31,567 results on '"reforms"'
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2. (НЕ)ПОСЛІДОВНІСТЬ ЄВРОІНТЕГРАЦІЙНОГО РЕФОРМУВАННЯ ЗАКОНОДАВСТВА УКРАЇНИ ПРО ДЕРЖАВНУ ПІДТРИМКУ СІЛЬСЬКОГО ГОСПОДАРСТВА.
- Author
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Григор’єва, Х. А.
- Subjects
EUROPEAN integration ,AGRICULTURAL policy ,AGRICULTURE ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,REFORMS - Abstract
The article examines the peculiarities of the reform of agricultural protection legislation in Ukraine in the context of European integration obligations. It was concluded that the European agricultural protection model, in addition to substantive and formal components, also has a mandatory technical and legal part, which is represented by important legal mechanisms: a) land registration systems (IACS and LPIS); b) accounting and analytical networks (FADN); c) institutional and functional structures (national payment agencies). European integration transformations in the domestic agro-protection sphere should concern all three components at once: substantive component (specific support mechanisms), formal component (compliance with legislation), technical-legal component (creation of an implementation environment for successful implementation of legislative requirements). In the course of our research, the imbalance of the European integration reform of domestic agricultural protection legislation was recorded. Such an imbalance is manifested in the active anticipatory development of the technical and legal component and in the passivity of rule-making in relation to the substantive and formal parts of the agro-protection model. The identified disproportionality can lead to future legislative problems and conflicts. Perhaps the lawmaker is postponing the reform (or at least its conceptual outline), hoping that he will have time to do it relatively quickly, relying on agricultural protection regulations and EU directives. However, this task is not so simple, because each EU member country must develop its own national version of legislation on state support for agriculture, focusing on its own needs, opportunities and priorities. Given the specific circumstances of Ukraine becoming a candidate for EU membership and the ultra-crisis modern conditions of preparation for accession, Ukraine is once again taking a crooked path of European integration reform of agricultural protection legislation, which may have negative consequences. In this regard, the classic sequence of the European integration reform of legislation on state support for agriculture of Ukraine "from abstract to concrete" seems optimal, namely: 1) conceptual stage (theoretical development of a new system of agricultural protection legislation, selection of legal mechanisms and their legislative form, outline future system of legislation); 2) the rule-making stage (creating the regulatory framework for the functioning of the new support system); 3) technical stage (creation, testing, launch of necessary information products for proper implementation of legal requirements). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. СУД І СУДОЧИНСТВО В СЕЛАХ ГАЛИЧИНИ (КІНЕЦЬ XVIII – ПЕРША ПОЛОВИНА ХІХ СТ.).
- Author
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Б., Вишневський
- Subjects
LEGAL norms ,CUSTOMARY law ,LEGAL history ,JUSTICE administration ,LEGAL judgments ,PEASANTS - Abstract
The article is dedicated to the analysis of the functioning of the judicial system and the peculiarities of the judicial proceedings in the rural communities of Galicia between the end of the XVIII
th century and the first half of the XIXth century. The development of legal institutions following the annexation of Galicia to the Habsburg Monarchy is examined, particularly the introduction of the Austrian judicial system, which replaced traditional forms of rural adjudication. The primary focus is on the changes in the structure of courts, the jurisdiction of judges, the process of case hearings, and the participation of peasants in judicial proceedings. The article also characterizes the influences of political, social as well economic factors on judicial procedures and decisions. Special attention is given to the role of peasant self-governance and its integration into new legal norms. The article highlights a significant contribution to understanding the evolution of judicial proceedings in the rural areas of Galicia, which will foster a deeper comprehension of the processes of legal modernization in the Austrian Empire. It describes the impact of the Austrian administration on the judicial system, including a series of reforms aimed at unifying judicial proceedings and implementing Austrian law. This led to significant changes in the structure of the courts, their jurisdiction, and the procedures for implementing their decisions, as the peasants of Galicia had their own traditional legal customs and norms, which often conflicted with Austrian legislation. The integration processes associated with the introduction of the new justice system substantially affected the unique legal culture of the peasants, as rural courts had specific characteristics compared to urban and district courts. The article analyzes legislative acts and reforms introduced by the Austrian authorities in the field of judicial proceedings, their role, and their impact on judicial practice. It identifies the specific features of courts and judicial proceedings in the villages of Galicia during the period under study. The importance of researching this issue lies in understanding the evolution of legal norms, judicial practice, and their impact on the lives of the rural population. The study of the declared problem allows for a better understanding of the legal and social processes that took place in this part of Europe during the specified period. This not only supplements the general picture of the history of law but also helps to identify the roots of contemporary legal traditions and issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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4. Is it possible to reform police stops? Politicisation and police change in two European countries.
- Author
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de Maillard, Jacques and O'Neill, Megan
- Subjects
- *
POLICE reform , *HISTORICAL institutionalism (Sociology) , *POLICE , *REFORMS ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
In several Western countries, police stops have become the object of political controversies on what the objectives and targets of police activities should be. By using the examples of two European countries (France and Scotland) where the issue has been highly politicised over the last 15 years, we will conduct a comparative analysis to show how it has led to significant change in legislation, policy and police practice in Scotland and yet to a policy blockage in France. In both cases, police stops have been politicised through the combination of three interlinked axes: the production of critical scientific evidence, intense media coverage and forceful political attention. Differing national traditions are not sufficient to explain the divergent outcomes. Drawing upon historical institutionalism, we will underline how institutions, understood as stable sets of formal and informal rules, favour certain policy developments rather than others. We will explore how each political context has shaped the balance of constraints and opportunities for reform and we will stress the importance of the respective dynamics of reforms. While both jurisdictions experienced 'hot'political climates, certain conditions needed to be met in order for significant reform to manifest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Aspiration and Capability to Aspire: How Do French Institutions Affect Socio-Occupational Groups?
