath. To promote capacity building, ESTSS offers a certification programme based on a curriculum in psychotraumatology and corresponding on-line training to the European community of mental health professionals. To assure evidence-based approaches and methods tailored to current circumstances, ESTSS has initiated a pan-European research project with international cooperation aimed at studying the mental health consequences of the pandemic, with a focus on psychological trauma and other stress-related reactions. To foster knowledge-exchange, the European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT), the official journal of ESTSS, is publishing a special issue on COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Global competition and the nature of trade in the European Community's pulp and paper industry.
- Author
-
Waitt, Gordon
- Subjects
- *
PAPER industry , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *INTERNATIONAL competition - Abstract
Investigates the changing nature of pulp and paper trade patterns within the European Community as the pulp and paper industry responded to increasing global competition between the years 1960 and 1985. Internationalization of the industry during the 1980s; Specialization in the trade of individual pulp and paper products between European member states; Grubel and Lloyd's index.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reply to the note by Frejka and Sardon on our paper ‘Patterns of low and lowest-low fertility in Europe’ and an erratum.
- Author
-
Billari, FrancescoC. and Kohler, Hans-Peter
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *FERTILITY decline , *HUMAN fertility , *HUMAN reproduction - Abstract
The article presents the authors' views in response to a comment on their paper "Patterns of Low and Lowest-Low Fertility in Europe," published in a 2004 issue of the journal "Population Studies." In their comment, the critics have argued that the cohort-fertility analysis in the aforesaid paper is weak on theoretical grounds and the empirical analysis is incomplete. The authors affirm that they agree with the comment that, as a society, the Netherlands differs from Southern Europe and even more from Central and Eastern Europe. Nevertheless, from a contemporary global perspective, these differences should not be overemphasized. They say that in their analyses, they used the Netherlands as a reference case of a country with an extraordinary pattern of late childbearing that is not associated with lowest-low fertility levels. However, the critics believe that these unusual characteristics invalidate the use of the Dutch example in the paper. So, this criticism is misconceived. It is precisely the unusualness of the fertility pattern in the Netherlands that makes it a useful reference point in the study of low and lowest-low fertility.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A note on the cohort-fertility analysis in the paper ‘Patterns of low and lowest-low fertility in Europe’, Population Studies 58(2): 161–176, by Francesco C. Billari and Hans-Peter Kohler.
- Author
-
Frejka, Tomas and Sardon, Jean-Paul
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *FERTILITY decline , *HUMAN fertility , *HUMAN fertility statistics , *HUMAN reproduction - Abstract
The article presents the authors' comments on the paper entitled, "Patterns of Low and Lowest-Low Fertility in Europe," by Francesco C. Billari and Hans-Peter Kohler, published in a 2004 issue of the journal "Population Studies." In their comment, the authors argue that the original authors' comparison of cohort-fertility patterns in the lowest-low fertility countries of Southern, Central, and Eastern Europe with Dutch cohort patterns is weak on theoretical grounds and that the empirical analysis is incomplete. The empirical analysis demonstrates that in the young cohorts of Southern, Central, and Eastern Europe, childbearing may very well decline below the levels observed in the Netherlands and in other West European countries. This is already happening in Southern Europe. Moreover, the childbearing surplus in early adulthood is evaporating, and the recuperation that would be needed for completed cohort fertility in these countries to remain above that of many West European countries is of such magnitude that it is doubtful whether it could occur.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. TITLES AND ABSTRACT OF PAPERS.
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH , *NATURAL resources , *GEOGRAPHICAL research - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of geographical research papers. In the research paper "A Geographical Study of Nova Scotia," researcher R.H. Whitebeek discusses the geographic conditions of Nova Scotia. Lying nearer Europe and possessing many excellent harbors and peopled by immigrants from the best European stocks, the province of Nova Scotia in Canada has now, after 300 years, fewer people than the city of Boston, Massachusetts. Its total manufacturing output is less than that of single companies in New England, and the province has shared but slightly in Canada's economic growth.
- Published
- 1914
7. Where should hydrology go? An early-career perspective on the next IAHS Scientific Decade: 2023–2032.
- Author
-
van Hateren, Theresa C., Jongen, Harro J., Al-Zawaidah, Hadeel, Beemster, Joris G.W., Boekee, Judith, Bogerd, Linda, Gao, Sijia, Kannen, Christin, van Meerveld, Ilja, de Lange, Sjoukje I., Linke, Felicia, Pinto, Rose B., Remmers, Janneke O.E., Ruijsch, Jessica, Rusli, Steven R., van de Vijsel, Roeland C., Aerts, Jerom P.M., Agoungbome, Sehouevi M.D., Anys, Markus, and Blanco Ramírez, Sara
- Subjects
HYDROLOGIC cycle ,HYDROLOGY ,OPEN scholarship ,HYDROLOGICAL research ,BIG data - Abstract
This paper shares an early-career perspective on potential themes for the upcoming International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) Scientific Decade (SD). This opinion paper synthesizes six discussion sessions in western Europe identifying three themes that all offer a different perspective on the hydrological threats the world faces and could serve to direct the broader hydrological community: "Tipping points and thresholds in hydrology," "Intensification of the water cycle," and "Water services under pressure." Additionally, four trends were distinguished concerning the way in which hydrological research is conducted: big data, bridging science and practice, open science, and inter- and multidisciplinarity. These themes and trends will provide valuable input for future discussions on the theme for the next IAHS SD. We encourage other early-career scientists to voice their opinion by organizing their own discussion sessions and commenting on this paper to make this initiative grow from a regional initiative to a global movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Money Talks: Folklore in the Public Sphere.
- Author
-
Gencarella Olbrys, Stephen
- Subjects
FOLKLORE ,MONEY ,PAPER money ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
This article examines “currency chains”—messages and petitions written on paper money—as folkloric expressions and rhetorical acts that critique or commend dominant American public discourse. After a general description of currency chains, it considers two categories in detail. First is the “St. Lazarus” variety that flourished in the United States in the late 1990s, having migrated from Europe. Second are political money chains that engage with a social or political order, often in protest. This article observes the condemnation of currency chains as an irrational phenomenon, and regards them as viable means for often marginalised groups to foster participation in a public sphere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Exploring the ecological efficiency as the path to resilience.
