6,013 results
Search Results
252. Birth history, age structure, and post World War II fertility in ten developed countries: an exploratory empirical analysis.
- Author
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Artzrouni MA and Easterlin RA
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Cohort Studies, Europe, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Research, Scandinavian and Nordic Countries, Statistics as Topic, Age Distribution, Birth Rate, Demography, Developed Countries, Economics, Fertility, Forecasting, Fourier Analysis, Models, Theoretical, Population Growth
- Published
- 1982
253. Age patterns of women at first birth.
- Author
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Bloom DE
- Subjects
- Birth Rate, Europe, Family Characteristics, Family Relations, Finland, Italy, Parents, Population, Population Characteristics, Population Dynamics, Reproductive History, Research, Scandinavian and Nordic Countries, Age Factors, Birth Order, Cohort Studies, Demography, Developed Countries, Fertility, Marriage, Maternal Age, Models, Theoretical
- Published
- 1982
254. Intercountry comparisons of labor force trends and of related developments: an overview.
- Author
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Mincer J
- Subjects
- Demography, Divorce, Fertility, Household Work, Marriage, Organization and Administration, Population, Population Dynamics, Birth Rate, Developed Countries, Economics, Educational Status, Employment, Health Resources, Health Workforce, Income, Salaries and Fringe Benefits, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, Women's Rights
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
255. An Empirical Study on the National Heterogeneity of High-End Manufacturing Technology Innovation and GVC's Division of Labor Status.
- Author
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Liang, Lei and Liang, Yawen
- Subjects
DIVISION of labor ,EMPIRICAL research ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,HETEROGENEITY ,TECHNOLOGY transfer - Abstract
Although the relationship between technological innovation and the status of the global value chain's (GVC) division of labor has been essentially affirmed by academia, the direct regression of all countries does not account for national differences pertaining to different economic development levels. This paper divides the countries selected for this study into developed and developing countries and then conducts empirical tests on two sample sets to explore the heterogeneity of technological innovation and GVC division of labor status. The results reveal the following: (1) in developed countries, the GVC division of labor status of high-end manufacturing is generally higher than that of developing countries; (2) in developed countries, the technological innovation of high-end manufacturing plays a significant role in promoting GVC's division of labor, while developing countries have a significant inhibitory effect; and (3) staff input and financial developmental levels have significantly promoted GVC's status in the division of labor. Earlier studies have shown that, in developing countries, technological innovation in high-end manufacturing industries does not fully serve the goal of exporting intermediate goods. This study's conclusions offer a new method of explaining the nature of a given country, the logic of technological innovation, and the differences in the GVC division of labor status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
256. The smile curve: Evolving sources of value added in manufacturing.
- Author
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Baldwin, Richard and Ito, Tadashi
- Subjects
SMILING ,DEVELOPING countries ,VALUE chains ,SERVICE industries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Economics 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
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
257. Primary care-based interventions to address the financial needs of patients experiencing poverty: a scoping review of the literature.
- Author
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Parry, Jane, Vanstone, Meredith, Grignon, Michel, and Dunn, James R.
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,DEVELOPED countries ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PATIENT-centered care ,PRIMARY health care ,PATIENT psychology ,LITERATURE reviews ,PHYSICIANS ,NEEDS assessment ,ENDOWMENTS - Abstract
Background: It is broadly accepted that poverty is associated with poor health, and the health impact of poverty has been explored in numerous high-income country settings. There is a large and growing body of evidence of the role that primary care practitioners can play in identifying poverty as a health determinant, and in interventions to address it. Purpose of study: This study maps the published peer-reviewed and grey literature on primary care setting interventions to address poverty in high-income countries in order to identify key concepts and gaps in the research. This scoping review seeks to map the tools in use to identify and address patients' economic needs; describe the key types of primary care-based interventions; and examine barriers and facilitators to successful implementation. Methods: Using a scoping review methodology, we searched five databases, the grey literature and the reference lists of relevant studies to identify studies on interventions to address the economic needs-related social determinants of health that occur in primary health care delivery settings, in high-income countries. Findings were synthesized narratively, and examined using thematic analysis, according to iteratively identified themes. Results: Two hundred and fourteen papers were included in the review and fell into two broad categories of description and evaluation: screening tools, and economic needs-specific interventions. Primary care-based interventions that aim to address patients' financial needs operate at all levels, from passive sociodemographic data collection upon patient registration, through referral to external services, to direct intervention in addressing patients' income needs. Conclusion: Tools and processes to identify and address patients' economic social needs range from those tailored to individual health practices, or addressing one specific dimension of need, to wide-ranging protocols. Primary care-based interventions to address income needs operate at all levels, from passive sociodemographic data collection, through referral to external services, to direct intervention. Measuring success has proven challenging. The decision to undertake this work requires courage on the part of health care providers because it can be difficult, time-consuming and complex. However, it is often appreciated by patients, even when the scope of action available to health care providers is quite narrow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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258. Intelligent Transportation Systems in Developing Countries: Challenges and Prospects.
- Author
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Diderot, Cidjeu Djeuthie, Bernice, Nguensie Wakponou Addie, Tchappi, Igor, Mualla, Yazan, Najjar, Amro, and Galland, Stéphane
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DEVELOPING countries ,INTELLIGENT transportation systems ,DEVELOPED countries ,SYSTEM safety ,RESEARCH questions - Abstract
Developed countries have paved the way for the implementation of intelligent transport systems to improve the safety, efficiency, and environmental impact of transport. With developing countries entering the fray, the question is: Is ITS as implemented in developed countries relevant to developing countries? This research question is discussed in this paper for the case of sub-Saharan countries that are among the poorest countries worldwide. To this end, the paper outlines the main differences in transportation scenarios between developed and sub-Saharan countries, and then considering the main constraints of sub-Saharan countries, a guide towards an affordable intelligent transportation system in these countries is discussed. Finally, the paper proposes two main novel ideas for the deployment of intelligent transport systems on dirt roads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
259. Global Patterns of Agricultural Investment and Food Security: Evidence from the fDi Markets Database.
- Author
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Zhao, Yongzhi and Chen, Yangfen
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,FOOD security ,SUSTAINABLE investing ,PUBLIC investments ,DEVELOPED countries ,AGRICULTURAL technology ,FOOD prices - Abstract
The number of hungry people is on the rise and more efforts are needed to improve the global food security status. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) proposes more investment in the agricultural sector to boost production and alleviate hunger. However, there are fewer papers that distinguish enterprises investment from public investment. In this case, we take advantage of detailed investment data in the fDi Markets database to explore the global patterns of agricultural investment. In particular, we identify the top destination countries based on aggregate and sub-sectoral agricultural investment data. Then we investigate the relationship between agricultural investment and food security, which is measured by per capita protein intake. Finally, we propose some suggestions from the investment motivation perspective to help food-insecure countries to attract overseas investment. We find that developed countries are the primary sources of global agricultural investment and these sources have been becoming more diverse in the past decade. It implies the trend towards a more inclusive investment environment worldwide. However, the global distribution of agricultural investment is uneven as food-insecure countries only receive 20% of the global agricultural investment. The top three destination countries, USA, China, and Russia, have a relatively high food security level. In contrast, countries suffering from food insecurity receive fewer investment projects, and most of which are on a small scale. Given the limited socio–economic development status in food-insecure countries, it is essential for all levels of society to help them and contribute to ending hunger. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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260. Peripheral Labour and Accumulation on a World Scale in the Green Transitions.
- Author
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Ajl, Max
- Subjects
UNIVERSAL healthcare ,SOCIAL reproduction ,GREEN New Deal (United States) ,DEVELOPED countries ,SKEPTICISM - Abstract
This commentary turns a critical lens on the perspectives of labour in the potential green transition. It shows what changes when we focus on worldwide social labour—the labour which most of humanity currently performs—and its worldwide impact, going beyond climate to damages from mining and to biodiversity and other elements of the ecology. Such an optic forces scepticism about approaches which only consider the North when it comes to a large-scale green transition. Indeed, this paper argues, using illustrative examples, how such approaches rely on suppressing the historical role of colonialism and imperialism in making First World (core) development possible. It shows how lenses such as "social reproduction" or policies such as "universal health care" focused only on the core reproduction of worldwide patterns of domination. It then puts forward the outlines of an alternative approach to decent work in the context of a worldwide green transition toward a non-hierarchical world system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
261. The Practices of Advanced Countries in the Legal Regulation of Intellectual Property Objects Created by Artificial Intelligence.
