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Replication data for: Changing standards or political whim? Evaluating Changes in the Content of the US State Department Human Rights Reports following Presidential Transitions
The annual US State Department Country Reports on Human Rights Practices represents one of the principal data sources used to generate multiple commonly used human rights measures. Despite the frequency with which these indicators are used in quantitative studies of human rights, scholars have rarely considered how the qualitative information in the source has varied over time. We contribute to this area of research by investigating the general changes in the amount of information included in the reports as well as the administration-specific changes in this information. Using automated text analysis techniques, we find that the amount of information in the reports generally increases over time. However, our analysis also reveals that the rate (and direction) of change varies across different human rights topics and across presidential administrations. Consequently, we find evidence to support a changing standard of accountability as well as evidence that political considerations shape human rights reporting
Supplemental Material for: Role of hypoxia-inducible-factor-1α (HIF-1α) in ferroptosis of adipose tissue during ketosis
Supplemental Material for JDS.2024-2482
Data-Collective movement of schooling fish reduces locomotor cost in turbulence
Dataset for "Collective movement of schooling fish reduces locomotor cost in turbulence
Replication Data for: The Discursive Process of Resemantisation: How Global Health Discourses Turned Male Circumcision into an Anti-HIV Policy
The file comprises the replication material (corpus and R script) as well as additional analysis for the published manuscript. We conducted a computational discourse analysis of 396 documents curated between 2007 and 2016 by the Clearinghouse on Male Circumcision for HIV Prevention. We used this analysis to show how the documents promoting the Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) programme represent the latest of the medical resemantisation of male circumcision that started in the 19th century
Replication Data for: Education as identity? A meta-analysis of education-based in-group preferences in candidate choice experiments
In a climate where education stratifies electorates, does a university degree universally pay dividends at the polls or is there an education homophily premium, whereby graduates disproportionately select "their own’"? Via a meta-analysis and original subgroup heterogeneity test of 20 candidate choice conjoint experiments from 12 affluent democracies, we demonstrate university educated candidates boast a 5 percentage-point preferability bump over their less educated counterparts. We also find evidence of education-based identity biases, observing significant in-group preferability among degree holders. Graduates are more inclined to place a premium on candidates’ membership of their educational in-group and penalise those from the out-group vis-à-vis non-graduates. These results clearly highlight the importance of education in the candidate favourability calculus and demonstrate that education’s biasing effect in shaping preferences will likely ensure the continued dominance of university educated representatives in affluent democracies, particularly as university enrolment rates continue to rise
PDB: 5EN2, Crystal structure of the Junín virus (JUNV) surface glycoprotein receptor-binding subunit (GP1) bound to a neutralizing monoclonal antibody (311K, 38°C, 100 ns): random seed #1
PDB: 5EN2, Crystal structure of the Junín virus (JUNV) surface glycoprotein receptor-binding subunit (GP1) bound to a neutralizing monoclonal antibody (311K, 38°C, 100 ns): random seed #1. PDBs obtained every 50 ns
Replication Data for: Insuring Against Hunger? The Long-Term Political Consequences of Exposure to the Dutch Famine
Does experiencing a shock alter one's voting behavior? We explore how a specific shock to individuals’ health and human capital accumulation -- in-utero malnutrition -- prompted by the sudden onset of the 1944/45 Dutch Famine affected insurance demand and voting behavior later in life. Given similar socialization patterns, we find conglomerations of affected individuals to be associated with higher support for Left parties more than 50 years after the exposure. Relying on rich administrative data and leveraging the Dutch Famine as a natural experiment, this paper represents an initial effort to investigate and confirm the long-term effects of shocks on political behavior
Breaking the stigma: the joint effort of the government, print media, and citizens toward transgender education equality (2018-2022)
This study employs statistical analyses, including Correlation and Linear Regression
PDB: 1ZTX, West Nile Virus Envelope Protein DIII in complex with neutralizing E16 antibody Fab (310K, 37°C, 100 ns)
PDB: 1ZTX, West Nile Virus Envelope Protein DIII in complex with neutralizing E16 antibody Fab (310K, 37°C, 100 ns): random seed #1. PDBs obtained at every 50 ns