- Author
-
Apostu, Simona-Andreea, Vasile, Valentina, Panait, Mirela, and Sava, Valentin
- Subjects
POLLUTION ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The permanent changes in society affect, among other, the environment. This is why environmental efficiency plays a very important role, being quantified in different forms. In our paper we have developed a composite index of ecological efficiency taking into account two dimensions, environmental pollution and resource consumption, each one being characterized by specific indicators. Thus, using this index, the aim was to evaluate and rank the level of greening of each country in Europe. Crises over time, including the health crisis caused by coronavirus, have focused to resilience, so we have highlighted whether it is significantly influenced by the ecological efficiency index. In addition, we analyzed whether ecological efficiency is related to investments in a country, financial, material and technological potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Social and institutional factors of economic development: evidence from Europe.
- Author
-
Kaldaru, Helje and Parts, Eve
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,MACROECONOMICS ,INCOME inequality ,ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Social and institutional determinants of economic development are attracting increasing attention among development economists. The present paper analyses the impact of macro-level social capital and related social factors on economic development in 34 European countries. Macro-level social capital comprises different aspects of institutional quality and is closely related to income distribution and social cohesion. We used principal component analysis to group initially selected social determinants of economic development into three components (human and social capital, income equality, and redistribution), which altogether describe 64.4% of the variation in initial variables. The following regression analysis proved that all these components have a positive effect on economic development, measured by the human development index. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Patients' experiences and effects of non-pharmacological treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome – a scoping mixed methods review.
- Author
-
Mengshoel, Anne Marit, Helland, Ingrid Bergliot, Meeus, Mira, Castro-Marrero, Jesus, Pheby, Derek, and Bolle Strand, Elin
- Subjects
CHRONIC fatigue syndrome treatment ,CHRONIC fatigue syndrome ,CINAHL database ,COGNITIVE therapy ,CONVALESCENCE ,EXERCISE ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
The EU COST Action 15111 collaboration on myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) aims to assess current research and identify knowledge gaps in Europe. Presently, our purpose is to map the effects of non-pharmacological therapies (NPTs) for ME/CFS, and what patients find important in the treatment process. A scoping mixed methods literature review of European studies identified 16 papers fulfiling our inclusion criteria. The quantitative and qualitative studies were synthesized separately in tables. Additionally, extracts from the qualitative studies were subjected to translational analysis. Effect studies addressed cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT, n = 4), multimodal rehabilitation (n = 2) and activity-pacing (n = 2). CBT reduced fatigue scores more than usual care or waiting list controls. The effects of rehabilitation and activity-pacing were inconsistent. The contents, assessment methods and effects of rehabilitation and activity pacing studies varied. For patients, health professionals' recognition of ME/CFS and support were crucial, but they expressed ambiguous experiences of what the NPTs entail. Methodological differences make comparisons across NPTs impossible, and from a patient perspective the relevance of the specific contents of NPTs are unclear. Future well-designed studies should focus on developing NPTs tailored to patients' concerns and evaluation tools reflecting what is essential for patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Foreign direct investment openness and income classes in Europe around the Great Recession.
- Author
-
Arestis, Philip, Bárcena-Martín, Elena, Martín-Fuentes, Natalia, and Pérez-Moreno, Salvador
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,INVESTMENT income ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 ,BUSINESS cycles ,CAPITAL movements ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Distributional implications of capital account regulation is eminently context-specific. This paper examines the distributional effects of the openness of foreign direct investment (FDI) flows across 27 European countries in different economic environments around the Great Recession, covering the period 2007–2013. Our multi-level approach allows us to combine country-level variables and sociodemographic characteristics of individuals. The results highlight that the openness of FDI flows heterogeneously affects the income share of individual groups, favouring in particular the highest income classes. This finding seems to be driven by the educational level. We argue that even though highly educated individuals are present along the entire distribution, the highest income classes are especially favoured by the openness of FDI flows. This biased distributional effect of the openness of FDI flows persists throughout the years examined, regardless of the economic environment; this is due, in part, to the fact that the distribution of highly educated people is not sensitive to the business cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Resources.
- Author
-
Cooke, Liz
- Subjects
INFORMATION resources ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,ECONOMIC development ,WOMEN in development ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
The article focuses on several information resources related to global economic crisis. A paper by Richard King and Caroline Sweetm discusses the relationship between recession and gender inequalities. Another paper by Rania Antonopoulos also focuses on the impact of financial crisis on the society. Another paper discusses the role of women in economic development in Europe.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Young people in Latvia and Georgia: identity formation and the imprints of traditions and globalization.
- Author
-
Khoshtaria, Tamar, Zurabishvili, Tinatin, Romanovska, Alina, and Gilbreath, Dustin
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,ADOLESCENT health ,NATIONALISM ,SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
Youth in the post-Soviet countries have faced the challenges of identity formation in concomitance with the processes of state-building in newly independent states. This paper focuses on young people aged 14 to 19 in seemingly different post-Soviet countries, Georgia and Latvia, who grew up after the collapse of the Soviet Union in independent countries striving towards Europe and its values. Based on qualitative interviews conducted in schools for the <#funding-source;>Horizon 2020#funding-source;> CHIEF project, the paper discusses some aspects of young people's identity formation, and how they see themselves in national and European contexts. Along with some similarities evident in both countries, such as young people reporting a very strong sense of national belonging and identity, the data also show important differences when it comes to young people's perceptions of Europe in Latvia and Georgia, as the latter report some reluctance in regards to accepting European identity and values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. 'Old wine in new bottles'? Smart Specialisation in Wales.
- Author
-
Pugh, Rhiannon Elisabeth
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability in business ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This paper explores the translation and implementation of Smart Specialisation in Wales. It finds that rather than taking a new approach to innovation policy, Welsh policy-makers are following a largely cluster-based rationale, which omits the important entrepreneurial discovery process to identify the real strengths of the region. The fresh idea presented by this paper is that a replication of past policy approaches that have been tried and found wanting is taking place rather than a new approach to innovation policy across Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Black kites wintering in Europe: estimated number, subspecies status, and behaviour of a bird wintering on Crete and Turkey.