- Author
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Magauiya, Abay, Omarova, Aiman B., Kasenova, Aigul, Akhmetov, Zhasulan, and Akhmadi, Marat
- Subjects
DEVELOPED countries ,INTELLECTUAL property ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,SCIENTIFIC method ,RIGHT to be forgotten ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
[Purpose] The purpose of this study is to outline the general features of legal regulation in advanced countries of artificial intelligence in the field of intellectual property law, namely in the context of legal regulation of intellectual property rights created by such artificial intelligence. [Methodology/Approach/Design] During the conducted research, the leading method is the comparative legal method. However, apart from it, an array of philosophical, general scientific, and special scientific methods has been used. [Findings] The main results obtained are the analysis of the provisions of regulations governing the specific features of intellectual property rights created by artificial intelligence in advanced countries of the world, such as the United States of America, Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland), the countries of the European Union, etc. [Practical Implications] Practical recommendations are provided for improving the national (Kazakh) legislation in the context of legal regulation of this issue. [Originality/Value] The materials can be used for further scientific research of the statutory regulation of intellectual property objects created by artificial intelligence and constitute a practical value for improving the quality of the available regulators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
262. REVIEW OF MODIFYING THE INDICATORS OF ROAD SAFETY SYSTEM.
- Author
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Jameel, Abeer K. and Evdorides, Harry T.
- Subjects
ROAD safety measures ,SYSTEM safety ,ROAD users ,TRAFFIC fatalities ,DEVELOPED countries ,CELL phones ,DRUGGED driving - Abstract
The new vision of road safety issues is based on a systematic approach called a ’safe system’. This approach has been applied recently in some developed countries and resulted in a significant reduction in road fatalities. On the other hand, it is necessary to develop an index to use not only in assessing the size of the road safety problem but also to monitor the intermediate outcome of its operational performance. This paper aims to review the modified indicators of the operational performance of road safety systems based on the fundamentals of the ‘safe system’ vision. A methodology is presented to choose comprehensive, measurable, and independent indicators which are relevant to the new vision and can be used to predict the conditions of the problem and enable actions to be taken to prevent road crashes from happening. In this methodology, the main indicators of road safety are classified into thematic indicators and individual indicators. These indicators are subjected to evaluation according to measurability, comprehensiveness, and availability of data. The final set of indicators is grouped into three thematic groups; safer road mobility, safer road user behavior, and safer vehicle. Based on the evaluation of the suggested indicators, it is concluded that the iRAP star rating is the most comprehensive, measurable, and dependent indicator to reflect the safer mobility indicator. Speeding, using a protective system, consuming psychoactive substances, and using a mobile phone while driving are chosen as safer road user behavior indicators. The EuroNCAP is chosen as the safer vehicle indicator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
263. Package size and manufacturer-recommended serving size of sweet beverages: a cross-sectional study across four high-income countries
- Author
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Mary R. L’Abbé, Alyssa Schermel, Cliona Ni Mhurchu, Jacob C. Seidell, Helen Eyles, Ingrid H M Steenhuis, Bruce Neal, Elizabeth Dunford, Maartje P. Poelman, Prevention and Public Health, Health Economics and Health Technology Assessment, and EMGO+ - Lifestyle, Overweight and Diabetes
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Canada ,Cross-sectional study ,Serving Size ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Portion size ,Research Support ,Beverages ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Serving size ,Journal Article ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Non-U.S. Gov't ,Mathematics ,Netherlands ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ,Developed Countries ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Australia ,Food Packaging ,Portion Size ,Sweetening agents ,Research Papers ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Sweetening Agents ,Energy Intake ,High income countries ,Demography ,New Zealand - Abstract
ObjectiveTo assess the mean package size and manufacturer-recommended serving size of sweet beverages available in four high-income countries: Australia, Canada, the Netherlands and New Zealand.DesignCross-sectional surveys.SettingThe two largest supermarket chains of each country in 2012/2013.SubjectsIndividual pack size (IPS) drinks (n891) and bulk pack size (BPS) drinks (n1904).ResultsFor all IPS drinks, the mean package size was larger than the mean serving size (mean (sd)=412 (157) ml and 359 (159) ml, respectively). The mean (sd) package size of IPS drinks was significantly different for all countries (range: Australia=370 (149) ml to New Zealand=484 (191) ml;P<0·01). The mean (sd) package size of Dutch BPS drinks (1313 (323) ml) was significantly smaller compared with the other countries (New Zealand=1481 (595) ml, Australia=1542 (595) ml, Canada=1550 (434) ml;Psd) serving size of BPS drinks was significantly different across all countries (range: Netherlands=216 (30) ml to Canada=248 (31) ml;P<0·00). New Zealand had the largest package and serving sizes of the countries assessed. In all countries, a large number of different serving sizes were used to provide information on the amount appropriate to consume in one sitting.ConclusionsAt this point there is substantial inconsistency in package sizes and manufacturer-recommended serving sizes of sweet beverages within and between four high-income countries, especially for IPS drinks. As consumers do factor serving size into their judgements of healthiness of a product, serving size regulations, preferably set by governments and global health organisations, would provide consistency and assist individuals in making healthier food choices.
- Published
- 2015
264. Postcolonial hybridity, diaspora and accountancy: Evidence from Sierra Leonean chartered and aspiring accountants.
- Author
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Kaifala, Gabriel Bamie, Gallhofer, Sonja, Milner, Margaret, and Paisey, Catriona
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ACCOUNTANTS ,ACCOUNTING ,POSTCOLONIALISM ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore perceptions and lived experiences of Sierra Leonean chartered and aspiring accountants, vis-à-vis their professional identity with a particular focus on two elements of postcolonial theory, hybridity and diaspora. Design/methodology/approach: A qualitative methodological framework was employed. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 participants about their perceptions of their professional identity and their professional experiences both within and outside Sierra Leone. Findings: The current professionalisation process is conceptualised as a postcolonial third space where hybrid professional accountants are constructed. Professional hybridity blurs the local/global praxis being positioned as both local and global accountants. Participants experience difficulty "fitting into" the local accountancy context as a consequence of their hybridisation. As such, a diaspora effect is induced which often culminates in emigration to advanced countries. The paper concludes that although the current model engenders emancipatory social movements for individuals through hybridity and diaspora, it is nonetheless counterproductive for Sierra Leone's economic development and the local profession in particular. Research limitations/implications: This study has significant implications for understanding how the intervention of global professional bodies in developing countries shapes the professionalisation process as well as perceptions and lived experiences of chartered and aspiring accountants in these countries. Originality/value: While extant literature implicates the legacies of colonialism/imperialism on the institutional development of accountancy (represented by recognised professional bodies), this paper employs the critical lens of postcolonial theory to conceptualise the lived experiences of individuals who are directly impacted by such institutional arrangements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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265. Resilience and protective factors among refugee children post-migration to high-income countries: a systematic review.
- Author
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Marley, Charles and Mauki, Beatus
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration & psychology ,MENTAL illness prevention ,MENTAL illness risk factors ,AGE distribution ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CAUSALITY (Physics) ,GROUP identity ,PATIENT safety ,PHYSICIANS ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SELF-perception ,SOCIAL case work ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DEVELOPED countries ,SOCIAL support ,POSITIVE psychology - Abstract
Background Increasing numbers of children have been forced to flee and seek asylum in high-income countries. Current research indicates that focussing on resilience and protective factors is an important long-term goal for positive mental health and psychological functioning of refugee children. Methods We performed a systematic review of quantitative literature regarding psychological and contextual factors that contribute to resilience in refugee children residing in high-income countries. Our procedure followed guidelines from the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. Results We identified a number of protective factors as related to positive outcomes. They are drawn from several ecological domains and include age, self-esteem, maintenance of cultural identity, social support, belonging and safety and innovative social care services. A key overarching point reported by the studies we reviewed was that for refugee settlement specific policies and approaches to be beneficial, they were required to be embedded within a positive socially inclusive society. We also identified several limitations across the reported studies. Conclusion The factors we identified would assist clinicians to adopt a resilience-focussed approach. However, a continued pre-occupation with psychopathology was evident across the studies, which we argue as holding back the development of resilience-focussed approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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266. Health gap between developed and developing countries: Does globalization matter?
