134,199 research outputs found
"Maastricht 2042 and the Fate of Europe: Toward Convergence and Full Employment"
Unemployment in the European Union (EU) is a serious problem that threatens to disrupt the integration of accession countries, the character of individual countries, and the continued existence of the EU. According to Senior Scholar James K. Galbraith, European integration poses a huge conundrum for European employment because the conventional theory explaining unemployment in EuropeÐlabor market rigiditiesÐis wrong. The application of this policy will not cure European unemployment, but it could destroy the economic promise of the EU for its poorer regions and the accession countries.
Galbraith, D F, NX28240
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/386653Surname: GALBRAITH. Given Name(s) or Initials: D F. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX28240. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 24995.208423
Item: [2016.0049.18946] "Galbraith, D F, NX28240
Constructing Theoretically Informed Measures of Pause Duration in Experimentally Manipulated Writing (Hall, Baaijen and Galbraith, 2022)
This OSF repository contains supplementary materials for Hall, S., Baaijen, V. M., & Galbraith, D. (2022). Constructing theoretically informed measures of pause duration in experimentally manipulated writing. Reading and Writing. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-022-10284-
"What is the American Model Really About? Soft Budgets and the Keynesian Devolution "
The "American Model" serves as a point of reference in discussions of economic policy around the world especially in Europe; many claim that the American version of the free market represents an ideal type-it is the highest form of capitalism. The author argues, however, that the United States has relied heavily on government intervention in housing, health care, pensions, and education. Not only have these programs been largely successful and popular, they also provide a Keynesian stimulus to spending that help account for the strength of the U.S. economy. Now that the U.S. is in a weak, jobless recovery, the key to restoring growth may lie in the kinds of governmental programs that have helped to sustain and stabilize the U.S. economy in the past.
Response of the ocean natural carbon storage to projected twenty-first-century climate change
The separate impacts of wind stress, buoyancy fluxes, and CO2 solubility on the oceanic storage of natural carbon are assessed in an ensemble of twentieth- to twenty-first-century simulations, using a coupled atmosphere–ocean–carbon cycle model. Time-varying perturbations for surface wind stress, temperature, and salinity are calculated from the difference between climate change and preindustrial control simulations, and are imposed on the ocean in separate simulations. The response of the natural carbon storage to each perturbation is assessed with novel prognostic biogeochemical tracers, which can explicitly decompose dissolved inorganic carbon into biological, preformed, equilibrium, and disequilibrium components. Strong responses of these components to changes in buoyancy and winds are seen at high latitudes, reflecting the critical role of intermediate and deep waters. Overall, circulation-driven changes in carbon storage are mainly due to changes in buoyancy fluxes, with wind-driven changes playing an opposite but smaller role. Results suggest that climate-driven perturbations to the ocean natural carbon cycle will contribute 20 Pg C to the reduction of the ocean accumulated total carbon uptake over the period 1860–2100. This reflects a strong compensation between a buildup of remineralized organic matter associated with reduced deep-water formation (+96 Pg C) and a decrease of preformed carbon (?116 Pg C). The latter is due to a warming-induced decrease in CO2 solubility (?52 Pg C) and a circulation-induced decrease in disequilibrium carbon storage (?64 Pg C). Climate change gives rise to a large spatial redistribution of ocean carbon, with increasing concentrations at high latitudes and stronger vertical gradients at low latitudes
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Conceptual processes in writing: from problem solving to text production
Scholfield-Galbraith family fonds, 1865-1924
The Scholfield and Galbraith families of Dunnville, Ont. were related by marriage. Thomas Jefferson Galbraith (1842-1921) worked as a collector of canal tolls at Port Maitland, a landing waiter and searcher and an acting preventive officer in Customs. He was married to Jane Ann [Jennie] Montieth and they had five children, Margaret, Minnie Montieth, Genevieve Marion, Edith Stuart and Thomas Percy Galbraith.
Genevieve Marion Galbraith was married to Harry E. Scholfield, son of Frederick Scholfield (d.1908) and Georginna Galer (d. 1888), a dry goods merchant in Dunnville. Some extent records belong to a William Scholfield who operated a mill in Dunnville. Included are records related to land lease, mortgage and bargain and sale agreements between Scholfield and various individuals, including Richard Kirkpatrick, William Kohler, Alvin Drake, Robert Ban[u]d, Henry Beckett, Sr., Samuel Waltho, Nehemiah Niece.Fonds consists of records concerning the Scholfield and Galbraith families of Dunnville, Ont. Fonds includes land deeds, mortgages, wills and quit claim deeds. Fonds also includes some correspondence and financial statements, as well as commissions and an oath of office for Thomas J. Galbraith
Dr. and Mrs. George D. Bearce being introduced to Mrs. Galbraith by Dr. Reddick
On verso: Reception given to American Fulbrights by Delhi Fulbright Alumni, September 1961. Dr. and Mrs. George D. Bearce being introduced to Mrs. Galbraith by Dr. Reddick. In the background, from the left, Mr. William D. Popkin (American student), Dr. Shiv Puri (R'59) and Dr. John A. Vieg (Visiting Lecturer)
Computer studies of microseism statistics with applications to prediction and detection
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Geology and Geophysics, 1963.Vita. Appendix contains numerous pamphlets.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 280-282).by James Nelson Galbraith, Jr.Ph.D
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