- Author
-
Literák, I., Reháková, V., Xirouchakis, S., Škrábal, J., and Starenko, V.
- Subjects
WINTERING of birds ,WINTER ,BIRD behavior ,KITES ,SUBSPECIES ,CYTOCHROME b ,SPECIES hybridization - Abstract
Black kites of the nominal subspecies Milvus migrans migrans breed in Europe and winter regularly in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East. As a new phenomenon, black kites with morphological characteristics of the subspecies Milvus migrans lineatus are observed in Europe. Based on observations of black kites in winter 2020/2021 summarized in this paper, based on other recent reports about wintering black kites in Europe and based on juvenile black kite tagged on Crete and tracked for two years, we conclude that hundreds to thousands of black kites are now regularly wintering in south of Europe, and in smaller numbers in other parts of Europe as well as in northern Africa. The growing number of wintering black kites in Europe is apparently caused by members of the population from a hybrid zone between M. m. migrans and M. m. lineatus breeding east of the Urals, i.e. from the area of the European part of Russia. This is consistent with the hypothesis of the spreading of M. m. lineatus and a subsequent hybridization zone between M. m. migrans and M. m. lineatus in a westerly direction from Siberia across continental Europe. Moreover, two black kites found dead on Crete were attributed to M. m. lineatus and M. m. migrans by cytochrome B gene sequence analyses. The juvenile black kite with lineatus features tagged on Crete and telemetrically tracked during the next two years moved to the south-western part of Russia during the next two summers, but did not breed. It spent the following two winters at the same landfill in south-western Turkey. It seems that an adaptation to food sources provided by municipal waste landfills is important for black kites wintering in Europe, the Middle East and Morocco. Highlights • Hundreds to thousands of black kites are now regularly wintering in Europe. • The growing number of wintering black kites is caused by birds from a hybrid zone between Milvus migrans migrans and M. m. lineatus in eastern Europe. • Municipal waste landfills are important as food sources for black kites wintering in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Interregional migration and housing structure in an East European transition country: A view of Lithuania 2001-2008.
- Author
-
Bloze, Gintautas
- Subjects
INTERNAL migration ,HOUSING ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,TRANSITION economies - Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between interregional mobility at the municipal level and the local housing structure in a country where the housing sector is characterised by a relatively high private ownership rate, a small private rental sector, and persistent undersupply of new residential housing. Panel data for Lithuania - an East European transition country - for the years 2001-2008 are used to analyse internal migration inflows and outflows. Besides the usual migration determinants such as unemployment and wage differences, housing sector characteristics are also included in the empirical analysis. The results show that internal migration flows are quite responsive to variations in housing market characteristics, especially to the supply of new dwellings, indicating that housing shortage is the key factor hampering interregional migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The role of open borders and cross-border cooperation in regional growth across Europe.
- Author
-
Basboga, Kadir
- Subjects
REGIONAL cooperation ,BORDERLANDS ,EUROPEAN integration ,SCIENTIFIC community ,PER capita - Abstract
This paper estimates the impacts of opening of borders and intensity of cross-border cooperation (CBC) on regional growth across European border regions. The difference-in-difference estimations show that the opening of national borders for free movement of people is associated with a 2.7% increase in regional gross value added (GVA) per capita for the border regions of Europe. Using an extension of this estimation based on European Commission-supported CBC projects data for the 2007–13 period (through the INTERREG programme), the results suggest that the doubling of the number of CBC project partners (per 100,000 population) is correlated with an increase of 2.3% in regional GVA per capita. These results confirm the positive economic benefits of European integration by means of CBC. For future research efforts, these findings also encourage the research community to investigate more deeply the channels through which CBC affects the socioeconomic development of border regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The influence of the Belt and Road Initiative in Europe.
- Author
-
Sielker, Franziska and Kaufmann, Elisabeth
- Subjects
BELT & Road Initiative ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,TRANSPORTATION geography - Abstract
This paper contributes to the growing body of literature aimed at understanding the wide-ranging implications of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by displaying the variety of contractual, formal and informal arrangements that China has entered with European states on a bilateral basis. Almost all European states have entered into one or another form of formal cooperation under the disguise of the BRI. In general, Eastern European states tend to have the highest degree of formal cooperation as official BRI members, whereas the picture is more diverse in the North-West of Europe. Cooperation ranges from investment-based infrastructure projects to joint financial investments, as well as projects in education or health. This complicated puzzle of arrangements ultimately favours China's influence and will change Europe's interconnectedness with China beyond transport connectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A review of horse welfare literature from 1980 to 2023 with a text mining and topic analysis approach.
- Author
-
Benedetti, Beatrice, Felici, Martina, Nanni Costa, Leonardo, and Padalino, Barbara
- Subjects
TEXT mining ,HORSES ,ANIMAL welfare ,PETS ,PAIN measurement ,HORSE breeds - Abstract
Animal welfare protection is a challenge for which policy-makers are demanding scientific-based evidence. Considering horses, the challenge is even greater, as their role in society varies from production to companion animals. This review aimed to describe the evolution and geographical distribution of horse welfare literature over the years, to identify the most studied research topics and to highlight the still present gaps in knowledge. A search on Scopus
® bibliometric database was performed using different welfare-related keywords. Predetermined filters were posed on time range, language and subject area. A total of 6584 records were downloaded and screened retaining only the ones dealing with horse welfare and behavioural sciences. Descriptive statistics, text mining (TM) and topic analysis (TA) were performed on the abstract of 801 eligible records. The results showed the number of studies on horse welfare is exponentially increasing, especially in the European continent. 'Transport' was the most frequent word, but also 'behaviour' and 'pain' emerged. Nine topics were identified and covered different subject areas: stress analysis, pain assessment, equitation science, human–horse interactions, breeding management, transport, working equids and health. The evaluation of stress and pain, horse social behaviour and the human–horse relationship resulted to be the most studied aspects related to animal welfare. On the contrary, the concept of positive welfare and the welfare assessment at slaughter of horses were underrepresented, confirming the limited literature on these subjects. This review confirmed the growing impact of research on horse welfare and highlighted how some important areas still do not provide sufficient scientific evidence. Analysis of the literature related to horse welfare was performed using text analysis techniques to identify trends in words and research topics. Results showed that the literature on horse welfare has exponentially grown in the last 43 years, especially in Europe. The most studied topics were stress and pain, while studies on the welfare at slaughter and positive welfare indicators were scant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The provision of healthcare services to older LGBT adults in the Nordic countries: a scoping review.