- Author
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Elmawazini, Khaled, Manga, Pranlal, Nwankwo, Sonny, and AlNaser, Bader
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,HEALTH equity ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries ,GLOBALIZATION ,LIFE expectancy ,ECONOMIC conditions in Africa - Abstract
Whilst there is a rich body of literature linking globalization with economic disparities between rich and poor nations, there is very little situated understanding of causal links, if any, between globalization and health gaps between nations. Set against this background, this paper contributes to the empirical literature by investigating globalization as a channel of the health gap between countries in Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Results from a dynamic panel data analysis show that globalization has statistically insignificant impact on the health gap between the OECD and SSA countries. Rather, economic and demographic structures, measured by the age dependency ratio (% of working-age population) and GDP per capita growth emerged as the main determinants of the health gap between SSA and OECD countries. The paper draws out some policy implications which may usefully impact programmes aimed at checking health inequities between developing and developed countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
267. Evolution of University Third Mission Activities in Slovakia: What Role for a Public Policy?
- Author
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Rehák, Štefan, Šipikal, Miroslav, and Lešková, Alexandra
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,TELEPHONE interviewing ,STATE universities & colleges ,DEVELOPED countries ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,TECHNOLOGY transfer - Abstract
Purpose: Universities are an important component of regional innovation systems. There have been a number of studies during recent years in developed countries which analysed activities of universities aiming to increase their contribution in regional innovation. The aim of this article is to explore the evolution of third mission activities of universities in Slovakia and explore the role of public policy in this process. Methodology/Approach: We used a document analysis of annual reports of all public universities in Slovakia to see which third mission activities universities claim to perform and how the situation has changed over the years. We also compared universities according to their focus and location. Several personal and telephone interviews were conducted to verify or supplement the information. Findings: We found that among all third mission activities, the greatest change was observed in research and cooperation activities with businesses. This mainly resulted from a change in government policy but mostly due to very strong support from EU structural funds. Research Limitation/implication: The study is based on annual reports of universities which do not necessarily cover all activities that universities actually perform. Originality/Value of paper: The paper provides the first complete overview of the third mission activities performed by universities in Slovakia with a focus on their development over time. Also, it identifies the role which governmental policy plays in these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
268. BUSINESS ETHICS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES.
- Author
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Rossouw, G.J.
- Subjects
BUSINESS ethics ,ETHICS ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC development ,CORPORATE culture ,EMERGING markets ,INTERNATIONAL markets ,FOREIGN investments - Abstract
Underlying this paper is the conviction that it is of utmost importance that business ethics should indeed become an integral part of business culture in all, and therefore also in developing countries. It is not to be denied that business ethics has to a much larger extent become part of the business culture in developed countries than in developing countries. In this paper, I first of all wish to provide an explanation for the fact that business ethics is fighting an uphill battle in becoming part of the business culture in developing countries. Secondly I want to give a thumbnail sketch of the preconditions that have to be fulfilled in order to stimulate the development of a moral business culture in developing countries. In order to achieve these goals I will focus mainly on Africa, and more specifically on South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
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269. Regional, disease specific patterns of smoking-attributable mortality in 2000
- Author
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Majid Ezzati and Alan D. Lopez
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Health (social science) ,Respiratory Tract Diseases ,Developing country ,Digestive System Neoplasms ,Age Distribution ,Cost of Illness ,Cause of Death ,Neoplasms ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,Sex Distribution ,Intensive care medicine ,Lung cancer ,Developing Countries ,Aged ,Cause of death ,COPD ,business.industry ,Developed Countries ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cancer ,Respiratory tract neoplasm ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Respiratory Tract Neoplasms ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,business ,Developed country ,Research Paper ,Demography - Abstract
Background: Smoking has been causally associated with increased mortality from several diseases, and has increased considerably in many developing countries in the past few decades. Mortality attributable to smoking in the year 2000 was estimated for adult males and females, including estimates by age and for specific diseases in 14 epidemiological subregions of the world. Methods: Lung cancer mortality was used as an indirect marker of the accumulated hazard of smoking. Never-smoker lung cancer mortality was estimated based on the household use of coal with poor ventilation. Estimates of mortality caused by smoking were made for lung cancer, upper aerodigestive cancer, all other cancers, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), other respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and selected other medical causes. Estimates were limited to ages 30 years and above. Results: In 2000, an estimated 4.83 million premature deaths in the world were attributable to smoking, 2.41 million in developing countries and 2.43 million in industrialised countries. There were 3.84 million male deaths and 1.00 million female deaths attributable to smoking. 2.69 million smoking attributable deaths were between the ages of 30–69 years, and 2.14 million were 70 years of age and above. The leading causes of death from smoking in industrialised regions were cardiovascular diseases (1.02 million deaths), lung cancer (0.52 million deaths), and COPD (0.31 million deaths), and in the developing world cardiovascular diseases (0.67 million deaths), COPD (0.65 million deaths), and lung cancer (0.33 million deaths). The share of male and female deaths and younger and older adult deaths, and of various diseases in total smoking attributable deaths exhibited large inter-regional heterogeneity, especially in the developing world. Conclusions: Smoking was an important cause of global mortality in 2000, affecting a large number of diseases. Age, sex, and disease patterns of smoking-caused mortality varied greatly across regions, due to both historical and current smoking patterns, and the presence of other risk factors that affect background mortality from specific diseases.
- Published
- 2004
270. Representation of authors and editors from countries with different human development indexes in the leading literature on tropical medicine: survey of current evidence
- Author
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Marcel Tanner, Jennifer Keiser, Jürg Utzinger, and Burton H. Singer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Operations research ,education ,Advisory Committees ,MEDLINE ,Library science ,Developing country ,Tropical Medicine ,Medicine ,Letters ,Human Development Index ,Developing Countries ,General Environmental Science ,Publishing ,business.industry ,Developed Countries ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Authorship ,Human development (humanity) ,Papers ,Tropical medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Periodicals as Topic ,business ,Developed country - Abstract
Objective To assess the current international representation of members of editorial and advisory boards and authors in the leading peer reviewed literature on tropical medicine. Design Systematic review. Main outcome measures Country affiliations, as classified by the human development index, of editorial and advisory board members of all tropical medicine journals referenced by the Institute of Scientific Information (ISI) as of late 2003 and of all contributing authors of full articles published in the six leading journals on tropical medicine in 2000-2. Results Sixteen (5.1%) of the 315 editorial and advisory board members from the 12 ISI referenced journals on tropical medicine are affiliated to countries with a low human development index and 223 (70.8%) to countries with a high index. Examination of the 2384 full articles published in 2000-2 in the six highest ranking tropical medicine journals showed that 48.1% of contributing authors are affiliated to countries with a high human development index, whereas the percentage of authors from countries with a low index was 13.7%. Articles written exclusively by authors from low ranked countries accounted for 5.0%. Our data indicate that research collaborations between a country with a high human development index and one that has either a medium or a low index are common and account for 26.5% and 16.1% of all full articles, respectively. Conclusion Current collaborations should be transformed into research partnerships, with the goals of mutual learning and institutional capacity strengthening in the developing world.
- Published
- 2004
271. Diving into emerging economies bottleneck: Industry 4.0 and implications for circular economy.
- Author
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Cezarino, Luciana Oranges, Liboni, Lara Bartocci, Oliveira Stefanelli, Nelson, Oliveira, Bruno Garcia, and Stocco, Lucas Conde
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EMERGING markets ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,SOLID waste ,INSTITUTIONAL environment ,DEVELOPED countries ,REMANUFACTURING - Abstract
Purpose: In this paper, the authors aim to explore the relationship between the concepts of Industry 4.0 and circular economy (CE) as a contribution to the management decision on emerging countries. By analyzing the trends of scientific production to ascertain the interface of both constructs, the purpose of this paper is to identify limitations for Industry 4.0 and CE implementation in Brazil, as well to present an original framework and strategic pathways to overcome limitations for emerging countries. Design/methodology/approach: Supported in the Brazilian case, the authors draw a framework using the structuralism approach to indicate pathways for the strategic positioning of emerging economies that consider their limitation and potential for competitive advantage. By understanding country-related limitations such as social and economic contingencies, the authors conceive a structure of implications for Brazil's capacity to develop CE in the digital era. Findings: Results show that Brazil has a reasonable, institutional and stable environment, as well as strong regulatory policies for solid waste that can stimulate CE in the country. However, it requires more communication between actors, especially public and private institutions, performing long-range relationships. Also, the country requires consolidation of industrial policies and investments in the remanufacturing process in the supply chain. Likewise, despite Brazil's ability to take advantage of CE's benefits, the country presents a huge lack of qualification to fulfill the competences that the digitization process demands. Economically, Brazil has been fighting against an economic crisis since 2014 that has limited general investments, especially in the industrial sector. Industry presents low performance and decreasing GDP participation, which leads to constant overseas production transfer as a consequence of the workforce's high costs. Research limitations/implications: The authors can affirm that Brazil is far behind developed countries in searching for the capacity to provide CE through technological industrial change. The main problems are related to the lack of articulation of public and private spheres to promote new digital business models. Therefore, the structured framework enables managers and public agents to provide solutions and to properly address supply chain bottlenecks in emerging economies. Originality/value: Exploring the relationship between the concepts of Industry 4.0 and CE through the specific lens of the structuralist method, this work can contribute to the management decision on emerging countries, looking into four important perspectives: political, economic, social and technological. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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272. THE DECLINE OF DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLANS IN DEVELOPED COUNTRIES.