- Author
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Stephanus, Camille and Vero, Josiane
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CAPABILITIES approach (Social sciences) , *VOCATIONAL interests , *SKILLED labor , *EMPLOYABILITY , *REFORMS - Abstract
How do workers in low-skilled jobs picture their futures? How are aspirations for career reorientation activated? What influence do institutions have on the objectives that individuals pursue? How do various socio-occupational groups approach and manage their future? What are the major differences between skilled and low-skilled workers? These are some of the questions raised after a series of reforms passed in France that aim to make all individuals the genuine agents of their professional lives and pathways rather than being the passive focus of training programmes and employability initiatives. This paper seeks to investigate these issues. Based on Sen's capability approach and the French linked and longitudinal Defis surveys, we contend that French low-skilled workers are more likely to aspire to career reorientation but have less capability to aspire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. From the Chicago Boys to Hjalmar Schacht: The Trajectory of the (Neo)liberal Economic Expertise in Russia.
- Author
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Matveev, Ilya
- Subjects
- *
RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *LIBERALISM , *EXPERTISE , *CONTRADICTION , *REFORMS - Abstract
The article studies a set of ideological orientations and policy networks in Russia that could be grouped under the term "technocratic liberalism." It provides an account of the origins of the liberal economic experts, their participation in various reform projects, their political and discursive strategies. The focus is on the contradictions of the technocratic approach to reform as revealed in the discourse and actual practice of the reformers, and their attempts to overcome or avoid these contradictions that ultimately led them to the position they found themselves in after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Pedagogy of the oppressive: building the movement to abolish U.S. legal education.
- Author
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Coronado, Antonio M.
- Subjects
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LEGAL education , *LAW schools , *EDUCATIONAL change , *REFORMS , *CRITICAL pedagogy - Abstract
This essay serves as an urgent cause for action and open call to envision the abolition of U.S. law schools. Traditional legal education's current manifestation, I argue, serves as a unique system of socialization that advances harm in service of the USA as a settler nation-state. Through a historically grounded analysis of the law school as a project of exclusionary power, this essay identifies traditional U.S. legal education's (1) pedagogical harm, in the imperial curriculum and instruction of law students; (2) structural harm, in the gatekeeping of legal knowledge; and (3) ideological harm, in the training of future lawyers as agents of settler-state power. Drawing from movements of scholarship-activism in critical legal pedagogy, rhetorical studies, and abolition, this essay proposes radical reforms to the law school as footholds toward freedom. In situating the law school as a critical zone of abolitionist struggle, this essay makes the case that rhetoricians, legal scholars, and advocates aligned with the work of liberation might join across disciplines, jurisdictions, and time to advance "non-reformist reforms" to traditional U.S. legal education. Only through conscious processes of reimagination, I insist, can we more forcefully contribute to the abolition of oppressive formations of power everywhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Interest groups and EU-Turkey relations: a focused analysis on TÜSİAD and MÜSİAD.
- Author
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Günay, Orhan
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL discourse analysis , *SOCIAL factors , *SOVEREIGNTY , *REFORMS - Abstract
This study conducts a critical discourse analysis on Turkey's European Union (EU) accession, focusing on the narratives of TÜSİAD and MÜSİAD. Employing the Discourse-Historical Approach within Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), the research explores how economic, political, and social factors shape these groups' stances on EU accession. The findings reveal TÜSİAD's advocacy for economic integration and democratic reforms, in contrast with MÜSİAD's emphasis on economic sovereignty and pragmatic EU engagement. These perspectives reflect the interplay of interests within Turkish society and broader EU policy trends, highlighting these groups' roles in shaping Turkey's EU accession discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. "Top-down" local government mergers: Political and institutional factors facilitating radical amalgamation reforms.
- Author
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Callanan, Mark, Houlberg, Kurt, Raudla, Ringa, and Teles, Filipe
- Subjects
LOCAL government ,LAND consolidation ,CITIES & towns ,MONOPOLIES ,REFORMS - Abstract
Why are some countries able to go ahead with comprehensive top-down local government amalgamation reforms, despite the many challenges such a reform entails? So far, we have limited theoretical and empirical understanding of how central governments manage to adopt such reforms. Drawing on different theoretical frameworks around public policy as well as research into territorial reforms, this article presents key political and institutional factors that are likely to facilitate top-down municipal mergers and examines whether these theoretical propositions help to explain the adoption of comprehensive top-down municipal amalgamation in four cases: Denmark, Estonia, Ireland, and Portugal. Key political and institutional factors identified in existing frameworks provide a useful starting point for understanding and explaining top-down comprehensive municipal amalgamation reforms, such as the role played by the breaking up of existing policy monopolies and emergence of new venues for discussing the reform. At the same time, the cases also reveal some important nuances that at times run counter to theoretical expectations. Our cases also reveal further factors, including the "bundling" of amalgamation reforms with other wider initiatives, and the potential effect of "distracting events" that should be taken into account in the further development of theoretical frameworks concerning top-down amalgamations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Investigating the impact of vinyl acetate-ethylene polymer on the mechanical and microstructural properties of expansive clay subgrade.
- Author
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Saberian, Mohammad, Perera, Salpadoru Tholkamudalige Anupiya. M., Zhu, Jiasheng, Roychand, Rajeev, and Li, Jie
- Subjects
REFORMS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,POLYMERS ,KNOWLEDGE gap theory ,BREAKAGE, shrinkage, etc. (Commerce) - Abstract
The construction sector has undergone significant reforms towards increased sustainability in recent decades. Therefore, there has been a great interest in developing alternative binders for stabilising expansive clay subgrades and improving their mechanical properties while mitigating their swelling and shrinking behaviour. One such alternative binder is vinyl acetate-ethylene (VAE) polymers. However, there are only a few studies on utilising polymers, especially VAE polymers, for clay stabilisation. Specifically, there is a lack of research on using VAE polymer-stabilised clays for road subgrade purposes. This study aims to address this knowledge gap by evaluating the potential of using a VAE solid powder polymer to stabilise expansive clay subgrade through a comprehensive series of mechanical tests as well as physicochemical and microstructural analyses. The results of the experiments provide evidence that the introduction of the polymer considerably improved the mechanical strength and swell and shrinkage behaviour of the expansive clay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. 150 Jahre Maßgeblichkeitsgrundsatz – Zwischenbilanz und Prognose.
