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Replication Code and Pseudo Data for: Product Market Competition, Mergers and Acquisitions, and Covenant Redesign
This folder contains replication codes and sample data for “Product Market Competition, Mergers and Acquisitions, and Covenant Redesign” by Hadiye Aslan, Madhu Kalimipalli, Praveen Kumar, and Buvaneshwaran Venugopal, Review of Corporate Finance Studies
Replication Data for: Behrer Heft-Neal 2023, Nature Sustainability
Replication data and code for "Higher air pollution in wealthy districts of most low- and middle-income countries
Taking down tongues: Explorations in the epistemic culture of language documentation and conservation
The materials archived here are part of the 'Taking down tongues: Explorations in the epistemic culture of language documentation and conservation' fieldwork project (sponsored by the Thomas J. Watson Foundation). This project in linguistic anthropology aims to address the following: Does language documentation and conservation actually follow through on the promise of bringing meaningful benefits to the communities they purport to serve? This dataset includes ethnographic interviews, fieldnotes, linguistic data, and various forms of visual ethnography, collected between July 2013-August 2014, in the Asia-Pacific region (namely, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, and French Polynesia)
Data for "The Local Bubble is a Local Chimney: A New Model from 3D Dust Mapping"
Data from "The Local Bubble is a Local Chimney: A New Model from 3D Dust Mapping" by O'Neill et al. (2024)
ONeill2024_LocalBubble_ShellProperties_A0.5.fits: Table of Local Bubble shell properties at the fiducial edge threshold of A'_{0.5}
ONeill2024_LocalBubble_ShellProperties_A0.9.fits: Supplementary table of shell properties at an edge threshold of A'_{0.9}
ONeill2024_LocalBubble_Shell_xyz.fits: Shell extinction (ZGR23/pc, at A'_{0.5}) interpolated to a heliocentric Cartesian grid
ONeill2024_LocalBubble_ShellProperties_MeanDraws.fits: Table of mean model derived from all draws, with shell uncertainty estimates
draws/: Twelve tables of shell properties for each draw of the E23 map
figures/: HTML files for interactive figures presented in the paper
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Replication Data for: Identification with an Anti-System Party Undermines Diffuse Political Support: The Case of Alternative for Germany and Trust in the Federal Constitutional Court
Stata script file and dataset to replicate the fixed effects panel analyses from the manuscript. The data are derived from the original cohort of the GLES panel (2013-2017)
Replication data for Interchangeability of the Polar Team Pro system in determining match load and intensities in semi-professional rugby union players.
Both the data set and descriptive's are included
WXS23
This report describes the results of a first of its kind, nationwide survey of Spanish speakers on severe weather in the United States. The 2023 Severe Weather and Society Spanish Survey (WXS23) was designed and administered by the Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (IPPRA) at the University of Oklahoma. This is the third survey in the Severe Weather and Society Spanish series (see Krocak et al. 2021 and Bitterman et al. 2023 for information on WXS21 and WXS22 respectively), but its English equivalent is an annual series that has been conducted since 2017 (see Silva et al. 2017, Silva et al. 2018, Silva et al. 2019, Krocak et al. 2020, Ripberger et al. 2021, Bitterman et al. 2022, and Bitterman et al. 2023 for information on WX17, WX18, WX19, WX20, WX21, WX22, and WX23 respectively). WXS23 was fielded July 28 – August 31, 2023, using an online questionnaire that was completed by 420 U.S. adults (age 18+) that were recruited from an Internet panel. In order to complete the survey, respondents had to indicate that they speak Spanish well or very well. In addition to asking respondents many of the same questions as the WX surveys, the WXS23 survey also asked respondents several experimental questions to test the way risk and probability are communicated to Spanish speakers. Like the WX surveys, the WXS23 measured public trust in the National Weather Service (NWS), extreme weather and climate risk perceptions, risk literacy, interpretations of probabilistic language, and interpretation of longer-range severe weather forecasts (like those from the NOAA Storm Prediction Center). This report presents an overview of methodology of the survey data collection, data weighting, and a reproduction of the survey instrument with weighted means and frequencies for the questions that elicited numeric responses
Replication Data for: Transferring Power to Maintain Control: Decentralization as a National-Level Electoral Strategy in Western Europe
Why do national governments choose to transfer some of their administrative, political, and fiscal powers to regional authorities? This article develops and tests a nationally focused strategic account: decentralization is a targeted means to bolster a governing party’s national-level electoral strength by appeasing the voters of threatening ethnoterritorial parties in national parliamentary elections. Statistical analyses of decentralization across the subnational regions of Western European countries confirm that governing parties transfer additional competencies to regions in which an ethnoterritorial party threat exists, when the government is legislatively vulnerable. In contrast, if a government is not dependent on a region for maintaining national parliamentary control, the presence of a strong ethnoterritorial opponent will not motivate the government to decentralize. These findings help to explain patterns of asymmetrical decentralization across regions within a country and why governing parties decentralize competencies to subnational governments that they do not expect to control
Submesoscale eddies detected by SWOT and moored observations in the northwestern Pacific
Data used in the paper entitled "Submesoscale eddies detected by SWOT and moored observations in the northwestern Pacific
Multidimensional Diversity and Research Impact in Political Science: What 50 Years of Bibliometric Data Tells Us
This study examines the changing patterns of knowledge production and diffusion in political science over the past five decades using a dataset of over 200,000 SSCI-indexed research articles from 1970 to 2020. We analyze how author identity and four types of team diversity (namely, gender, ethnic, regional, and reference diversity) influence research outputs and outcomes. The results show that historically excluded groups of scholars have gradually improved their representation and expanded their collaboration networks over time. Although the publication gaps are narrowing, obscured gaps in evaluation and citation practices persist. A specialty’s average citation impact is negatively associated with the minority population it accommodates. The least cited specialties are largely attended by women and ethnic minority scholars. At the article level, while papers written by ethnic minorities and Global South scholars are significantly less cited, collaborating with outgroup scholars effectively overcomes this citation gap. We also find that papers written by women receive more citations than those written by men, after controlling for journal prestige and research topics. Furthermore, when we limit our investigation to leading universities, citation gaps diminish. However, scholars of African origin continue to experience entrenched citation disadvantages even if they are affiliated with highly prestigious universities. This study provides multidimensional measurements to advance diversity debates and adds nuances to our understanding of opportunity structures in political science