- Author
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Luković, Stevan and Savićević, Marko
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DEFINED benefit pension plans ,PENSION plan funding ,PENSIONS ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Copyright of Ekonomika is the property of Society of Economists 'Ekonomika' 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
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
273. THE CHALLENGES OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION IN SCHOOLS: THE SOUTH AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE .
- Author
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Mpu, Yolanda and Adu, Emmanuel O.
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INCLUSIVE education ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Inclusive education is the term used to describe an education system in which all learners are accepted and fully included, educationally and socially. The process of inclusion proves to have challenges in developing countries such as South Africa which adopted it a bit later than the developed countries. Research has mentioned that amongst other challenges is the lack of resources and overcrowding. Hence, this paper debates and discusses the challenges in the implementation of inclusive education in South African schools. The study was designed as a multiple case study research in which a qualitative research approach was employed. Three schools in the Buffalo City Metro and three participants per school participated in the study. Qualitative data analysis was grounded on an interpretive philosophy. The findings revealed that overcrowding, insufficient training, lack of knowledge and skills of educators were the overarching themes that resulted in educators feeling a sense of inadequacy to teach in an inclusive education classroom. The study will cover the challenges faced in the implementation of inclusive education. Therefore, the study recommends that inclusive education should cater to all learners irrespective of the type of disability [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
274. Comment.
- Author
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Taylor, John B.
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CENTRAL banking industry ,MONETARY theory ,PRICE inflation ,MACROECONOMICS ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This article presents the author's comments on the paper Central Bank Behavior and the Strategy of Monetary Policy: Observations From Six Industrialized Countries, by Ben Bernanke and Frederic Mishkin. Bernanke and Mishkin have put together a useful data based on money growth, targets for money growth and monetary policy decisions in six different countries during the 1970s and 1980s. The tables, charts and narrative , based on central bank reports and contemporary commentaries, have great potential to help students of monetary economics and monetary policy sort out macroeconomics events during this period. An example of this potential is Bernanke and Mishkin's demonstration that money growth accelerated in Japan and Germany in the late 1980s, and that in both countries, attempts to stabilize exchange rates led to this acceleration. This finding deserves careful analysis by those interested in the conduct of monetary policy. According to many macroeconomic theories, these increases in money growth should have brought about an acceleration of inflation and perhaps another boom-bust cycle. In fact inflation did accelerate in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Hence, exchange rate stabilization in the 1980s could be a cause for the deterioration in macroeconomic performance in Japan and Germany in the early 1990s.
- Published
- 1992
275. Systematic Review of Longitudinal Evidence and Methodologies for Research on Neighborhood Characteristics and Brain Health.
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Michael, Yvonne L., Senerat, Araliya M., Buxbaum, Channa, Ezeanyagu, Ugonwa, Hughes, Timothy M., Hayden, Kathleen M., Langmuir, Julia, Besser, Lilah M., Sánchez, Brisa, and Hirsch, Jana A.
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NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,RACE ,RESEARCH methodology ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Objective: Synthesize longitudinal research evaluating neighborhood environments and cognition to identify methodological approaches, findings, and gaps. Methods: Included studies evaluated associations between neighborhood and cognition longitudinally among adults >45 years (or mean age of 65 years) living in developed nations. We extracted data on sample characteristics, exposures, outcomes, methods, overall findings, and assessment of disparities. Results: Forty studies met our inclusion criteria. Most (65%) measured exposure only once and a majority focused on green space and/or blue space (water), neighborhood socioeconomic status, and recreation/physical activity facilities. Similarly, over half studied incident impairment, cognitive function or decline (70%), with one examining MRI (2.5%) or Alzheimer's disease (7.5%). While most studies used repeated measures analysis to evaluate changes in the brain health outcome (51%), many studies did not account for any type of correlation within neighborhoods (35%). Less than half evaluated effect modification by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and/or sex/gender. Evidence was mixed and dependent on exposure or outcome assessed. Conclusion: Although longitudinal research evaluating neighborhood and cognitive decline has expanded, gaps remain in types of exposures, outcomes, analytic approaches, and sample diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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276. A False Accountability Narrative: The Human Rights Implications of Developed Nations Over-Testing Youth in Education.
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Harness, Melissa A. and Harness, Adam Z.
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HUMAN rights ,EDUCATION ,DEVELOPED countries ,YOUTH - Abstract
Standardized testing is a human rights issue that continues to plague the educational systems in developed nations. Within countries like the United States and the United Kingdom, vexatious accountability measures, such as those provided by standardized testing, have polarized the educational arena, leaving in its wake a litany of human rights concerns. This culmination of over-testing and outcome-only driven education equates to an end game where employment and dollar signs erode the very fabric of human rights for children. In this paper, we hope to inspire understanding of the issues of contention happening in developed nations today regarding standardized testing issues, and we will make recommendations that may help these nations move from the statistical to the enlightened view of growing responsible and civicminded citizens into the twenty-first century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
277. АНАЛІЗ СВІТОВОГО ДОСВІДУ ЩОДО ПІДХОДІВ ДО ВИЗНАЧЕННЯ ІНВАЛІДНОСТІ: ПО ШЛЯХУ РЕФОРМИ СИСТЕМИ МЕДИКО-СОЦІАЛЬНОЇ ЕКСПЕРТИЗИ.
- Author
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Борисова, І. С.
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SCIENTIFIC literature ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,LEGISLATIVE hearings ,DEVELOPED countries ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The Ukrainian system of medical and social expertise needs to revise its conceptual and methodological foundations in accordance with the realities of the current development of social sciences in the world and demand of the state regarding the modern understanding of disability. The purpose of the study was to analyze international experience and legislation on policy towards persons with disabilities and systematic approaches to the criteria of violation of functioning and the possibilities of determining the status of "person with disabilities" using the basic principles of the International Classification of Functioning (ICF), Impairment and Health to create optimal approaches to determining the criteria for disability in Ukraine. The study was based on the analysis of available scientific literature and legislative documents of developed countries on the understanding of the concept of "person with a disability". The scientometric databases used were Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and MedLine. Data from the official websites of the Political Department of the European Parliament, WHO, the United Nations, UNICEF, the World Bank. According to the results of the study, it is determined that a single state body is responsible for determining the status of a person with a disability in sustainable development countries using a multidisciplinary approach. The author identifies 3 main components that most developed countries assess when determining disability: economic, medical and social. At the same time, the main criterion is decreased performance. It has been established that since 2022, Spain has completely switched to the criteria of the International Classification of Functioning in determining the signs of disability, basing the severity of a person's condition as a degree of disability on a percentage decrease in the person's functioning. Some European countries use selective categories of the ICF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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278. Practitioner consensus on the determinants of capacity building practice in high-income countries
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Roger Hughes, Elizabeth Swanepoel, and Ann Fox
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Canada ,Capacity Building ,Consensus ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Nutritional Sciences ,Delphi method ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Likert scale ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Content validity ,Medicine ,Humans ,Nutritionists ,Medical education ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Public health ,Developed Countries ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Australia ,Capacity building ,Workforce development ,Research Papers ,United Kingdom ,United States ,Conceptual framework ,The Conceptual Framework ,Public Health ,business - Abstract
ObjectiveTo assess and develop consensus among experienced public health nutrition practitioners from high-income countries regarding conceptualisation of capacity building in practice, and to test the content validity of a previously published conceptual framework for capacity building in public health nutrition practice.DesignA Delphi study involving three iterations of email-delivered questionnaires testing a range of capacity determinants derived from the literature. Consensus was set at >50 % of panellists ranking items as ‘very important’ on a five-point Likert scale across three survey rounds.SettingPublic health nutrition practice in Australia, the UK, Canada and the USA.SubjectsPublic health nutrition practitioners and academics.ResultA total of thirty expert panellists (68 % of an initial panel of forty-four participants) completed all three rounds of Delphi questionnaires. Consensus identified determinants of capacity building in practice including partnerships, resourcing, community development, leadership, workforce development, intelligence and quality of project management.ConclusionsThe findings from the study suggest there is broad agreement among public health nutritionists from high-income countries about how they conceptualise capacity building in public health nutrition practice. This agreement suggests considerable content validity for a capacity building conceptual framework proposed by Baillieet al. (Public Health Nutr12, 1031–1038). More research is needed to apply the conceptual framework to the implementation and evaluation of strategies that enhance the practice of capacity building approaches by public health nutrition professionals.