- Author
-
Jakobsen, Monika Dybdahl, Bromseth, Janne, Siverskog, Anna, and Krane, Martin Sollund
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,ONLINE information services ,CINAHL database ,PROFESSIONS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ENGLISH language ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PRIORITY (Philosophy) ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL care ,LGBTQ+ people ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Objectives: Our objectives were to examine what is known about the provision of healthcare services to older LGBT adults in the Nordic countries, identify knowledge gaps, map implications of this research for the education of healthcare professionals and delivery of healthcare, and identify key future research priorities to advance policy and practice for older LGBT adults in this region. Design: We conducted searches in nine databases. Peer-reviewed articles and PhD theses published in and after 2002 written in English, Norwegian, Swedish or Danish languages were included. 41 studies met our inclusion criteria. However, only eight of these studies focused specifically on older LGBT adults. Therefore, to answer all research questions, five book chapters about older groups were also included. Results: There were few studies from countries other than Sweden and few quantitative studies. Bisexual people represented a neglected group in research. The studies included showed that healthcare personnel lack knowledge on LGBT issues, particularly about older LGBT adults and non-binary gender identification. Older LGBT adults frequently reported being met with cis- and heteronormative expectations in healthcare encounters. For transgender people, access to medical treatment has been managed by gatekeepers influenced by a binary understanding of gender. Conclusions: Relevant measures to enhance practices are increased attention on LGBT issues in education; training of healthcare professionals; measures at the institutional level; and ensuring that transgender people identifying as non-binary receive the same quality of care as individuals identifying in a binary way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Economic crisis and the petite bourgeoisie in Europe during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Author
-
Blackbourn, David
- Subjects
HISTORY ,RESEARCH teams ,HISTORIANS ,SCHOLARS ,FORUMS - Abstract
This article presents a report on the fourth round table discussion by the European Research Group on the problems of the Petite Bourgeoisie in the 19th- and 20th-century Europe. The round table discussion was held in Paris-Nanterre, France on May 4-5, 1984. The scholarly discussion started with a group of three papers on the impact of economic crisis in the late 1840s. The discussion centered essentially on two points. Several social historians and their works were mentioned by participants in the discussion.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Closing disparities between European sending and receiving international migration flow data.
- Author
-
Abel, Guy J. and Yildiz, Dilek
- Subjects
TRANSBORDER data flow ,HUMAN migration patterns ,COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Evidence-based policies to monitor and manage migration flows require accurate data. Data collection on international migration flow statistics is based on a range of data sources and measures. Discrepancies in reported migration flow data are apparent when comparing flow statistics from receiving countries on the number of arriving migrants by their country of origin with statistics from sending countries on the number of departing migrants by their country of destination. In recent decades the relative incompleteness and non-comparability in reported migration statistics have motivated a number of initiatives to improve data in European countries. In this paper we illustrate graphically the discrepancies between sending and receiving migration flow statistics provided to Eurostat by European countries. We find a reduction of the discrepancies between receiving and sending migration flow data after the implementation of regulations to improve the availability and comparability of migration data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. High specificity of the Salmonella Pullorum/Gallinarum rapid plate agglutination test despite vaccinations against Salmonella Enteritidis and Salmonella Typhimurium.
- Author
-
ter Veen, Christiaan, Feberwee, Anneke, Augustijn, Marieke, and de Wit, Sjaak
- Subjects
SALMONELLA enteritidis ,SALMONELLA typhimurium ,AGGLUTINATION tests ,SALMONELLA ,VACCINATION - Abstract
In Europe, monitoring of breeding stock for Salmonella Pullorum (SP) or Salmonella Gallinarum (SG) infections is compulsory at the point of lay. Vaccinations against Salmonella Enteritidis (SE) and Salmonella Typhimurium (ST) are increasingly administered in Europe. These vaccines might induce cross-reactions in the rapid plate agglutination (RPA) SP/SG test due to shared O-antigens, possibly resulting in a lower test specificity. The extent to which the specificity of SP/SG serological tests is influenced by SE and/or ST vaccinations in the field has not been reported. In this paper, we report the diagnostic and flock specificity of the commercially available RPA SP/SG test using 1:2–1:16 serum dilutions on four panels of sera: SPF sera, field sera from flocks of varying age and SE/ST vaccination status, and reference sera from an international proficiency testing scheme. The results showed that the use of live SE/ST vaccines did not influence the specificity of the RPA SP/SG test. Inactivated vaccines showed a drop of the diagnostic specificity to 96.54% and a flock specificity of 34.1% when the 1:2 serum dilution was used. The 1:8 serum dilution showed a diagnostic specificity of 99.41% and a flock specificity of 86.4%. In conclusion, the use of SE/ST vaccines has either no effect or a modest effect on the specificity of the RPA SP/SG test used to monitor flocks. The main factors are the type of vaccine, and the serum dilution used for testing and a cut-off. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe: five lessons from the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
- Author
-
Javakhishvili, Jana D., Arnberg, Filip, Greenberg, Neil, Kazlauskas, Evaldas, Lotzin, Annett, and Xavier, Miguel
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MENTAL illness ,COVID-19 ,MENTAL health policy ,MENTAL health ,EUROPEAN communities - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Psychotraumatology is the property of Taylor & Francis 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
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. How microbreweries flooded Europe: mapping a new phenomenon in the beer industry.