- Author
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Jürgen Marx, Franz
- Subjects
TAX accounting ,CAPITAL gains tax ,CAPITAL gains ,REFORMS - Abstract
Copyright of FinanzRundschau is the property of De Gruyter 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
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. DOES THE STATE HAVE AN OBLIGATION NOT TO ENFORCE THE LAW?
- Author
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THOMAS, W. ROBERT
- Subjects
LAW enforcement ,OBLIGATIONS (Law) ,CRIMINAL justice system ,REFORMS ,COUNTERPRODUCTIVITY (Labor) - Abstract
The article focuses on the state's competing obligations to enforce and not enforce the law, arguing for the existence of a general duty against maximal enforcement. It explores the reasons why excessive enforcement can be inefficient, oppressive, and counterproductive, suggesting that the state has a freestanding obligation to limit its enforcement of laws, particularly in the context of criminal justice reform and minimalism.
- Published
- 2024
13. CRIMINAL LAW MINIMALISMS.
- Author
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LEVIN, BENJAMIN
- Subjects
CRIMINAL law ,MASS incarceration ,LAW enforcement ,REFORMS - Abstract
The article focuses on criminal law minimalism, analyzing its scope and scale as a framework for reforming the U.S. criminal system. It explores key questions about what aspects of the criminal law should be minimized—such as substantive laws, carceral punishment, and policing and how much minimalism should guide institutional practices. It argues that minimalism presents both radical and pragmatic possibilities, raising critical debates about the normative vision of criminal law.
- Published
- 2024
14. Ideological origins of resistance against gender‐inclusive language reforms: Singular they as a de‐gendering or multi‐gendering strategy.
- Author
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Renström, Emma A. and Klysing, Amanda
- Subjects
- *
BINARY gender system , *GENDER identity , *PRONOUNS (Grammar) , *GENDER , *REFORMS - Abstract
Gender is traditionally conceptualized as a binary construct, which is reflected in the use of binary‐gendered third‐person pronouns. Gender‐inclusive pronouns such as singular they challenge this conceptualization, which can evoke resistance against their use. Singular they can be used generically when gender is unknown (de‐gendering), or to specifically highlight an individual's non‐binary gender identity (multi‐gendering). The different uses of singular they can threaten different ideological convictions and impact the use and perception of the pronoun. Experiment 1 (N = 599) showed that in de‐gendering contexts, participants preferred to use singular they but in multi‐gendering contexts they preferred binary pronouns. Social identification with one's gender group, RWA and binary gender views predicted less use of singular they in both contexts. In Experiment 2 (N = 199), participants evaluated sentences with singular they in de‐gendering and multi‐gendering contexts. Overall, sentences with singular they in de‐gendering contexts were more positively evaluated. SDO predicted less positive evaluations of they in de‐gendering contexts, while RWA and binary gender views predicted less positive evaluations of they in multi‐gendered contexts. The findings provide important knowledge in understanding ideological motivations for resistance against gender‐inclusive language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The Chinese idea of a university in flux: academic freedom and institutional autonomy under entrepreneurial reforms in the GBA.
- Author
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Zhu, Jun-hua and Yang, Rui
- Subjects
- *
INSTITUTIONAL autonomy , *ACADEMIC freedom , *CHINESE people , *SEMI-structured interviews , *REFORMS - Abstract
The complexity of the idea of a university has been intensified globally as more universities pursue entrepreneurship. For modern universities in China as latecomers, contemporary entrepreneurial reforms are implemented against a backdrop of ongoing interactions between Chinese and Western ideas of a university, with the Western established as the formal system and the Chinese functioning informally yet powerfully. Through 71 semi-structured interviews at four universities in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, this study explores how academic freedom and institutional autonomy are perceived by Chinese academics under entrepreneurial reforms. The study has two major findings through Clark’s analytical framework of academic, government, and market forces: (1) A novel form of statist academic freedom is emerging, merging traditional Chinese scholarly values with state-driven entrepreneurial demands; (2) The adapted
triple helix model in China emphasises competition and excellence, shaped by a unique blend of state influence and market dynamics. It offers a nuanced perspective on academic freedom and institutional autonomy amidst entrepreneurial reforms in China, highlighting a compatibility with Chinese idea of a university and a response to global entrepreneurial pressures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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16. An early reading of English planning reform under Starmer’s Labour government.
- Author
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Valler, Dave and Phelps, Nicholas A.
- Subjects
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STATE capitalism , *REFORMS - Abstract
This paper provides a tentative reading of proposed English planning reform under the Labour government elected in July 2024. Key aspects of the agenda are reviewed, together with the proposed extension of an ongoing devolution and decentralisation programme. Labour’s reforms are characterised as the leading-edge of a generally cautious ‘new state capitalism’. Though there are similarities with previous ‘roll-out neoliberal’ arrangements under the New Labour governments from 1997 to 2010, the altered political-economic context will likely reinforce some distinctiveness in terms of the meaning and implementation of reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Election administration harms and ballot design: A study of Florida's 2018 United States Senate race.
- Author
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Morse, Michael, Herron, Michael C., Meredith, Marc, Smith, Daniel A., and Martinez, Michael D.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTIONS , *BALLOTS , *SUSPICION , *VOTING , *REFORMS ,UNITED States Senate elections - Abstract
We introduce a typology of election administration harms and apply it to empirically study the consequences of ballot design. Our typology distinguishes between individual, electoral, and systemic harms. Together, it clarifies why ballot design can be a particular vulnerability in election administration. Using both ballot‐level and precinct‐level data, we revisit Florida's 2018 United States Senate race, in which Broward County's ballot design flouted federal guidelines and, according to critics, was pivotal to the outcome. We estimate that Broward's ballot design induced roughly 25,000 voters to undervote in a race determined by about 10,000 votes and that these excess undervotes were concentrated among low‐information voters. Broward's ballot did not, however, affect the outcome of the election. Nonetheless, flawed ballot designs are still concerning in an age of voter distrust. Given the risk that flawed ballots can cause systemic harm, we offer a roadmap for procedural reforms to improve ballot design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
