1,360 research outputs found

    The Will to Disempower? Nabokov and his Readers

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    Rodgers argues that aspects of Nietzsche’s philosophy—specifically “master-slave morality” and the “will to power”—can articulate the interplay between author and reader in Nabokov’s work. Informed by Bernard Reginster’s interpretation of the will to power as the “activity of overcoming resistance,” the chapter claims that the disempowering distinction between elevated author and subjugated reader in Nabokov’s fiction engenders a readerly resistance. Rodgers illustrates this distinction by drawing on Nabokov’s published university lectures, on the epigraph and foreword to his novel Invitation to a Beheading, and on his short story “The Vane Sisters.” “The Will to Disempower? Nabokov and His Readers” focuses on the risks of readerly resistance as well as its empowering implications for “Nietzschean readers,” those who are conscious of Nabokov’s textual practice

    The campaign for democratic socialism 1960-1964.

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    PhDIn early 1960 it seemed likely that the official Labour Party defence policy would be defeated by a unilateralist resolution at the Scarborough Conference. In response to this possibility the Campaign for Democratic Socialism, or CDS, was established. The CDS projected the image of a grass-roots movement inspired by Gaitskell's "fight and fight again" speech. But it was run by a Campaign Committee which included leading members of the Party like Tony Crosland, Roy Jenkins and Patrick Gordon Walker, as well as less well known members like Bill Rodgers, Dick Taverne, Philip Williams, Brian Walden, Denis Howell and David Marquand. This highly talented group launched an elaborate and successful lobbying, publicity and briefing operation which was influential in overturning the unilateralist vote at the Blackpool Conference of 1961. After Blackpool the Campaign helped many of its leading members find seats in the House of Commons while continuing to put the "revisionist" case through its newspaper Campaign. The importance of the CDS in the history of the Labour Party is, primarily, as the first internal pressure group organised by the right of the Party. It was also the first internal Party group to use such sophisticated lobbying techniques. Moreover, the subsequent careers of the leading members of the Campaign influenced the development of the Labour Party. The CDS was an important formative political action for many of them. Finally many of the CDS supporters set-up or joined the SDP when it was launched

    Carolyn Marie Rodgers

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    Discenza, Jacqueline M.; Wall, Theresa; Parzych, Jean Marie; Fox, Shannon Leslie. (2000). Carolyn Marie Rodgers. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/166314

    The pitfalls of using a child support schedule based on outdated data

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    A strong rationale for updating child support guidelines arises from changes over time in the measurement of expenditures on children, as well as changes in the empirical relationship between expenditures on children and the income of parents. Such changes affect the accuracy of the numerics upon which states’ child support guidelines are based. This study evaluates an alternative child support guideline that was proposed for Virginia and draws lessons for other states that similarly base their guidelines on older survey data. Regression results show that over time, the child expenditure and household income relationship has changed considerably. Furthermore, the largest increases in expenditures attributable to children have occurred for lower- and middle-income households.Peer reviewe

    D.K. Adams, S.F. Mills, H.B. Rodgers. An atlas of north American affairs

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    Soumagne Jean. D.K. Adams, S.F. Mills, H.B. Rodgers. An atlas of north American affairs. In: Norois, n°109, Janvier-Mars 1981. p. 131

    Manners (G.), Keeble (D.), Rodgers (B.), Warren (K.). — Regional Development in Britain

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    Soumagne Jean. Manners (G.), Keeble (D.), Rodgers (B.), Warren (K.). — Regional Development in Britain. In: Norois, n°97-98, Avril-Juin 1978. pp. 290-291

    Manners (G.), Keeble (D.), Rodgers (B.), Warren (K.). — Regional Development in Britain

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    Soumagne Jean. Manners (G.), Keeble (D.), Rodgers (B.), Warren (K.). — Regional Development in Britain. In: Norois, n°97-98, Avril-Juin 1978. pp. 290-291

    A primer on wage gap decompositions in the analysis of labor market discrimination

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    The traditional wage gap decomposition accounts for differences across demographic groups in wages and in the determinants of wages. The analysis decomposes the wage gap in a particular year into a portion explained by average group differences in productivity characteristics and a residual portion that is commonly attributed to discrimination. The low-cost data requirements and the intuitive appeal help to explain the popularity of the traditional procedure as a starting point for estimating the extent of wage discrimination. Researchers have subsequently introduced a number of extensions that build more detailed steps into the decomposition in order to provide a richer set of results. Evidence from these decompositions can provide a more finely-tuned benchmark as to the degree to which discrimination serves as an explanation for the presence and persistence of group differences in average wages

    An Economic Analysis of Debt Swaps and Case Study of the Harvard Debt for Education Swap

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    Evaluation of Harvard University's debt for education swap with Ecuador yields a clear bottom line: Harvard unambiguously gains from the deal, since tuition receipts more than double initial outlays, and the university acquires assets to fund research in Ecuador. Ecuador's economic benefits, however, are less clear, since the dollar outflow from Ecuador may exceed the amount of new scholarship aid plus the true buyback value. Participants in future debt for education deals must consider both the uncertainty of economic gains and possible macroeconomic consequences for the debtor country.Peer reviewe

    The Prevalence of Gender Topics in U.S. Economics Journals

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    This study complements existing research on the contributions and rankings of female economists with a descriptive analysis of the prevalence of gender issues in U.S. economics journals. Assuming that labor economics and development economics are the fields most likely to examine gender issues, I compare the incidence of gender-related articles in the last decade in leading U.S. general economics journals with top journals in the labor and development fields. I also examine the gender composition of authors of gender-related articles in all journals. Results indicate that the highest ranked field journals publish a higher percentage of articles on gender than do the leading general journals from among their labor and development papers. And unlike the common perception, a disproportionate number of the gender articles are written by men rather than women, particularly in the labor and general journals. The results suggest that departments that use publication in general journals as a proxy for overall research quality, and which do not consider alternative evaluations of research as potential full substitutes, may be using biased measures of the quality and importance of research on gender. The publication policies of general economics journals and the promotion policies of certain economics departments may have a direct effect in reducing both the number and perceived prestige of voices addressing issues of gender in economics.Peer reviewe
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