- Published
- 2014
279. Rethinking Economic Growth in a Globalizing World : An Economic Geography Lens
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Venables, Anthony J.
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TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ,MARKET ACCESS ,PRODUCERS ,INTERMEDIATE INPUTS ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ,POLICY INSTRUMENT ,VALUE ADDED ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,RECIPROCAL EXTERNALITIES ,ECONOMIC REFORMS ,PRICE DIFFERENCES ,TERMS OF TRADE ,EXTERNALITIES ,EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC PROCESSES ,POLICY MAKERS ,FINANCIAL SECTOR ,INCOME ,MACROECONOMICS ,EXPORT GROWTH ,FEDERAL RESERVE ,POLICY ISSUES ,PRODUCTIVITY ,FACTOR ENDOWMENTS ,INVESTING ,CAPITAL INVESTMENTS ,RULE OF LAW ,INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES ,PRO-POOR GROWTH ,PER CAPITA INCOME ,EXTERNALITY ,GROWTH THEORY ,OPPORTUNISTIC BEHAVIOR ,AVERAGE COSTS ,LONG-RUN GROWTH ,RELATIVE INCOME ,INVESTMENT CLIMATES ,TRADE POLICY ,RAPID GROWTH ,DEVELOPMENT PRACTITIONERS ,POLICY MEASURES ,NPL ,DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS ,INTERMEDIATE GOODS ,LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES ,POLICY CHANGE ,MARKET MECHANISM ,BID ,GROWTH PROCESS ,INFORMAL ECONOMY ,FEDERAL RESERVE BANK ,POLLUTION ,WAGES ,GLOBAL ECONOMY ,TRADE BARRIERS ,PROPERTY RIGHTS ,LABOR MARKET ,MARKET MECHANISMS ,EMPIRICAL WORK ,SECTOR ACTIVITY ,GDP PER CAPITA ,ECONOMIC LITERATURE ,ENVIRONMENTAL ,POVERTY REDUCTION ,PUBLIC SECTOR ,INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE ,WORLD INCOME DISTRIBUTION ,INCOME LEVELS ,MACROECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT ,POLICY IMPLICATIONS ,ECONOMIC BENEFITS ,EQUILIBRIUM ,LABOR MOBILITY ,PRICE CHANGES ,GROWTH PROSPECTS ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,RETURN ,RENTS ,INNOVATION ,DEVELOPED COUNTRIES ,POLICY RESPONSES ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,ECONOMIC THEORY ,CONSUMERS ,INVESTMENT CLIMATE ,PRODUCTION PROCESS ,ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ,ECONOMIC PROGRESS ,GDP ,CHLORINE ,WAGE RATES ,ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY ,PRO-POOR ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,FACTOR MARKETS ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ,EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION ,COUNTRY CASE ,EXPORTS ,FOREIGN MARKETS ,PRODUCT MARKETS ,MARKET SIZE ,INDUSTRIAL POLICY ,INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,SUPPLIERS ,THEORETICAL MODELS ,DIMINISHING RETURNS TO SCALE ,HUMAN CAPITAL ,EQUIPMENT ,ECONOMIC POLICIES ,PECUNIARY EXTERNALITIES ,COORDINATION FAILURE ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,POLICY INTERVENTION ,COORDINATION FAILURES ,MULTIPLE EQUILIBRIA ,ECONOMIC POLICY ,GOVERNMENT SPENDING ,SECURE PROPERTY RIGHTS ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,FOREIGN MARKET ,COMPETITIVE MARKET ,INTERNATIONAL BANK ,GLOBAL MARKETS ,MARKET FAILURES ,MONETARY FUND ,GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT ,FISCAL POLICIES ,GLOBALIZATION ,INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS ,ECONOMICS ,TRADING ,INCREASING RETURNS ,DIVISION OF LABOR ,PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION ,SCALE EFFECTS ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,INCOME GROWTH ,NATURAL RESOURCES ,PUBLIC GOODS ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,LABOR FORCE ,CHECKS ,ECONOMIC REVIEW PAPERS ,ECONOMIC RESEARCH ,DIMINISHING RETURNS ,LONG RUN ,PRODUCTION PATTERNS ,LEVEL PLAYING FIELD - Abstract
This paper argues that cumulative causation processes are fundamental to understanding growth and development. Such processes derive from spatially concentrated increasing returns to scale including thick market effects, knowledge spillovers, sectoral and urban clustering, and self-reinforcing improvements in physical and social infrastructure. These sources of agglomeration have been extensively analyzed in the economic geography literature. They imply that spatial unevenness in economic activity and incomes is an equilibrium outcome. Growth tends to be 'lumpy,' with some sectors in some countries growing fast while other countries lag. The policy challenge is to lift potential new centers of economic activity to the point where they can reap the productivity and investment climate advantages of increasing returns and cumulative causation.
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- 2008
280. Female top managers and firm performance.
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Martínez-Zarzoso, Inmaculada
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ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,GREAT men & women ,LABOR productivity ,CORPORATE culture ,DEVELOPED countries ,FEMALES - Abstract
This paper uses firm-level data worldwide to investigate productivity gaps between female and male-managed companies in developing and developed countries and compare the outcomes obtained for different regions in the world. The main aim is to shed some light on the debate around the existence of performance differences when females participate in managerial activities. The main results indicate that it is crucial to distinguish between female management and female ownership and the confluence between both. We find that when the firms have a top female manager and ownership is exclusively male, firms show higher average labor productivity. We argue that firms owned by males belong to male-dominated corporate culture and would only select a female manager if she is more competent than potential male candidates. These results are very heterogeneous among regions, of which South Saharan Africa, East Asia, and South Asia are driving the main results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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281. Homogeneous Adaboost Ensemble Machine Learning Algorithms with Reduced Entropy on Balanced Data.
- Author
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Ramakrishna, Mahesh Thyluru, Venkatesan, Vinoth Kumar, Izonin, Ivan, Havryliuk, Myroslav, and Bhat, Chandrasekhar Rohith
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DEVELOPING countries ,ENTROPY ,DEVELOPED countries ,DATA mining ,DECISION trees - Abstract
Today's world faces a serious public health problem with cancer. One type of cancer that begins in the breast and spreads to other body areas is breast cancer (BC). Breast cancer is one of the most prevalent cancers that claim the lives of women. It is also becoming clearer that most cases of breast cancer are already advanced when they are brought to the doctor's attention by the patient. The patient may have the evident lesion removed, but the seeds have reached an advanced stage of development or the body's ability to resist them has weakened considerably, rendering them ineffective. Although it is still much more common in more developed nations, it is also quickly spreading to less developed countries. The motivation behind this study is to use an ensemble method for the prediction of BC, as an ensemble model aims to automatically manage the strengths and weaknesses of each of its separate models, resulting in the best decision being made overall. The main objective of this paper is to predict and classify breast cancer using Adaboost ensemble techniques. The weighted entropy is computed for the target column. Taking each attribute's weights results in the weighted entropy. Each class's likelihood is represented by the weights. The amount of information gained increases with a decrease in entropy. Both individual and homogeneous ensemble classifiers, created by mixing Adaboost with different single classifiers, have been used in this work. In order to deal with the class imbalance issue as well as noise, the synthetic minority over-sampling technique (SMOTE) was used as part of the data mining pre-processing. The suggested approach uses a decision tree (DT) and naive Bayes (NB), with Adaboost ensemble techniques. The experimental findings shown 97.95% accuracy for prediction using the Adaboost-random forest classifier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
282. Determinants of Honey Consumption with Special Reference to the Influence of Nutritional Knowledge and Health Status on Consumption Habits.