18. Operation analysis of 3.1 MM TPY domestic continuous reforming unit.
- Author
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Pan Long, Zhang Weiqi, and Xu Kaijian
- Subjects
DUST ,SUBSTITUTION reactions ,AROMATIC compounds ,MECHANICAL wear ,REFORMS ,ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
A company's 3.1 MM TPY continuous reforming unit adopts domestic ultra-low pressure continuous reforming (SLCR) technology with indigenous intellectual property, and uses continuous reforming catalyst PS-VI. It is currently the largest domestic continuous reforming unit. During the shrink-fit assessment stage after the large-scale installation, the displacement of various equipment and pipeline supports and hangers in the reaction and regeneration system is normal and consistent with the design data. After the unit is put into operation, the trend of thermal displacement in the reaction and regeneration system is consistent with the results of the shrink-fit assessment. The performance assessment results of the unit show that, in the case where the aromatic potential content of the raw material is 7.49 percentage points lower than the design value, the liquid yield of C
5 + of the unit is 88.15%, the pure hydrogen yield is 3.80%, the mass fraction of aromatic hydrocarbon in the depentane oil is 82.84%, and the aromatic hydrocarbon conversion rate is 172% . After half a year of operation, the catalyst dust content remains stable from 8 kg/d to 12 kg/d, and all economic indicators are good. The PS-VI catalyst exhibits good reaction activity, selectivity and low wear rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. § 4g EStG und die umwandlungssteuerliche Entstrickung – Normative Würdigung am Beispiel der Verschmelzung von Kapitalgesellschaften unter Einbezug des Entwurfs zum JStG 2024 – Teil I.
- Author
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Schaumberger, Marcus, Stößel, Johannes, and Ditandy, Maximilian
- Subjects
INCOME tax ,MERGERS & acquisitions ,TAXATION ,EUROPEAN law ,CORPORATE taxes ,REFORMS - Abstract
Copyright of FinanzRundschau is the property of De Gruyter 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. From the Soviet Union to Russia: fifty years of reforms in initial teacher education.
- Author
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Kalimullin, Aydar, Valeeva, Roza, and Baklashova, Tatiana
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *TEACHER training , *CURRICULUM change , *EDUCATIONAL change , *ART teachers - Abstract
Teacher education in Russia has become the subject of considerable reform over the past 50 years. It is today a complex system of continuous training which gives students a chance to enter the profession in a number of different ways, as well as maintain their professional skill set throughout the course of their careers. This paper offers a comprehensive overview of the history and the state of art initial teacher education in Russia during the last 50 years. It aims to draw on scholarly expertise in Russia and will locate the policies and practices that are discussed within the context of teacher education reform. The main themes of the paper are the history and current practice of Russian initial teacher education. The paper will consider the relationship between policy and practice and examine the respective influences of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), and processes of wider reform in the Russian Federation since the 1990s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. A Compromise Doomed to Failure: The Soviet Practice of Greek ‘Language Construction’ in the 1920s–1930s.
- Author
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Sinitsyn, Fedor
- Subjects
- *
ORAL communication , *GREEKS , *DIALECTS , *REFORMS , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
The ‘Greek language problem’ in the USSR represented a special ‘case of complex ethno-linguistic identification,’ because in the Soviet Union, in addition to Katharevousa and Dimotiki, several dialects (languages) were used as a spoken language. In May 1926, at the first All-Union Meeting on Cultural Building among the Greeks of the USSR it was decided to abandon the use of Katharevousa. However, the reform of 1926 created the ground for a very broad interpretation. In 1932–1934, several more meetings on the ‘Greek issue’ were organized in the USSR, as well as a linguistic expedition to the places of residence of the Greeks. But the final decision on the ‘language problem’ has never been made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Polar Contradictions: China’s Dialectical Thinking About the Arctic.
- Author
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Lamazhapov, Erdem
- Subjects
- *
POLICY discourse , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *ACADEMIC discourse , *CONTRADICTION , *REFORMS - Abstract
Using China’s seemingly contradictory positions on the Arctic as a starting point, this article examines China’s official and academic Arctic discourses. This paper proposes that China’s apparently contradictory positions in the Arctic region are the result of the dialectical resolution of discursive tensions. Using an original dataset of over one thousand Chinese academic articles and books, together with China’s official statements, this article presents China’s Arctic policy discourse as a polyphonic landscape where diverse opinions and ideas compete within a discursive field. The research proposes that by utilising dialectical thinking, China is able to seek a middle ground between conflict and cooperation, between the near-Arctic state and stakeholder identities and between resource development and environmental protection. China also aims to preserve the status quo while striving to reform Arctic governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Ultrasound reforms droplets.
- Author
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Malik, Lokesh, Nandy, Subhas, Satpathi, Niladri Sekhar, Ghosh, Debasish, Laurell, Thomas, and Sen, Ashis Kumar
- Subjects
- *
HYDRODYNAMICS , *EMULSIONS , *COSMETICS , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *REFORMS - Abstract
Size-controlled monodisperse droplets are indispensable in food, cosmetics, and healthcare industries. Although emulsion formation from bulk phases is well-explored, a robust in situ method to continuously reform existing emulsions is unavailable. Remarkably, we introduce a continuous flow acousto-microfluidics technique which enables simultaneous trapping–coalescence–splitting of droplets to reform an existing polydisperse emulsion into size-controlled droplets with improved monodispersity. In contrast to conventional approaches, our platform enables controlling droplet characteristics in situ by regulating acoustic power without altering hydrodynamical parameters thereby improving response time and facilitates continuous nozzle-less clogging-free droplet generation from a liquid plug in a chamber instead of from a liquid stream at a narrow junction. The technique can process polydisperse droplets produced not only due to fluid-source fluctuations or unstable jetting regime but also externally by non-microfluidic or inexpensive setups. Our theoretical scaling suggests that the sum of capillary (Ca) and acousto-capillary (Caa) numbers ∼ (1), and predicts the generated droplet size, both agreeing well with the experimental findings. We identify acousto-visco-capillary number, Caav = (Ca Caa)1/2, which governs the generated droplet size. We also explore and characterize acoustic streaming- and coalescence-based mixing of samples inside the trapped plug. Distinctively, our platform is amenable to continuous mixing of inhomogeneous droplets, offering monodisperse mixed-sample droplets, and holds the potential to match current throughput standards through suitable design modifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The relationship between R&D element mobility and regional innovation in China: evidence from meta-analysis.