- Author
-
Materna, Kryštof, Bernhäuserová, Veronika, Hasman, Jiří, and Hána, David
- Subjects
BEER industry ,MICROBREWERIES ,BREWERIES ,STATISTICS ,BEER - Abstract
Europe has experienced a major boom of new breweries over the last thirty years, with thousands of new breweries being set up, even in regions where brewing has no history. So far, however, this microbrewing wave has not been systematically mapped. This paper presents a unique database of European breweries from 1990–2020. Using a series of maps and statistical analyses, it shows how breweries have gradually spread across Europe. Initially, microbreweries were being established in countries that are in a declining stage of the beer life-cycle from industrial breweries. After 2005 (and particularly in the 2010s), breweries reached other regions through neighbouring and hierarchical spatial diffusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Collegiality in modern universities - the composition of governance ideals and practices.
- Author
-
Sahlin, Kerstin and Eriksson-Zetterquist, Ulla
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATIONAL change ,COWORKER relationships ,UNIVERSITY & college administration ,INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) - Abstract
The questions of how universities are governed and how they should be governed have recently gained attention throughout Europe. The history of universities shows a diffused pattern of repeated reform efforts. However, this situation has more or less exploded since the turn of the century, bringing in new modes of organising. In short we can observe a diffusion of more managerial forms of organising, leading to a situation where different governance ideals co-act. In this paper we analyse the interplay of several governance ideals as they play out in practice. We begin and end the essay by noting that collegiality is a modern, efficient and practical form of governance, but it never works entirely on its own; rather it interacts with other modes of governance. After an introduction of diverse modes of governance, analysed as ideal type models, we exemplify how those diverse modes mix in practices of governance and organising. A more theoretical argument that runs through the paper is a critique of the dominance of ideal types of discussions on university governance and in organisation theory more generally, to the extent that those ideal types tend to be reified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of European Territorial Cooperation (ETC) on the promotion and use of solar energy in the Mediterranean.
- Author
-
Gomez Prieto, J.
- Subjects
SOLAR energy ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,POWER resources - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to assess the contribution of European Territorial Cooperation (ETC) programmes operating in the Mediterranean area as a supporting way to achieve the renewable energy objectives established in European Union Directive 2009/28/EC. It addresses a combination of impact and thematic assessment applied to projects tackling solar energy over the period 2007-13. Observations indicate that although not always measurable, ETC contributions to the use and promotion of solar energy in the Mediterranean represent a key step forward in higher deployment. The paper also suggest alternatives to improve projects' outputs to be delivered in the new cycle 2014-20. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Environmental Agreements.
- Author
-
ten Brink, Patrick and Medhurst, James
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL responsibility - Abstract
Environmental agreements between government authorities and industry to address particular environmental challenges are increasingly being looked to as a new, low-cost and effective means of solving environmental concerns. The role of these agreements, and their effectiveness, differ significantly according to country, industry, industry structure, the environmental problem being addressed; and depend significantly on the structure of the EA and which stakeholders are involved. This paper presents insights into the effectiveness, lessons and future use of environmental agreements (EAs) in Europe, by looking in some detail at the structure and performance of six EAs from across the EU, addressing different sectors and different environmental challenges. It builds on and updates the work that ECOTEC carried out for the European Environment Agency (ERA; Agency Contract number. EEA/AIA/003/96), culminating in the EEA publication: Environmental Agreements: Environmental Effectiveness (EEA 1997).(*) This paper also presents a broader context and definition of EAS, and offers some lessons into their application, and a discussion on their potential future use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
30. Where now for fair trade?
- Author
-
Doherty, Bob, Davies, IainA., and Tranchell, Sophi
- Subjects
UNFAIR competition ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,SUPERMARKETS ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,BUSINESS research ,FAIR trade associations ,MACROECONOMICS ,MARKETS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper critically examines the discourse surrounding fair trade mainstreaming, and discusses the potential avenues for the future of the social movement. The authors have a unique insight into the fair trade market having a combined experience of over 30 years in practice and 15 as fair trade scholars. The paper highlights a number of benefits of mainstreaming, not least the continued growth of the global fair trade market (tipped to top $7bn in 2012). However, the paper also highlights the negative consequences of mainstreaming on the long-term viability of fair trade as a credible ethical standard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Exploring the development of a cultural care framework for European caring science.
- Author
-
Albarran, John, Rosser, Elizabeth, Bach, Shirley, Uhrenfeldt, Lisbeth, Lundberg, Pranee, and Law, Kate
- Subjects
CULTURAL values ,CULTURE ,NURSING education ,HUMANISM - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to discuss the development of a cultural care framework that seeks to inform and embrace the philosophical ideals of caring science. Following a review of the literature that identified a lack of evidence of an explicit relationship between caring science and cultural care, a number of well-established transcultural care frameworks were reviewed. Our purpose was to select one that would resonate with underpinning philosophical values of caring science and that drew on criteria generated by the European Academy of Caring Science members. A modified framework based on the work of Giger and Davidhizar was developed as it embraced many of the values such as humanism that are core to caring science practice. The proposed caring science framework integrates determinants of cultural lifeworld-led care and seeks to provide clear directions for humanizing the care of individuals. The framework is offered to open up debate and act as a platform for further academic enquiry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Mapping strategy, structure, ownership and performance in European corporations: Introduction.
- Author
-
Colli, Andrea, Iversen, Martin Jes, and de Jong, Abe
- Subjects
BUSINESS models ,ECONOMIC conditions in Europe, 1945- - Abstract
This paper is the introduction to the Business History special issue on European Business Models. The volume presents results of the international project about mapping European corporations, within the strategy, structure, ownership and performance (SSOP) framework. The paper describes the historical developments of the SSOP framework and introduces the contributions to the special issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. National policy brokering and the construction of the European Education Space in England, Sweden, Finland and Scotland.
- Author
-
Grek, Sotiria, Lawn, Martin, Lingard, Bob, Ozga, Jenny, Rinne, Risto, Segerholm, Christina, and Simola, Hannu
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,EDUCATIONAL ideologies ,EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
This paper draws on a comparative study of the growth of data and the changing governance of education in Europe. It looks at data and the 'making' of a European Education Policy Space, with a focus on 'policy brokers' in translating and mediating demands for data from the European Commission. It considers the ways in which such brokers use data production pressures from the Commission to justify policy directions in their national systems. The systems under consideration are Finland, Sweden, and England and Scotland. The paper focuses on the rise of Quality Assurance and Evaluation mechanisms and processes as providing the overarching rationale for data demands, both for accountability and performance improvement purposes. The theoretical resources that are drawn on to enable interpretation of the data are those that suggest a move from governing to governance and the use of comparison as a form of governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Bayesian analysis of immigration in Europe with generalized logistic regression.
