3,933 research outputs found

    Re:Reading piece on author Gunnar Hansen of Northeast Harbor. Hansen wrote I

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    Re:Reading piece on author Gunnar Hansen of Northeast Harbor. Hansen wrote Islands at the Edge of Time, and recently worked on the screenplay for a documentary produced by the Penobscot Nation

    Replication Data for: Living Together, Voting Together: Voters moving in together before an election have higher turnout

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    The readme for the replication archive for "Living Together, Voting Together: Voters moving in together before an election have higher turnout" by Dahlgaard JO, Bhatti Y, Hansen JH and Hansen KM* published in British Journal of Political Science Year 2021 *Corresponding author: Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen, [email protected], www.kaspermhansen.eu. Øster Farimagsgade 5, 1353 Copenhagen K, Denmark, Cell +45 51245005. The administrative data used for most files are not part of the replication archive as they can not be share according to Statistics Denmark's Terms & Conditions. PLease see https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/Forskningsservice# about general access to Statistics Denmark data for research

    sj-docx-1-pss-10.1177_0956797621997349 – Supplemental material for Predictive Uncertainty Underlies Auditory Boundary Perception

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pss-10.1177_0956797621997349 for Predictive Uncertainty Underlies Auditory Boundary Perception by Niels Chr. Hansen, Haley E. Kragness, Peter Vuust, Laurel Trainor and Marcus T. Pearce in Psychological Science</p

    Thorkild Hansen

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    This is a short presentation of the main works of the Danish author Thorkild Hansen

    Trail Poverty Navigation Tool: Surviving to Thriving

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    Purpose: To assist in developing a community practice, to unite and train community members on how to break down barriers, assist in poverty reduction, and refer clients to appropriate resources

    The dynamics of unreliable narration:Implicit and omitted authors, double narratees and constructive readers in first person unreliable narration

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    Per Krogh Hansen brings attention to one of the most discussed narratological concepts in recent years, the ‘unreliable narrator’. In the article »The Dynamics of Unreliable Narration«, Hansen is considering to what extent the question of authorial control or intention is relevant when analysing and interpreting unreliable narrators. In the first part of the article, he questions this claimed essentiality of an authorial agent from three different angles: One concerning the border between diegetic and extradiegetic issues. Another with specific focus on unreliable simultaneous narration (first person, present tense). And a third with attention paid to the role of unreliable narrators in factual narratives. In the article, he proposes a model for describing the different dynamic roles the authorial agent, as well as the empirical reader, plays in different forms of unreliable narration. Here, terms like ‘implicit author’, ‘omitted author’, ‘double narratees’ and ‘constructive readers’ are introduced andillustrated by examples of Dennis Cooper and Edgar Allan Poe

    Etüden-Sammlung für Violine. Studies and exercises for violin. Collection d'études pour violon, [by] Carl Flesch.

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    Sibley only owns v.2. -- Wilhelm Hansen Edition Nr. 2096. --- Notes in German, French and English by the author

    The Martin Hansen Story by James H. Wood

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    Notes - Mr. Jim Wood tells the story of his father-in law, Martin Hansen. Mr. Hansen's life begins in Denmark with his birth on February 13, 1888. He talks of his early farming career where he was made a foreman on a neighbour's farm at the age of sixteen. Mr. Hansen arrived in Athabasca on July 3rd, 1913. He shares many anecdotes of his life, including his service in WWI, his homesteading experience and his family life (3 pages

    github.com/Richard-Hansen/hello_world

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    The eclipse of the goal of zero inflation

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    William J. Barber's study of Alvin H. Hansen (1887-1975) emphasized the importance of the intellectual transformation that led to the "'Keynes-Hansen intellectual system that appeared to have compelling diagnostic and prescriptive power" (Barber 19X7. 205).1 Between 1936 and 1938, Hansen became a convert to Keynesian economics, and this led to the Hicks-Hansen IS-LM model. Subsequent authors (including Phillips in the 1950s) concluded that this approach, being an equilibrium model, did not capture the disequilibrium "essence" of Keynes (Lipsey 19X I, 547). The purpose of this article is to highlight a second intellectual transformation in Hansen's policy advocacy, and to suggest the possibility that, once again, Hansen contributed to a Keynesian economics that was in conflict with Keynes's stated position. I will also discuss a parallel transformation in the policy advocacy of Sumner H. Slichter ( 1892-1959), who was, like Hansen, a Harvard University professor
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