- Author
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Ge, Lanqing, Li, Chunyan, Cheng, Deli, and Fu, Chunxiao
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL development , *TECHNOLOGICAL progress , *RESOURCE allocation , *UNIVERSITY research , *REFORMS - Abstract
The mobility of R&D elements is an essential means to achieve the optimal allocation of regional resources and to promote regional high-quality development. However, there is still a wide divergence in academic research on the relationship between R&D element mobility and regional innovation, as well as a lack of evidence on the magnitude of the correlation. It constrains the effective operation of the innovation system to a certain extent. Based on this, this paper employs a meta-analysis to summarise and interpret the 411 effect values of 33 representative literature to explore the mechanism of R&D element mobility on regional innovation. The results reveal a moderate positive correlation between R&D element mobility and regional innovation. Sampling scope, sampling region, data period, mobility direction and innovation output all significantly moderate the relationship between the two. This finding is of great significance for the future reform of factor marketisation. It provides theoretical support and practical guidance for the further realisation of the goal of high-quality development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Redistricting and the 2022 Congressional Midterm Elections.
- Author
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Williamson, Ryan D.
- Subjects
- *
APPORTIONMENT (Election law) , *GERRYMANDERING , *ELECTIONS , *REFORMS - Abstract
The 2020 redistricting cycle closely resembled recent cycles in many ways, but also differed substantially in others. I, therefore, begin by discussing some of the new, unique features of redistricting. Next, I extend existing work on the impact of different redistricting methods to 2022 and discuss how the trends in the most recent cycle compare to years past. From there, I discuss how the most recent redistricting plans could impact future elections. Finally, I conclude with a discussion of ideas for future research in the areas of gerrymandering, redistricting reform, and laws around how lines are drawn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. LA MEJORA CONTINUA DE LA EDUCACIÓN: Eje de una propuesta de cambio.
- Author
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SANDOVAL FLORES, ETELVINA and RANGEL MONTALVO, KARLA
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT to education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *PUBLIC schools , *REFORMS - Abstract
Since the approval of the Political Constitution of the United Mexican States in 1917, The 3rd constitutional article has undergone 11 reforms, the last one on May 15, 2019 (Gonzalez, 2021). This reform was founded on an alternative policy model underpinned by a model of improvement that promotes the defense of public schools and the fulfillment of the right to education. On this premise, Mexican regulations put educational improvement at the center of its debate and introduced changes focused on improvement within the framework of the National System for the Continuous Improvement of Education under the coordination of a new agency: the National Commission for the Continuous Improvement of Education (in Spanish Comisión Nacional para la Mejora Continua de la Educación). The purpose of this article is to examine the progress and challenges identified by this agency to rethink the process of educational improvement in the context of the transition of government. We are interested in providing elements of analysis to evaluate the continuity of the improvements in the framework of the educational project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
27. Return to Watergate: The story of the Nixon presidency and its downfall seems fixed in amber. After fifty years, it's time to explore new research and write new histories.
- Author
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Nichter, Luke A.
- Subjects
- *
WATERGATE Affair, 1972-1974 , *CHURCH committees , *REFORMS - Published
- 2024
28. A historical turn in the study of media governance. A research agenda for Europe in times of democratic crisis.
- Author
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Corduwener, Pepijn
- Subjects
- *
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *EUROPEAN history , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *MEDIA studies , *REFORMS - Abstract
The liberalization of the media stands very much at the forefront in public, policy and academic concerns on how our current model of media governance affects democracy. But the discussion on the effects of media liberalization has obscured the vital question why liberalization was able to become the dominant media governance paradigm in the first place. This research note makes the case for a historical turn to answer this question. It argues that it is essential to contextualize media liberalization in the history of contemporary democracy in Europe rather than see it primarily through the perspective of technological innovation or top-down promotion of neo-liberal policies. It explores how three insights in historiography might form the core of a research agenda for media governance that takes history seriously. These include (a) the study of actors from below that pushed for reform outside the realm of government; (b) the influence of ideas on shaping institutional reform and (c) reading history forward rather than project today's assumptions and outcomes into the past. Jointly, this historical turn will not only provide an enhanced understanding of how past reforms shaped the present, but also enlighten prospects for future changes of media governance paradigms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Money, its functions and the moral limits of their re-design.
- Author
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Mildenberger, Carl David
- Subjects
- *
CORRUPTION , *REFORMS , *HARD currencies , *HOPE , *DESIGN - Abstract
If money is used in a market setting, and if it fulfils its three traditional functions well, this creates normative problems. Arguably, the two most pressing problems linked to markets – inequality and corruption – are partly caused by the prevailing monetary design. Given the history of suggested monetary reforms, one might reasonably hope that, by consciously re-designing the functions of a currency, one might overcome these issues. This essay argues that there are clear moral limits to this. Because of the way inequality and corruption are intertwined via money's functions, we cannot simultaneously overcome both problems. This also means that even though these problems have monetary causes, they do not have purely monetary solutions, but need to be addressed relying on fiscal or market reform as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Explaining Ukraine's resilience to Russia's invasion: The role of local governance.