- Author
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Kowalczuk, Iwona, Stangierska, Dagmara, Widera, Katarzyna, Fornal-Pieniak, Beata, and Latocha, Piotr
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HONEY ,HEALTH literacy ,CONSUMER behavior ,FOOD consumption ,HEALTH behavior ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Featured Application: The results presented in this paper provide a reference point on the important determinants of honey consumption which can help honey marketers to promote consumer buying behaviour as well as provide doctors and nutritionists with arguments to encourage higher honey consumption by patients. Due to its sensory qualities and therapeutic properties, honey is a desirable dietary ingredient. Despite the growing interest in proper nutrition in developed countries, honey consumption in developed countries is relatively low. This is also true in Poland. Hence, research was undertaken to determine Polish consumers' behaviour with regard to honey, and its determinants, with particular emphasis on nutritional knowledge and health status. The relationships between the different aspects of consumer behaviour in the honey market and the demographic and economic characteristics of the respondents were verified using the Mann–Whitney U test for comparisons of non-dependent groups for variables on an interval scale. A multiple regression model was developed to examine the relationship between the respondents' nutritional knowledge and their honey-related behaviour, while the relationship between the respondents' health status and their behaviour towards honey was verified using a logistic regression model. Obtained results indicate that gender, age, education, and income differentiate consumers' behaviour with regard to honey. The level of nutritional knowledge had a moderate effect on variations in the respondents' behaviour. A better assessment of health status was associated with greater importance of nutritional-health motivators of honey consumption, while poorer health status determined a greater importance of such determinants as the place where honey is sold or its label attractiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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283. The role of digitalization in the FDI -- income inequality relationship in developed and developing countries.
- Author
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Van Bon Nguyen
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *FOREIGN investments , *MOMENTS method (Statistics) ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Purpose -- The study aims to use individuals using the internet and fixed broadband subscriptions as a proxy for digitalization to empirically assess the effects of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), digitalization and their interaction on income inequality in developed and developing countries from 2002 to 2019. Design/methodology/approach -- The paper used the system general method of moments estimators for 30 developed and 35 developing countries. Findings -- FDI increases income inequality in developed countries but decreases it in developing countries, digitalization reduces income inequality in both groups and interaction term narrows income inequality in developed countries but widens it in developing countries. Originality/value -- The paper is the first to introduce digitalization into the FDI -- income inequality relationship. Furthermore, it provides empirical evidence to show the difference in the role of digitalization in this relationship between developed and developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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284. Supplier diversity for socially responsible purchasing: an empirical investigation in Brazil.
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Miguel, Priscila L.S. and Tonelli, Maria José
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BUSINESS enterprises ,DEVELOPED countries ,SOCIAL impact ,SUPPLIERS ,PURCHASING - Abstract
Purpose: Based on a critical lens, this paper aims to empirically evaluate the adoption of programs to buy from minority suppliers (MS) and their outcomes in Brazil, considering a multi-stakeholder approach (buying companies, suppliers and third parties). Design/methodology/approach: The data were collected via an exploratory survey involving 109 buying companies and two case studies with 21 in-depth interviews. Findings: It was revealed that supplier diversity (SD) in Brazil is still developing, and is more rhetoric than a practice promoting real change. The current traditional procurement mindset, the role of third parties, and the focus on supplier selection, rather than on supplier development prevents a social impact that could reduce inequality between MS and their counterparts. Originality/value: Previous studies were focused on buying companies' perspective in advanced countries that have clear regulation for SD. By exploring the phenomenon in a country with great economic disparities and no regulation, and using a critical lens, this study highlights the difference between desired and effective implementation of social initiatives that promote inclusiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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285. Scarcity of research on psychological or psychiatric states using validated questionnaires in low- and middle-income countries: A ChatGPT-assisted bibliometric analysis and national case study on some psychometric properties.
- Author
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Rudan, Duško, Marčinko, Darko, Degmečić, Dunja, and Jakšić, Nenad
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PSYCHIATRY ,NARCISSISM ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,CULTURE ,MIDDLE-income countries ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,DEVELOPED countries ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,USER interfaces ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,BORDERLINE personality disorder ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,LOW-income countries ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MENTAL depression ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,ANXIETY ,SHAME ,DEVELOPING countries ,SELF-mutilation ,RESOURCE-limited settings - Abstract
Background It is vital to assess whether research on psychological or psychiatric states using validated questionnaires is still lagging in low- and middle-income countries and to what degree, and to continue to assess the psychometric properties of the most informative questionnaires. Methods We performed a bibliometric analysis of Web of Science Core Collection for all years to determine the number of studies performed in each country that used an inventory or a questionnaire on aggression, anxiety, depression, borderline personality, narcissism, self-harm, shame, or childhood trauma. We conducted a simple observational analysis of distributions by countries to derive the main overall conclusions, assisted by ChatGPT to test its ability to summarise and interpret this type of information. We also carried out a study in Croatia to examine some psychometric properties of five commonly used questionnaires, using Cronbach's a coefficient and zero-order correlations. Results We observed a concentration of research activity in a few high-income countries, primarily the United States and several European nations, suggesting a robust research infrastructure and a strong emphasis on studying psychological and psychiatric states within their population. In contrast, low- and middle-income countries were notably under-represented in research on psychological and psychiatric states, although the gap seems to be closing in some countries. Turkey, Iran, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico, India, Malaysia and Pakistan have been consistently contributing an increasing number of studies and catching up with the most research-intensive high-income countries. The national case study in Croatia confirmed adequate psychometric properties of the most frequently used questionnaires. Conclusions Addressing research gaps in low- and middle-income countries is crucial, because relying solely on research from high-income countries may not fully capture the nuances of psychological and psychiatric states within diverse populations. To bridge this gap, it is essential to prioritise mental health research in low-resource settings, provide training and resources to local researchers, and establish international collaborations. Such efforts can lead to the development of culturally valid questionnaires, an improved understanding of psychological and psychiatric states in diverse contexts, and the creation of effective interventions to promote mental well-being on a global scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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286. ROLE OF HARVARD DATAVERSE PROJECT IN RESEARCH DATA MANAGEMENT SERVICES.
- Author
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Arora, Surbhi and Chakravarty, Rupak
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DEVELOPING countries ,DATA management ,RESEARCH personnel ,WORK sharing ,DEVELOPED countries ,LIFE sciences ,INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
Purpose: To simplify working with and sharing research data, researchers want infrastructures that provide the highest level of accessibility, stability, and reliability. The Harvard Dataverse Project (HDP) (https://dataverse.org/) is compiling a growing list of such infrastructures. In this regard, the objective of this paper is to provide an overview through an analysis of the activities of the Dataverse website in managing research data. Design/ Methodology/ Approach: The study examines the statistics systems and other critical resources concerning upload and use the dataverse/ datasets/ files upto October 2022. This includes the creation of dataverse, category of dataverse, uploaded total datasets, file downloads trend, publication of dataverse or datasets, most approachable subject to share and browse data, the most recommended file type of research data and access level of research data. The basic resources include top metadata sources and data citation standards of dataverse project. Findings: It is noted that behaviours associated with structured study outcomes are more evident in developed countries as opposed to developing countries according to top author affiliation which is from the USA. The findings also show that research data in Medicine, Health, and Life Sciences is more uploaded and structured, whereas data in Social Sciences is more browsed and structured. Overall, the generation of dataverses, datasets, files, their downloads, and publication dataset is on the rise. The maximum contribution of data developers is found as Master, Daniel M. and Stager, Lawrence E whereas research project category and data and image file format are seen as highly used to organize data. On the dataverse website, good citation standards are being noticed, as well as the fact that 97 percent of data are available to reuse because contributors waive their copyright licences under CC0. Originality/ Value: This study presented an overall picture of the growing research data practices throughout the investigation on the Harvard Dataverse platform. The research proposed best practices focused on RDM operations to improve the amount of Research Data activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
287. MANAGING REFUGEES AND SUPER-DIVERSITY IN MALAYSIA.
- Author
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Talib @ Khalid, Kartini Aboo and Abdullah, Nur Atiqah Tang
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CONVENTION Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951) ,FORCED migration ,REFUGEES ,POSTCOLONIALISM ,DEVELOPED countries ,LEGAL aid ,CULTURAL pluralism ,INSTITUTIONAL environment - Abstract
The phenomenon of super-diversity in Malaysia is inevitable, and one of the causes other than the influx of migrants is refugees. Managing refugees in Malaysia indicates the loopholes in a collection of literature and practices. This article is a research note addressing the contemporary findings on challenges in managing refugees. Also, it discusses the timeline of migration in this country, which occurred in three contexts of before, during and post-colonial periods. Although Malaysia is not a signatory to the Refugee Convention of 1951, it still hosts more than a hundred thousand refugees of various origins. Thus, the challenges demand the state to deliberately manage arising issues on security, logistical accommodation, legal aid, and health provision. Following these new challenges and current demands, the government must move forward with effective and efficient ways of learning the best practices from the developed nations to manage refugees with a paradigm shift of accepting super-diversity and refugees as a reality rather than as issues. Institutional change is necessary to review the "paper citizens" mindset into pragmatic management on new possible markets and talents for human capital and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
288. The Portrayal of Homeland Reminiscences in Sunetra Gupta's Memories of Rain and A Sin of Colour.
- Author
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S., Rajkumar and M., Vijayakumar
- Subjects
HUMAN skin color ,DEVELOPED countries ,IDENTITY crises (Psychology) ,DIASPORA ,REMINISCENCE ,MEMORY ,LONELINESS - Abstract
Diaspora is a crucial part of colonialism since it typically consists of millions of individuals who left their homelands in search of better opportunities overseas, frequently to industrialized nations. Majority of the novels written by diasporic writers explore the themes of upheaval, alienation, loneliness, and selfdiscovery. Leaving homeland is a distressing phenomenon whether it is voluntary or forcible. Authors of diasporic ancestry effectively express the emotional and physical suffering endured by their protagonists upon relocation to a new locale. Diaspora individuals are emotionally and physically split from their natives and the rest of the world, despite being crowned, projected, known and loved in their new society. Sunetra Gupta, an eminent member of the Indian diaspora, examines the experience of immigrants in the United States by employing her characters. In the select novels of Sunetra Gupta, people find serenity by staying in their own country. They are delighted and content since their prior experiences have left positive and lasting impressions in their minds. This paper attempts to explain and analyze the problems that Moni, Nikarika and Debendranath face in Memories of Rain and A Sin of Colour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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289. Decolonial theories: origin, categories, and critical intents.