- Author
-
Dalla Valle, Luciana, Leisen, Fabrizio, Rossini, Luca, and Zhu, Weixuan
- Subjects
BAYESIAN analysis ,SOCIAL surveys ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,BINARY codes ,INFORMATION modeling ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
The number of immigrants moving to and settling in Europe has increased over the past decade, making migration one of the most topical and pressing issues in European politics. It is without a doubt that immigration has multiple impacts, in terms of economy, society and culture, on the European Union. It is fundamental to policy-makers to correctly evaluate people's attitudes towards immigration when designing integration policies. Of critical interest is to properly discriminate between subjects who are favourable towards immigration from those who are against it. Public opinions on migration are typically coded as binary responses in surveys. However, traditional methods, such as the standard logistic regression, may suffer from computational issues and are often not able to accurately model survey information. In this paper we propose an efficient Bayesian approach for modelling binary response data based on the generalized logistic regression. We show how the proposed approach provides an increased flexibility compared to traditional methods, due to its ability to capture heavy and light tails. The power of our methodology is tested through simulation studies and is illustrated using European Social Survey data on immigration collected in different European countries in 2016–2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Innovation landscape and challenges of smart technologies and systems – a European perspective.
- Author
-
Micheler, Simon, Goh, Yee Mey, and Lohse, Niels
- Subjects
INDUSTRY 4.0 ,HIGH technology ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,TECHNOLOGY ,CYBER physical systems - Abstract
Smart technologies with higher degrees of autonomy will be essential to achieve the next breakthrough in both agility and productivity in future manufacturing systems, often referred to as Industry 4.0. However, the technologies will also bring substantial design and integration challenges and novelty risks to manufacturing businesses. The aim of this paper is to analyse the current landscape and to identify the challenges for introducing smart technologies into manufacturing systems in Europe. Expert knowledge from both industrial and academic practitioners in the field was extracted using an online survey. A workshop was used to triangulate and extend the survey results. The findings indicate three main challenges for the ubiquitous implementation of smart technologies in manufacturing are: i) the perceived risk of novel technologies, ii) the complexity of integration, and iii) the consideration of human factors. Recommendations are made based on these findings to transform the landscape for smart manufacturing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Ultimate owner and risk of company performance.
- Author
-
Staszkiewicz, Piotr and Szelągowska, Anna
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,RETURN on assets ,FINANCIAL performance ,FINANCIAL risk ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the links between a company's ultimate owner and the risk involved with financial performance. The study tests hypotheses on the relation between ultimate ownership origin and risk of return on assets. The research adopts cross-sectional data from a unique sample of 32,614 companies across 43 European countries with ultimate owners from 105 countries. The results indicate that the domestic ultimate owner is, in general, less likely to be a risk-taker than overseas investors. The research develops the nature of ownership-performance relations in the specific economic context of Europe. The results add robust evidence on attitudes towards performance risk of Europe wide ultimate owners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Accelerating internet adoption in China's fresh produce supply chain: a VEGNET approach.
- Author
-
YANQING DUAN, XIAOXIAO XU, XUE LIU, ZOGRAFOS, KONSTANTINOS, and BEMELEIT, BORIS
- Subjects
FARM produce ,SUPPLY chains ,INTERNET ,SUPPLY chain management - Abstract
The rapid growth and new development of internet technologies have provided many significant opportunities for cost reduction and service improvement for the supply chain. However, the adoption of the interact technologies in agribusiness supply chains (SC), especially the flesh produce supply chain, is still slow and far behind other sectors. This paper is about the EU funded project VEGNET (Enhancing Vegetable Supply Chain Management with internet Technologies) which aims to accelerate the speed of internet adoption among fresh produce supply chains involving small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The paper first introduces the project's objectives and approaches. It then presents some key findings from a survey conducted with United Kingdom SMEs in fresh produce supply chains. These findings provide actual insights into the current internet and software usage of the United Kingdom SMEs and help to reveal gaps between Europe and China. Findings and implications from the project's other activities, such as case studies and surveys in China are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Qualitative data analysis in cross-cultural projects.
- Author
-
Troman, Geoff and Jeffrey, Bob
- Subjects
EDUCATION research ,DATA analysis ,COMPARATIVE method ,CROSS-cultural studies ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL conditions in Europe - Abstract
Large-scale research projects, conducted in a cross-European context, are increasingly attractive to educational researchers and policy-makers. However, this form of comparative research across cultures brings problems concerning the standardization of data collection and analysis, particularly where ethnographic research is concerned, as it prioritizes a full range of qualitative research strategies. This paper outlines the use of a universal model and the approaches recently taken by two research teams and contrasts these with another recent nine-partner comparative European study that used ethnographic methods. We then describe the analytical procedures used in the project, which encouraged participant observation and individual researcher interpretation in order to generate grounded accounts and outline how they were culturally sensitive and meaningful to research teams who used varied analytical approaches. However, this raised difficult issues for the 'final' analysis and the production of a loosely coupled research report. Our pragmatic solution was a process of 'qualitative synthesis' whereby individual partner reports were collated by the Project Director and treated as data and a grounded theory approach was applied to generate tentative theory in respect of creative learning. The paper concludes by arguing that data generated by a loosely coupled approach to qualitative comparative research which uses a wide range of data collection methods can be effectively analysed with a qualitative synthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE AS A FUTURE CHALLENGE FOR CITIES IN EAST CENTRAL EUROPE.