- Author
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Rabinovych, Maryna, Brik, Tymofii, Darkovich, Andrii, Savisko, Myroslava, Hatsko, Valentyn, Tytiuk, Serhii, and Piddubnyi, Igor
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC debating , *REGRESSION analysis , *CITIES & towns , *REFORMS - Abstract
Resilience of local communities (territorial hromadas) is an increasingly salient matter in the academic and policy debate on the factors which have determined Ukraine's resilience to Russia's 2022 invasion. Building on existing literature on institutional resilience and its predictors, this article explains the ability of Ukrainian self‐governed municipalities to withstand the threats to institutional stability stemming from the invasion. First, it uses an exploratory qualitative design to operationalize the concept of resilience and its predictors with an account of varying experiences of Ukrainian hromadas during the full‐scale invasion (e.g., hromadas near the frontline and in the rear). Next, it presents data from open sources and the results of a regression analysis to test the impact of various groups of predictors on hromadas' resilience to the full‐scale invasion. Our models show a significant relationship between hromadas' resilience and geographical, politico‐administrative and economic predictors influenced by the outcomes of the decentralization reform conducted in Ukraine since 2014. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A blue ribbon goat: the Rockefeller Commission, public opinion, and the Ford Administration's intelligence reform failure.
- Author
-
Townley, Dafydd
- Subjects
- *
CONTROL (Psychology) , *PUBLIC opinion , *INTELLIGENCE service , *EXECUTIVE orders , *REFORMS - Abstract
After allegations of the US intelligence community conducting illegal operations that targeted American citizens, 1975 became known as the Year of Intelligence. The subject dominated national discourse and led to competing programmes of intelligence oversight proposed by Congress and the executive branch. This article examines the Ford administration's programme that started with the Rockefeller Commission in January 1975 and ended with the issue of Executive order 11,905 in 1976. It argues that neither were enough to stave off Congress intruding on executive control of the intelligence community, because the Ford administration inaccurately measured the public's demands for genuine reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Democratic Civil Religion and the Kleisthenic Reforms.
- Author
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Jerusalimiec, Lucas
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL reform , *LOCAL government , *REFORMS , *CITIZENSHIP , *CONSTITUTIONS , *CIVIL religion - Abstract
Ancient accounts of Kleisthenes's democratizing reforms to the Athenian constitution in 508/507 B.C.E. do not elaborate on the reasons why these reforms found widespread support and thus proved stable. While scholars are confident that Kleisthenes divided Athenian citizens into ten geographically representative tribes and assigned them to local units of government, they do not agree about why these reforms produced a thoroughgoing democracy. This paper argues that Kleisthenes instituted reforms to religious practices and structures that supplied ideational content to the political reforms. This paper also attempts to demonstrate that some of the religious elements that Kleisthenes repurposed to serve the democratic constitution had been politicized in the previous century. Religious observance was thus one of the sites where contestation about Athens' political direction furnished democratic conceptual vocabulary. Athenians who wished to see civic institutions become more inclusive could be and were appealed to through reforms to everyday religious practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Activity‐based funding reform and the performance of public hospitals: The case of Queensland, Australia.
- Author
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Nguyen, Bao Hoang, Grosskopf, Shawna, Yong, Jongsay, and Zelenyuk, Valentin
- Subjects
- *
DATA envelopment analysis , *PUBLIC hospitals , *HOSPITALS , *REFORMS - Abstract
This study investigates the impact of activity‐based funding (ABF) on the performance of hospitals by exploiting a natural experiment that happened in the state of Queensland, Australia. To examine the outcome of the reform, the performance of hospitals is measured by the technical efficiency estimated from data envelopment analysis (DEA) models. We try to identify the causal effect of ABF on the technical efficiency of hospitals by incorporating difference‐in‐differences approach in the popular two‐stage DEA framework. We find empirical evidence that ABF improves the technical efficiency of hospitals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. From work unit segmentation to occupational segmentation: non-smooth structural changes in China's labor market from 1994 to 2018.
- Author
-
He, Jiaolong and Wu, Yang
- Subjects
- *
LABOR market , *TIME-varying networks , *MARKET design & structure (Economics) , *REFORMS - Abstract
China's labor market has changed dramatically since the beginning of reform and opening up. Previous studies have pointed out that marketization changed the segmentation structure of China's labor market. However, there was a lack of theoretical derivation of the mechanism, and empirical analysis was relatively rough due to methodological limitations. In this study, a pseudo-employer mobility temporal network was constructed for China's labor market from 1994 to 2018. Based on the temporal network analysis, this study finds the following: first, China's labor market is now structurally more open and flexible than it was before market-oriented reforms; second, the labor market in China has seen a shift from work unit segmentation to occupational segmentation; third, non-smoothness manifests itself in the structural changes in China's labor market. China's labor market quickly disintegrated after the launch of market-oriented reforms in the 1990s and then ushered in a turbulent period of drastic changes. It was after this turbulent period had ended that the present labor market structure took shape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Why do they leave? University personnel system reforms in China and the impacts on academic staff turnover.
- Author
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Yin, Zhaohui, Jiang, Xiaomeng, and Tong, Peiru
- Subjects
- *
PERSONNEL management , *UNIVERSITY rankings , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education , *REFORMS - Abstract
Under pressure to establish world-class universities, higher education institutions are competing for high-level talent and developing increasingly strict performance assessment mechanisms, which may cause academic staff turnover and potential talent loss. This study focuses on academic staff turnover in the context of reforms to the Chinese academic personnel system, featured by the adoption of a tenure track system. By adopting an ecological perspective, this study discerned a systematic influence of personnel system reforms on academic staff turnover across multiple levels of the academic ecosystem, including the social/institutional, organisational, interpersonal, and individual dimensions. The findings unravel possible discourse misalignment at different levels of the academic ecosystem, deepening understanding of the controversies around university personnel reforms. The study contributes to the global literature on academic staff turnover in the context of competition among world-class universities and offer lessons for other countries undergoing similar transformations in their higher education systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Pension Reform Policy in Latin America: A Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis.
- Author
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Carrera, Leandro N. and Angelaki, Marina
- Subjects
- *
PENSION reform , *PENSIONS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PRIVATIZATION , *REFORMS - Abstract
Latin American countries have been at the forefront of pension privatization and since 2008 they have also pioneered reform reversals. Previous studies have focused on single cases or a small number of them, given that pension reform is a complex phenomenon arising from the combination of different causes. Using fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA), the article analyzes a set of 32 pension reform cases in eight countries from the early 1990s until 2021. It finds four different pathways that combine institutional, structural and policy legacy conditions. It demonstrates that fsQCA is a useful tool for broader comparative policy work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Building a socially accountable medical school: A layered analysis of the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine.
