3,146 research outputs found

    Declaration of Fiona Murray, Ph.D, Associate Professor of Management of Technological Innovation and Entrepreneurship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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    Declaration of Fiona Murray, Ph.D., for the United States District Court for the Southern District of New Yor

    Murray, Fiona

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    [Les Murray meeting the Queen] [picture] /

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    Title from accession record.; Condition: good.; This photograph of Les Murray meeting Queen Elizabeth II appeared in The Australian, 5-6 June 1999 with the title "Les majesty: thank God he met Lizzie".; Exhibited: "In a New Light 2", National Library of Australia, 2 December 2004 - 28 March 2005. AuCNL; Exhibited in online exhibition: "In a New Light 2" at http://www.nla.gov.au/exhibitions/newlight2/index.html ANL. Les Murray photographed at Buckingham Palace. He was there to collect the Queen's Medal for Poetry.Les majesty: thank God he met Lizzi

    Digital Attachment: PhD Thesis Fiona Rochholz, Univ. Bremen, MARUM

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    Digital Attachment for PhD Thesis by Fiona Rochholz, submitted September 2019 at University of Bremen, Germany. Please contact author for additional questions

    Replication data for: Retractions

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    Azoulay, Pierre, Furman, Jeffrey L., Krieger, Joshua L., and Murray, Fiona, (2015) "Retractions." Review of Economics and Statistics 97:5, 1118-1136

    Evaluating the Role of Science Philanthropy in American Research Universities

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    Philanthropy plays a major role in university-based scientific, engineering, and medical research in the United States, contributing over 4billionannuallytooperations,endowment,andbuildingsdevotedtoresearch.Whencombinedwithendowmentincome,universityresearchfundingfromsciencephilanthropyis4 billion annually to operations, endowment, and buildings devoted to research. When combined with endowment income, university research funding from science philanthropy is 7 billion a year. This major contribution to US scientific competitiveness comes from private foundations as well as gifts from individuals. From the researcher’s perspective, analysis in this paper demonstrates that science philanthropy provides almost 30% of the annual research funds of those in leading universities. And yet science philanthropy has been largely overshadowed by the massive rise of federal research funding and, to a lesser extent, industry funding. Government and industry funding have drawn intensive analysis, partly because their objectives are measurable: governments generally support broad national goals and basic research, while industry finances projects likely to contribute directly to useful products. In contrast, philanthropy’s contribution to overall levels of scientific funding and, more importantly, the distribution of philanthropy across different types of research are poorly understood. To fill this gap, I provide the first empirical evaluation of the role of science philanthropy in American research universities. The documented extent of science philanthropy and its strong emphasis on translational medical research raises important questions for federal policy makers. In determining their own funding strategies, they must no longer assume that their funding is the only source in shaping some fields of research while recognizing that philanthropy may ignore other important fields

    Replication data for: Retractions

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    Azoulay, Pierre, Furman, Jeffrey L., Krieger, Joshua L., and Murray, Fiona, (2015) "Retractions." Review of Economics and Statistics 97:5, 1118-1136

    INSITE Data Roadmap and documentation

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    The INSITE Data Roadmap is a database of data sources likely to be useful to those interested in the influence of manmade structures on North Sea ecosystems. To date it consists of 74 datasets collated from governments, NGOs and research institutions. This product has been produced as part of the INSITE Data Initiative, funded by the INSITE research programme. INSITE – INfluence of man-made Structures In the Ecosystem is a major industry-sponsored project with the overall aim of providing stakeholders with the independent scientific evidence-base needed to better understand the influence of man-made structures on the ecosystem of the North Sea. Further information can be found at http://www.insitenorthsea.org/. The main gaps in our data sets collected so far concern sediment microbial turnover, geochemistry, production water discharge and flaring and atmospheric discharges. Whilst not a comprehensive list of all available data, we hope that this will be a useful research tool for accessing relevant data with ease.# File listing # * "Data_Roadmap_Summary.docx" - Summary of the database; * "Data Roadmap_EdDatashare.accdb" - Microsoft Access database of datasets relevant to understanding the role of man-made structures in the North Sea ecosystem; * "INSITE_Data_Initiative_dataset_entry_form.docx" - Entry form to request other datasets to be included

    National Book Awards readings by the finalists of their works.

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    Held at the National Library of New Zealand 11 May 1988.Recorded by the Stout Research Centre Literary Archive.Readings given by Fiona Kidman, Murray Edmond, Anne French, Nigel Cox and Dinah Hawken

    Binuclear copper(II) complexes of xylyl-bridged bis(1,4,7-triazacyclononane) ligands

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    Fiona H. Fry, Leone Spiccia, Paul Jensen, Boujemaa Moubaraki, Keith S. Murray, and Edward R. T. Tiekin
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