- Author
-
Steinführer, Annett and Haase, Annegret
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,URBAN research ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,DEMOGRAPHIC transition - Abstract
Contemporary cities in East Central Europe (ECE) represent a hybrid type of urban development which is still generally considered to be a special case and is only exceptionally referred to in the recently intensified debate over the European city. Our paper argues that such exclusion is short-sighted because ECE cities face structural problems similar to those of their Western pendants. Therefore, the contextual frame of urban research needs to be widened and can no longer be restricted to post-socialist transition. In this regard, one of the main challenges for future urban development will be the consequences of demographic change. Ageing, new patterns of fertility behaviour and more diversified household structures in line with the Second Demographic Transition (SDT) will have significant implications for urban structures and housing markets, as already known for Western Europe. The purpose of this paper is to work out new questions and hypotheses for future urban research with special respect to Polish and Czech cities. Besides West European experience, recent developments in eastern Germany are taken as a frame of reference, assuming that this specific transition case may, in many respects, be regarded as a forerunner for similar developments in its neighbouring countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. FLAGSHIP DEVELOPMENTS AND THE PHYSICAL UPGRADING OF THE POST-SOCIALIST INNER CITY: THE GOLDEN ANGEL PROJECT IN PRAGUE.
- Author
-
Temelová, Jana
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,SOCIAL groups ,LOCAL government ,SOCIALISM - Abstract
Over the past few decades many urban leaders have searched for an appropriate policy response to tackle urban decay. Various kinds of flagship projects emerged in many cities as the products of a property-led approach to the regeneration strategies adopted by local governments in North American and European cities. It was expected that the creation of high-profile milieux would launch chain reactions which would eventually lead to the regeneration of declining neighbourhoods. The focus of this study lies in the anatomy of physical transformation in an inner city neighbourhood within the context of post-socialist transition. In particular, the paper discusses the flagship role of the Golden Angel commercial centre in the physical upgrading of the Smíchov district in Prague. The case study contributes to the understanding of complex circumstances and mechanisms of revitalization in the post-socialist inner city. The empirical material is based on field observations, expert opinions and existing documents. The paper shows that a high-profile project can be one of the driving forces in physical revitalization through the provision of symbolic power, credibility and appeal to a declining neighbourhood. At the same time, it is emphasize that physical transformation is a multi-conditional and context-related process rather than an automatic and straightforward outcome of flagship developments. Successful revitalization depends on a favourable constellation of various factors. On the local level, the key factors include the development potential of the location, the attitude of the local authorities and the commitment of all involved actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Banking Efficiency in the Context of European Integration.
- Author
-
Stavárek, Daniel
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,INDUSTRIAL efficiency ,ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
This paper compares commercial banks' efficiency in four relatively homogenous groups of countries, though with different levels of economic development and involvement in the process of European integration. The first group consists of Portugal and Greece; the second group of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia; the third of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania; and the fourth of Bulgaria and Romania. The paper aims to reveal whether the differences among regions and countries in their stages of European integration and economic development are also visible in banking efficiency. Thus, the hypothesis that a higher degree of European economic integration and economic development goes hand in hand with higher banking efficiency is tested. Employing data envelopment analysis on unconsolidated data, we evaluate the efficiency of financial intermediation from 2001 to 2003. Results suggest that differences in banking efficiency exist among the regions analyzed, and the hierarchy corresponds with the hierarchy of regions in terms of economic development and degree of integration. However, the rapid growth of banking intermediation efficiency recorded in Central and East European countries could trade off the actual efficiency gap compared to traditional EU members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Trade and Industrial Upgrading in Countries of Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Hotopp, Ulrike, Radosevic, Slavo, and Bishop, Kate
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,LEARNING ,EXPORTS ,LABOR ,INDUSTRIES - Abstract
This paper explores mechanisms linking trade and restructuring in Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries through learning and industrial upgrading. These are reflected in changes in the composition of trade through changes in the relative shares of particular products and clusters in exports (scale), and in the number of products exported (scope). An analysis of export clusters shows the decreasing importance of commodities (homogeneous resource-based goods) and a shift toward technology and labor-intensive products to be a common trend. However differences between the countries are strong with respect to changes in both scale and scope in technology and labor-intensive activities. These differences show that trade-based learning mechanisms have strong effects on differences in industrial upgrading between CEE economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. New methodologies for comparative research? Establishing 'constants' and 'contexts' in educational experience.
- Author
-
Osborn *, Marilyn
- Subjects
RESEARCH ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STUDENTS ,ACADEMIC achievement ,FOREIGN study ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Drawing upon a programme of comparative studies in three European countries, England, France and Denmark, this paper discusses some of the particular issues and problems that can arise in comparative research. It outlines some ways in which the research has attempted to resolve these and to shed light on the complex interplay of factors—personal, social and structural—that influence young people's engagement with learning. It argues that comparative approaches which combine careful measurement with ‘up-close’, deep understanding of real-world contexts, can be a very powerful mix. The paper proceeds to discuss some innovative features of comparative research design such as the use of student quotations from the three countries as a stimulus to group interviews with students and the employment of an ‘insider-outsider’ perspective, both in the development of research instruments and in fieldwork, by collaborators from more than one country working together and writing up their observations of countries other than their own. It is argued that such an approach can give valuable insights to other comparative researchers who wish to acknowledge the importance of both structure and agency in order to illuminate the complexities of the interaction between culture, social structure and institutions and individual action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. On Types of Trade, Adjustment of Labor, and Welfare Gains During Asymmetric Liberalizations.
- Author
-
Kandogan, Yener
- Subjects
INTRA-industry trade ,LIBERTY ,BUSINESS ,LABOR market ,MANUFACTURED products - Abstract
This paper modifies the two-industry, two-country HeckscherOhlin model with intermediate goods to decompose trade into its horizontal and vertical intra-industry, as well as inter-industry parts. Acknowledging that liberalization affects each type of trade differently, and that changes in each imply labor adjustment of different magnitudes, the paper analyzes the effects of widely observed asymmetries in liberalization policies. The paper concludes with the implications of the model for the liberalization between the East and the West through the Europe Agreements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Economic Performance of European Stock Corporations.