- Author
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Hoffman, Miriam, Metzger, Keith, and Martinez, Ofelia
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL planning , *MEDICAL schools , *WELL-being , *CURRICULUM , *REFORMS - Abstract
Background: If medicine fundamentally exists to care for the wellbeing of individuals and societies, there should be a direct and comprehensive link between a medical school's social mission and its educational programme. We have not found a description of development or reform that utilises social mission to guide the comprehensive development of the educational programme. As a new school, we utilised a systematic mission‐driven approach to develop the curriculum, pedagogical methods and structure of the programme. Using layered analysis, this paper demonstrates how a school's mission can drive all aspects of the educational programme. This supports the transferability of this work to other schools so that they can achieve their unique missions. Approach: Layered analysis is used for reporting an intervention through three tiered lenses: philosophies, principles and techniques. This provides a structure to guide implementation and evaluation. It can also be used to transfer the innovation to other contexts. Evaluation: Each principle guiding the school's development is linked to context specific techniques and drives the focus of programme evaluation. Evaluation approaches using these principles are described, including an example of composite student performance data in a core area of focus. Implications: Through layered analysis of a medical school that developed and implemented a mission‐driven curriculum, this can enable other schools to transfer this approach to achieve their missions through the design and implementation of their programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Österreichs Rentenpolitik: Vom Nachbarn lernen?
- Author
-
Brandt, Ulrich and Freudenberg, Christoph
- Subjects
PENSION reform ,PENSIONS ,RETIREMENT ,PRICE inflation ,REFORMS - Abstract
In the German debate on retirement pensions, Austria's policy is often referenced. The considerably higher statutory pensions in the neighbouring country arouse interest. How does Austria finance these higher pensions? How does the Austrian pension system in general differ from the German one, especially against the background of the latest pension reforms and inflation in Austria? What reform options can applied to Germany? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Institutional reforms and entrepreneurial growth ambitions.
- Author
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Darnihamedani, Pourya, Block, Joern Hendrich, and Jansen, Justin
- Subjects
BUSINESSPEOPLE ,REFORMS ,AMBITION ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
Institutional reforms have resulted in deep transformations of the global economy. Yet, the theoretical development and accumulating insights about the effects of institutional reforms on entrepreneurial outcomes have been inconclusive. Our study applies categorisation theory to argue that flexibility- and stability-enhancing reforms may affect entrepreneurial growth ambitions in distinct ways, depending on whether more innovative versus less innovative entrepreneurs perceive specific reforms as an opportunity or a threat. Our study employs a multi-source, repeated cross-sectional dataset of approximately 150,000 entrepreneurs from 65 countries, covering the period from 2002 to 2016. Our findings indicate that flexibility-enhancing reforms lead to higher growth ambitions. They are particularly favoured by less innovative entrepreneurs. On the contrary, stability-enhancing reforms do not affect growth ambitions of entrepreneurs in general but rather increase growth ambitions of more innovative entrepreneurs. Our study provides important theoretical and practical implications about the consequences of institutional reforms on growth ambitions of entrepreneurs with different levels of innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Heterogeneous paths to stability.
- Author
-
Porto, Edoardo Di and Tealdi, Cristina
- Subjects
YOUNG workers ,JOB security ,WORK experience (Employment) ,CONTRACTS ,REFORMS - Abstract
In this paper, we show that incentives to convert temporary contracts into permanent ones might be less effective when the employment protection legislation associated with temporary contracts is lax. Drawing upon rich administrative data and using a difference-in-differences methodology, we estimate that workers at their first work experience hired on more flexible contracts undergo a reduction in the conversion rate to permanent employment of 6.3 percentage points after the implementation of the incentives (and of 3.2 percentage points over a year), compared to peers hired on more rigid contracts. This reduced conversion rate, which results in a 17% wage penalty even 2 years into their professional journey, points to a significant negative impact of flexible temporary jobs on the future prospects of young workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Structural reforms and income distribution: new evidence for OECD countries.
- Author
-
Wiese, Rasmus, Jalles, João Tovar, and Haan, Jakob de
- Subjects
INCOME distribution ,INCOME inequality ,LABOR market ,REFORMS ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
This article examines the impact of labour market and product market reforms on income inequality for 25 OECD countries between 1970 and 2020, using the local projections approach and an updated narrative-based dataset of the reform indicators. Our results suggest that both types of (endogenized) market-oriented reforms increase income inequality, but the effects are small. Consistent with this finding is that counter-reforms lead to less income inequality. Our results also indicate that the inequality-increasing effect of market-oriented reforms is mostly a result of more income going to the top of the income distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Do Less Informative College Admission Exams Reduce Earnings Inequality? Evidence from Colombia.
- Author
-
Riehl, Evan
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,HIGHER education exams ,LOW-income students ,TEST scoring ,REFORMS - Abstract
This paper asks whether reducing the informativeness of college admission exams reduces inequality in postcollege earnings. I examine a 2000 reform of the Colombian college admission exam that sought to reduce bias in scores. The reform reduced test score gaps between high- and low-income students by nearly 50% in some subjects, but it also decreased the exam's predictive power for abilities that matter in college. I find that the reform caused students to attend colleges where they were more likely to drop out, which reduced earnings for both high- and low-income students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. GPRA's Incomplete Institutionalization: A Story of Roots and Branches.
- Author
-
Hollandsworth, Edgar M. and Dull, Matthew M.
- Subjects
PERFORMANCE management ,ADMINISTRATIVE reform ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,REFORMS ,EXPLANATION - Abstract
This study proposes explanations for GPRA's incomplete institutionalization, and how it has influenced and continues to affect the use of performance management in the US Government. It evaluates the evolving institutionalization of GPRA, PART, and GPRAMA resulting from tensions in three sets of competing PM reform values: 1) performance-performative communications, 2) discretion-accountability, and 3) politics-administration. The study concludes that experiential learning from GPRA's incomplete institutionalization set the stage for today's evidence and data movements and increased instrumental use of performance information in federal agencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Decisional Convergence in Reforms? — Evidence from a Comprehensive Study of Performance Budgeting Foundations in the US and China.