- Author
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Soto, Damián Pachón and Yolima Torres Tafúr, Karen
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MODERNITY ,DECOLONIZATION ,COLONIES ,DEVELOPED countries ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
Copyright of Análisis is the property of Universidad Santo Tomas 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
- 2023
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290. Health technology assessment agencies: an international overview of organizational aspects
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Francesco, Martelli, LA TORRE, Giuseppe, Di Ghionno, E., Tommaso, Staniscia, Massimo, Neroni, Americo, Cicchetti, Von Bremen, K., Walter, Ricciardi, and Ni Hta Collaborative Group
- Subjects
Modalities ,Technology Assessment, Biomedical ,Health Policy ,Developed Countries ,Health technology ,International Agencies ,Public administration ,agencies ,health technology assessment ,international comparison ,organizational aspects ,Work (electrical) ,Central government ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Agency (sociology) ,Paper report ,Humans ,Business ,Developed country - Abstract
Objectives:The aim of the study is to make an international comparison of Health Technology Assessment (HTA) Agencies, to show their similarities and differences.Methods:An e-mail questionnaire was sent to thirty HTA agencies internationally. Questions related to the structure of the agency, the relationship with health-related institutions, the prescriptiveness of the decisions taken, the main core and the modalities to spread the assessment, and the type of funding.Results:Twenty-four HTA Agencies answered the questionnaire: 25 percent in America, 4.2 percent in Australia, and 70.8 percent in Europe. Fifty-four percent of HTA Agencies are governmental institutions (83.3 percent have central government funding), while 62.5 percent have relationships with health-related governmental institutions. Of the agencies, 87 percent reported that their decisions are not prescriptive, while for 20.8 percent and 8.3 percent of them stated that this was the case totally or partially, respectively, especially for the governmental and American Agencies. Seventeen agencies (70.8 percent) declared their work on multiannual programs (77 percent of the governmental HTA Agencies and 100 percent of the American ones). The assessments mainly addressed diagnostic procedures (85.7 percent) and pharmaceuticals (25 percent). The most common way to disseminate results is by means of paper report (91.7 percent), followed by the Internet (16.7 percent), and seminars to expert audiences (12.5 percent).Conclusions:The comparative analysis of HTA Agencies showed that governmental and American Agencies have a profound impact on the prescriptiveness of their assessment, and this could be linked to the fact that these types of Agencies work on multiannual programs. European and American HTA Agencies have many similarities in terms of type of assessment, funding, and dissemination of results.
- Published
- 2007
291. Integrating drones into NHS patient diagnostic logistics systems: Flight or fantasy?
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Oakey, Andy, Grote, Matt, Smith, Angela, Cherrett, Tom, Pilko, Aliaksei, Dickinson, Janet, and AitBihiOuali, Laila
- Subjects
VERTICALLY rising aircraft ,HAZARDOUS substances ,MEDICAL personnel ,DIAGNOSTIC specimens ,DEVELOPED countries ,TAXI service - Abstract
Healthcare accounts for approximately 5% of emissions in developed nations, and the public healthcare provider in the United Kingdom (UK), the National Health Service (NHS), has set a target to reach net-zero emissions by 2040 without detriment to its quality of patient care. With Uncrewed Aerial Vehicles (UAVs; a.k.a. drones, UAS, or RPAS) starting to be used in healthcare systems outside the UK, there is interest in how they could be integrated into NHS operations to transport diagnostic specimens. Reflecting on a business-as-usual analysis of current NHS diagnostic specimen logistics across the Solent region (southern UK), this paper critically evaluates the practical reality of integrating UAV deliveries of this commodity, identifying the benefits and challenges that must be addressed to realise commercial services, including dangerous goods legislation, cargo stability, routing, and weather. In the analysis, 14 out of 79 surgeries could be realistically served by a 5m wingspan vertical take-off/landing (VTOL) UAV: seven directly, and seven via ground-based transfers. The results suggested that an average of 1,628 samples could be served by UAV each week, resulting in 42 flights/week with 10 taxi services to cover periods where weather limited flying. This equated to an approximate total service cost of £2,964/week if regulations develop to relax UAV personnel constraints. The introduction of UAVs reduced the marginal external costs (greenhouse gas emissions, congestion, and air pollution) by £196 per week and cut travel times to UAV served sites by 72% (weather permitting). Tailpipe emissions (excl. taxis), vehicle-kilometres travelled, and van costs were reduced by 20%, 20%, and 23% (respectively), but the overall system cost increased by 56%. Whilst this increase is likely to make the introduction of UAV services financially challenging, the benefits in terms of emissions and journey time savings may offset some of the additional cost and warrant further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
292. Transport equipment network analysis: the value-added contribution.
- Author
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Hernández García, Luis Gerardo
- Subjects
COMPUTER networking equipment ,COMMUNITIES ,INPUT-output analysis ,VALUE chains ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Emerging in the twenty-first century, Network Science provides practical measures to interpret a system's interactions between the components and their links. Literature has focused on countries' interconnections on the final goods, but its application on the value-added from a network perspective in trade is still imitated. This paper applies network science properties and a multi-regional input–output analysis by using the UNCTAD-Eora Global Value Chain Database on the Transport Equipment value added on 2017 to unwrap the specific structural characteristics of the industry. Results show that the industry is highly centralized. The center of the network is dominated by developed countries, mainly from Europe, the United States, and Japan. Emerging countries such as China, Mexico, Thailand, and Poland also have an important position. In addition, the structure reveals two sub-hubs located in East Europe and North America. By extending to community detection, the network consists of three different communities led by Germany, the United States, and the United Kingdom, associated with more significant value-added flows. The study concludes that flows are not always consistent with the economy's geographical location as usually final goods analysis suggests, and highlight the need to continue using the complex network to reveal the world trade structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
293. Using Minimum Actuators to Control Shape and Stress of a Double Layer Spherical Model Under Gravity and Lateral Loadings.
- Author
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Saeed, Najmadeen, Katebi, Javad, Manguri, Ahmed, Mahmood, Aram, Szczepanski, Marcin, and Jankowski, Robert
- Subjects
LATERAL loads ,INTERIOR-point methods ,ACTUATORS ,QUADRATIC programming ,SEARCH algorithms ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Spherical domes are picturesque structures built in developed countries to attract tourists. Due to horizontal and vertical overloading, the structures' attractive shapes may be disturbed, and some members' stress may exceed the elastic level. In this paper, the shape and stress of a deformed double-layer spherical numerical model due to simultaneous lateral and vertical loadings are controlled, meanwhile, the number of actuators to alter the length of active members is minimized. The nodal displacements of the outer shape of the numerical model of the double-layer spherical structure are nullified. In addition, the stress of the members of the structure was monitored to stay within the elastic level. Moreover, the number of used actuators was minimized. These objectives are done by subjecting controlling formulations to a function that finds the minimum of constrained nonlinear multivariable which is called fmincon. The defined function in MATLAB uses one of the optimization algorithms (sequential quadratic programming, interior point, trust-region reflective, and active set). The algorithms search for active members that have a significant influence in controlling the targeted joints and members. Furthermore, the algorithms exclude the inactive actuators in several loops. The results obtained from MATLAB program are validated by SAP2000 software. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