- Author
-
Rennings, Klaus, Schröder, Michael, and Ziegler, Andreas
- Subjects
CORPORATIONS ,STOCKS (Finance) ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,BUSINESS enterprises ,FINANCE - Abstract
Concerning the relationship between sustainability and economic performance, this paper examines the effect of environmental and social performance on the stock performance of European stock corporations. Stock performance is measured as the average monthly stock return for the period 1996-2001. The sustainability performance is measured both by an evaluation of the environ mental or social risks of the industry to which a company belongs and by an evaluation of the environmental or social activities of a company relative to the industrial average. We apply two-stage econometric approaches, which include recent insights from empirical finance. The most important result is that a higher environmental sector performance has a significantly positive influence on the stock performance. In contrast, a higher social sector performance has a negative influence. This effect is somewhat less significant The variables of corporate environmental and/or social activities relative to the industry average have no significant effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Firm or the Region: What Determines the Innovation Behavior of European Firms?
- Author
-
Sternberg, Rolf and Arndt, Olaf
- Subjects
BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC geography - Abstract
This paper examines the determinants of innovation behavior in European firms that are predominantly small and medium in size. The aim is to assess the absolute as well as the relative impact on innovation behavior of firm-specific (i.e., internal) factors on the one hand and region-specific characteristics on the other. Two hypotheses are advanced and tested. The first is that—contrary in part to some recent literature on regional and national innovation systems—firm-specific determinants of innovation are more important than either region-specific or external factors. The second hypothesis is that in high-tech regions dominated by a small number of very large firms the innovation behavior of the smaller firms is more strongly influenced by regional factors than by factors internal to the firm. Whereas the first hypothesis is confirmed by the empirical results presented here, the second is not. Because firm-level innovation determinants are of great importance in the European regions investigated in this study, we suggest that local innovation policy should focus more on the specific needs of small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in particular regions than on improving regional conditions for innovation in general. The analysis is mainly based on data from the European Regional Innovation Survey (ERIS) and includes information from more than 8,000 interviews with manufacturing firms, service firms, and research institutions in 11 European regions. The logit analyses reported in this paper used data from some 1,800 manufacturing firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. North-south collaboration and capacity development in global health research in low- and middle-income countries -- the ARCADE projects.
- Author
-
Atkins, Salla, Marsden, Sophie, Diwan, Vishal, and Zwarenstein, Merrick
- Subjects
DOCUMENTATION ,ENDOWMENT of research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL schools ,MEDICAL research ,MENTORING ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,ADULT education workshops ,WORLD health ,WEBINARS ,HEALTH & social status ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Background: Research capacity enhancement is needed in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) for improved health, wellbeing, and health systems' development. In this article, we discuss two capacity-building projects, the African/Asian Regional Capacity Development (ARCADE) in Health Systems and Services Research (HSSR) and Research on Social Determinants of Health (RSDH), implemented from 2011 to 2015. The two projects focussed on providing courses in HSSR and social determinants of health research, and on developing collaborations between universities, along with capacity in LMIC universities to manage research grant submissions, financing, and reporting. Both face-to-face and sustainable online teaching and learning resources were used in training at higher postgraduate levels (Masters and Doctoral level). Design: We collated project meeting and discussion minutes along with project periodic reports and deliverables. We extracted key outcomes from these, reflected on these in discussions, and summarised them for this paper. Results: Nearly 55 courses and modules were developed that were delivered to over 920 postgraduate students in Africa, Asia, and Europe. Junior researchers were mentored in presenting, developing, and delivering courses, and in preparing research proposals. In total, 60 collaborative funding proposals were prepared. The consortia also developed institutional capacity in research dissemination and grants management through webinars and workshops. Discussion: ARCADE HSSR and ARCADE RSDH were comprehensive programmes, focussing on developing the research skills, knowledge, and capabilities of junior researchers. One of the main strengths of these programmes was the focus on network building amongst the partner institutions, where each partner brought skills, expertise, and diverse work cultures into the consortium. Through these efforts, the projects improved both the capacity of junior researchers and the research environment in Africa, Asia, and Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. JOINT VENTURES IN EUROPE: DETERMINANTS OF ENTRY .
- Author
-
Gullander, Staffan
- Subjects
JOINT ventures ,STRATEGIC alliances (Business) ,BUSINESS planning ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,BUSINESS research - Abstract
In Europe there are several thousand intercompany linkages which take the form of a joint venture (JV), i.e., a long-range equity arrangement between two or more independent parent firms. It seems likely that in the future companies will to an increasing degree form JVs. This paper describes the major forces underlying the entry into a JV and the available alternatives to JVs. In addition, the conditions under which a JV is or is not preferred are discussed. The paper is based on an extensive literature research on JVs in Europe and on a series of interviews with top executives of 40 recently established JVs involving at least one Swedish firm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Mapping Energy: Cartographies of Energy Into The Twenty-First Century.
- Author
-
Howell, Jordan P. and Baylis, David L.
- Subjects
HISTORY of cartography ,POWER resources ,GEOGRAPHY periodicals ,ENERGY consumption ,INTERACTIVE multimedia ,HISTORY ,TWENTIETH century ,CHARTS, diagrams, etc. ,MAPS - Abstract
'Energy' presents a number of complex and interrelated challenges regarding the environment, economy, and politics. In this paper, we argue that cartography should help clarify our understanding of energy issues, but ask whether this has in fact been the case. In a review of over 100 articles pulled from twenty-three peer-reviewed geography journals, we qualitatively assess energy maps published since the early 20
th century, examining trends in topic and cartographic technique. Energy maps in geography journals have focused on North America and Western Europe while relying on proportional symbols, grayscale production, and the analysis of energy phenomena at the national scale-tendencies that in many instances have limited our understanding of the ways in which energy is actually consumed. Simultaneously, cartographers are limited to the energy data available to them, frequently precluding small-scale consumption analysis or consideration of diurnal and seasonal trends. We argue that the future of energy cartography relies on access to consumption data coupled with greater user interactivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Psychotraumatology in Europe: a personal history.
- Author
-
Turner, Stuart
- Subjects
EUROPEAN history ,DISASTERS - Abstract
This paper outlines a personal account of the growth of the field of traumatic stress in Europe, especially with the history of major disasters in the 1980s, the first European Conference in Lincoln in 1988, the formation of European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies and its subsequent development, for example, with a federal structure and its own journal, and most important of all the way that the field as a whole has matured. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.