- Author
-
Lu, Elaine Yi, Du, Lina, and He, Wensheng
- Subjects
PUBLIC administration ,BUDGET reform ,BUDGET ,COMPARATIVE method ,REFORMS - Abstract
In line with Pollitt's call to clarify convergence in public management reforms, this research explores the decisional convergence in the context of performance budgeting reforms. Applying longer, deeper and comparative approaches, this research analyzes decades of experiences and comprehensive performance budgeting written foundations between two countries under the same framework. We found convergence of reform direction and transferability of key dimensions of reform. However, the important decisional divergences lie in evolution paths, reform speeds and the uneven, and sometimes surprisingly differential specifications of measurement, integration, accountability, and culture in performance budgeting foundations between the two countries. Adaptations and aspirations as sources of divergence, theoretical implications of T-form reform, and implications for generally accepted performance principles are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Hands-Off or Hands-On? Examining the Effect of Court Orders on Inmate Misconduct.
- Author
-
Meade, Benjamin and Scheuerman, Heather L.
- Subjects
CORRECTIONAL institutions ,COURT orders ,CENSUS ,PRISONS ,REFORMS - Abstract
Although studies have linked judicial intervention to inmate outcomes, it is unclear how the various reasons for which an institution is under court order predict the likelihood of inmate misbehavior, such as violence and other nonviolent forms of rule breaking. Data from the 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities (SISCF) and the 2000 Census of State Correctional Facilities (CSCF) are used to examine how various prison violations affect inmate misconduct. Hierarchical linear models reveal that sweeping litigation and reforms that pose a greater challenge to correctional authority are associated with greater misconduct, while more targeted approaches appear to have a less pronounced or inverse association with misconduct. These findings have important implications for the operation of the correctional institution and its society of captives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Do SMBs give play to their advantages in serving SMEs? Evidence from SMBs branching deregulation in China.
- Author
-
Li, Wanli, Qiao, Shiqi, and Pan, Wendong
- Subjects
SMALL business ,COMMUNITY banks ,DEREGULATION ,REFORMS ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Based on the unique setting of small and medium-sized banks (SMBs) branching deregulation in China, this paper examines the impact of SMBs branches expansion on the credit availability of enterprises by using spatial distribution of SMBs branches at firm-level. We find that SMBs branches expansion has a stronger effect on improving the credit availability of large-scale enterprises compared with SMEs, indicating that SMBs don't give play to their advantages in serving SMEs. Our study provides empirical evidence for the hypothesis of 'Comparative Advantages of SMBs' and policy implication for the reform of banking structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. 数字化转型视域下智慧考场的技术框架 构建研究.
- Author
-
汤倩雯 and 张 浩
- Subjects
DIGITAL transformation ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,REFORMS - Abstract
Copyright of China Medical Education Technology is the property of China Medical Education Technology Editorial Office 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Developing New Public Governance as a public management reform model.
- Author
-
Krogh, Andreas Hagedorn and Triantafillou, Peter
- Subjects
NEW public management ,PUBLIC administration ,PUBLIC sector ,PUBLIC relations ,REFORMS - Abstract
The concept of New Public Governance (NPG) has proven valuable as an umbrella term for cross-sector collaboration in public governance. Thus far, however, its conceptual development has mainly focused on the external relations of government. To develop NPG as a public management reform model, this article examines its internal dimension by specifying eight NPG reform tools for advancing collaboration within the public sector. We argue that the NPG reform model enables scholars to capture significant collaborative transformations in public administration and suggest new avenues for public management reform research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Mosque Construction as Nation-Building: The case of Turkey.
- Author
-
Uzer, Umut
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS institutions , *MOSQUES , *NATION building , *CALIPHATE , *REFORMS , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This article analyzes the question of mosque construction and its interrelationship vis-à-vis nation-building in contemporary Turkey. The dynamics of a secular state ruling over a conservative society have always been conflictual in republican Turkey, and this ever since the modern state began initiating a number of radical secular reforms in the 1920s and the 1930s. Among those reforms, disruptive in a previously conservative society, were the dissolution of the caliphate and dismemberment of religious institutions, coupled with widespread Westernizing policies including the adoption of Western sartorial habits, emphasis on science and technology, and changing the alphabet from the traditional Arabic to the current modern (romanized) Turkish script. On the other hand, the advent of democracy and changeover of government in 1950 brought with it the emergence of a renewed religious discourse and a desire for more mosque construction in order to accentuate the Islamic facet of Turkish culture. Therefore, the religious dimension of Turkish identity has increasingly been buttressed by mosque construction by right-wing governments, reaching its zenith with the current Justice and Development Party (JDP) government (beginning in 2002). Coupled with the emergence of an illiberal democracy bolstered by Turkish populism, this article proposes to analyze the linkage between mosque construction and the building of an Islamic conservative Turkish nation contrasting the secular Turkish identity of the ancien régime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Leaving a Legacy for my Children: The One-Child Policy Reform and Engagement in CSR Among Family Firms in China.
- Author
-
Cumming, Douglas, Hu, Jun, and Wu, Huiying
- Subjects
ONE-child policy, China ,REFORMS ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,FAMILY-owned business enterprises ,FAMILY business succession - Abstract
The reform of China's one-child policy allows families to have more children and thus may affect anticipation of intergenerational succession of family businesses and drive family firms to improve their corporate social responsibility (CSR). Using a difference-in-differences design, we find that the reform positively affects the CSR of family firms. We also find that the positive impact is more pronounced for family firms whose owners have fewer children, have no son, and have not yet surpassed reproductive age (older than 50), which confirms the theory that anticipation of intergenerational succession drives CSR in such firms. Moreover, we find that the positive impact is more pronounced for firms that operate in environments where CSR is more strategically important. We validate our findings by showing that the reform prompts investment in value-enhancing CSR and curtails short-termism. This study offers novel evidence that government policies conducive to intergenerational succession in family firms can lead to not only strategic CSR but also to truly ethical corporate behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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