294. Transferability of Safety Performance Functions: The Case of Urban Four-Lane Divided Roadways in Muscat.
- Author
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Alkaaf, Khalid Ahmed and Abdel-Aty, Mohamed
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,SPEED limits ,ROADS ,PROPERTY damage ,DEVELOPED countries ,TRAFFIC safety - Abstract
The Highway Safety Manual (HSM) initial version provides several safety performances functions (SPFs) that can be used to predict collisions on a roadway network. The calibration of the HSM SPFs for Fatal and Injury (FI), Property Damage Only (PDO), and Total crashes for Urban Four-lane Divided Roadway Segments (U4D) in Muscat, Sultanate of Oman, and the development of new SPFs were investigated in this paper. The HSM SPFs were calibrated first with the HSM methodology, and then new forms of specific SPFs were evaluated for Muscat urban roads to determine the best model using the Poisson-Gamma regression technique. The results of this study show that the HSM calibrated SPFs provide the best fit of the data used in this study and would be the best SPFs for predicting collisions in the City of Muscat. The developed collision model describes the mean crash frequency as a function of the natural logarithm of the annual average daily traffic, segment length, and speed limit. Overall, this study provides an important foundation for the implementation of HSM methods in Muscat city, and it may aid in making SPFs established in more developed countries adaptable for use in less developed countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
295. The big cost of big medicine – calculating the rent in private healthcare.
- Author
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Stelzner, Mark Joseph and Nam, Daniel Taekmin
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH insurance ,PATENT law ,MARKET power ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
As a country, the United States spends significantly more on healthcare than other advanced industrialized countries, and Americans have comparably worse health outcomes. Both are developments of the last four decades. In this paper, we look at how change in antitrust and patent law and thus change in market power in the largest four subsectors of healthcare, hospitals, physician groups, prescription drugs, and net medical insurance, have contributed to the increasing cost of medical care in the United States. We show that the annual rent – the degree to which health care is overpriced as a result of market power – was between 2.47 and 4.30 percent of GDP in 2016 – truly a big cost for big medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
296. How collective bargaining shapes poverty: New evidence for developed countries.
- Author
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Pineda‐Hernández, Kevin, Rycx, François, and Volral, Mélanie
- Subjects
DEVELOPED countries ,INCOME inequality ,NEGOTIATION ,POVERTY rate ,POVERTY - Abstract
Although many studies point to the significant influence of collective bargaining (CB) institutions on earnings inequalities, evidence on how these institutions shape poverty rates across developed economies remains surprisingly scarce. This paper explicitly addresses the relationship between CB systems and working‐age poverty rates before and after taxes and transfers in 24 developed countries over the period 1990–2015. Our results show that countries with a more centralized CB system, a more extended bargaining coverage rate and/or a higher trade union density display significantly lower poverty rates. However, these results only hold in a post‐tax benefit scenario. Controlling for country and time fixed effects and a wide range of covariates, our estimates indeed suggest that the poverty‐reducing effect of CB institutions stems from the political strength of trade unions in promoting public social spending rather than from any direct effect on earnings inequalities. Sensitivity tests for endogeneity and overlapping samples support this conclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
297. Corporate sustainability performance and firm performance researchLiterature review and future research agenda.
- Author
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Goyal, Praveen, Rahman, Zillur, and Kazmi, A.A.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,LITERATURE ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,PERFORMANCE management ,SUSTAINABLE development ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to present a taxonomy of available literature on the relation of sustainability performance and firm performance, and to provide a path for future research for this field of study. Design/methodology/approach – Research papers were collected on sustainability performance assessment from various journals available at different online databases. The unit of evaluation was a full paper published in one of the relevant journals. Papers were classified in different categories and tabulated under various classes. A total of 101 research paper sources were studied and assessed in terms of nature of research, level of analysis, and application. Findings – The review reveals that most of the research in the field of sustainability performance and firm performance association, analyzed this relationship in developed countries. The result differs in various cultural and economic contexts and there is no universally accepted direction of this relationship. Contribution of research has also revealed a pattern of growth in recent years. Financial performance is used in most of the research as a proxy to firm performance. As discussed, the different research gaps may be exploited for further research. It also argues that further empirical research in relation of corporate sustainability performance and firm performance is required in developing countries. Research limitations/implications – The findings of this paper can be generalized only to the specific population of online databases selected for this research for a given period of time and not for the entire universe of the sustainability performance literature. There may be various unexploited areas for future research in terms of different variables. Originality/value – This paper fulfils the need of a comprehensive review of corporate sustainability performance assessment literature. It provides a literature review and bibliography for the period between January 1992 and March 2011 for the use of both academicians and practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
298. CHALLENGES OF ECOLOGICAL MODERNIZATION IN EU'S EASTERN PERIPHERY. THE CASE OF ROMANIA.
- Author
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NICOLESCU, Valentin Quintus and NEAGA, Diana Elena
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,DEVELOPED countries ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) - Abstract
The need for urgent actions regarding the worsening climate crisis has been stressed over and over again through campaigns, reports, international conferences and treaties regarding climate, there are various discussions regarding the best ways to mitigate the crisis and strategic actions are taken at various levels, from local to national and international. But unfortunately, there is still not a clear and cohesive effort to address the climate crisis at a global level, and therefore the many local and national initiatives have little impact in terms of decreasing or reversing the effects of climate change. Thus, one can note that the different approaches to the climate issue by various states are shaped by their particular economic and infrastructural development. In this respect, we can understand the climate action not as a sort of a reductionist policy in relation to the classic coal and petroleum-based economy, but as a strategy of ecological modernization. From this perspective we are asking what are the challenges of ecological modernization for a particular category of states - the postcommunist periphery of the European Union, such is the case of Romania, which is, alongside Bulgaria, one of the least developed countries amongst the post-communist camp. We will try to explore the way in which Romania is trying to shape its 21st century strategy for eco-modernization and how, at the same time, it's trying to fall in line with the European requirements that the EU assumed as a part of the Paris Agreement and through the European Green Deal. Therefore, in our paper we are trying to answer the following questions: how is Romania dealing with its post-communist industrial past in terms of eliminating sources of pollution, switching to sustainable energy and designing public policies aimed to engender a greener economy? What is the role the Eu should play in relation to its less developed members? We are planning to address the above mentioned questions by using Joseph Huber's theoretical framing of the concept of ecological modernization, and also Martin Jänicke's approach to the concept to provide a better understanding of the challenges faced by Romania in its struggle to tackle the climate crisis, and of the ways in which these can be successfully mitigated by the Romanian authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
299. Two epochal turns of inequality, their significance, and their dynamics.
- Author
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Therborn, Göran
- Subjects
PUBLIC demonstrations ,PROTEST movements ,EQUALITY ,DEVELOPING countries ,POSTINDUSTRIAL societies ,DEVELOPED countries ,POVERTY reduction - Abstract
At the end of the twentieth century, two historical turns of economic inequality happened. Among the developed countries of the Global North, the secular trend of decreasing intra-national inequality turned into its opposite. At about the same time, the long period of global inequality began to bend down, among households as well as among nations, a turn less noticed but more significant than the reduction of extreme poverty in the South. The foundation of the former turn was the beginning of de-industrialization in the North, and the coming of a post-industrial society, very different from the one predicted. The paper analyzes the trigger of the turn and the central dynamics of the new inequality in the rich North, financialization, and the digital revolution. It then tries to answer two questions about the global turn: Was the decline of global inequality causally connected to the increase of Northern intra-national inequality? Will there be a development of industrial societies in the South? The answer to both is no. What lies ahead is more likely a global convergence of intra-national unequalization, albeit with both different and similar dynamics, as the decline of extreme poverty in the South is leading to inequality increases comparable to those of the North. Post-industrialism has no egalitarian dialectic like that of industrial capitalism, but the dynamics of the twenty-first century inequality are likely to be confronted not only with popular protest movements but also with an emergent scholarly and intellectual Egalitarian Enlightenment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
300. The Application of GIS Technology in the Management and Development of Ho Chi Minh City.
- Author
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Huynh Tan Hoi
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGY management ,REGIONAL planning ,URBAN planning ,URBAN growth ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Because of the fact that the population is constantly increasing year by year in Ho Chi Minh City, the population data management, technical infrastructure as well as urban planning and development are facing many difficult challenges due to the lack of technology, human resources, methods which are too outdated with paper documents or software that are no longer suitable. Around the world, in major developed countries, the application of GIS technology has gradually become an indispensable trend in the management, planning and development of urban areas into smart, modern cities because of its outstanding advantages compared to the previous methods. This article examines common features of the GIS information system, thereby proposing practical applications of this technology to assist in the management, planning and development of Ho Chi Minh City, take another leap to reach the finish line to become the smartest and most modern city in Vietnam in the near future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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