29,847 research outputs found
Please Bring me the New York Times – On the European Roots of Richard Abel Musgrave
Richard Musgrave was one of the around 200 academic economists who emigrated from Germany when Fascism came to dominate the country. This memorial lecture traces the German and European roots of Richard Musgrave’s oeuvre, trying to shed light on his family background as well as on the political and scientific factors that influenced his education as an economist. Particular emphasis is given to the development of his notion of public goods.Richard Musgrave, Public Finance and Economic Thought
Data for: Defending hierarchy from the Moon to the Indian Ocean: Symbolic capital and political dominance in early modern China and the Cold War
This is an Annotation for Transparent Inquiry (ATI) data project. The annotated article can be viewed on the publisher's website.
The theory presented in the article concerns how the evolution of fields of contestation for supremacy and position within hierarchical ‘games’ generates incentives for actors to invest even massive amounts of “tangible” resources into displays of cultural competence that have no immediate “material” payoffs commensurate with that investment. The piece applies its theorizing to two disparate cases: the “treasure fleet” expeditions under the early Ming in the early fourteenth century and to the Apollo project of manned voyages by the United States in the 1960s and early 1970s.We execute our strategy of comparing explanations drawn from our theory to those drawn by generalized families of competing explanations, as well as rival explanations driven by idiosyncratic features of the specific cases, in an analytically similar but empirically different manner. In both cases, we test our theory’s explanatory power against rival explanations using a framework drawn from recent advances in the qualitative literature; we refer to this strategy as a “folk Bayes” approach (detailed more in the Supplementary Information) and argue that it allows us to isolate observations in which our theory better predicts observance (or lack of observance) of clues associated with the case compared to rivals given intuitively plausible prior beliefs.
The differing levels of documentation available in each case (even before considering language difficulties) led to different strategies for collecting evidence to allow for this testing. In the Ming case, we drew on secondary sources. This reflects the fact that neither author reads Mandarin nor any other language implicated in the Ming treasure-fleet voyages. It also derives from the fact that we understand that even much of the “primary sources” available in Mandarin are themselves secondary sources (e.g. the Ming Shilu 明实录 or “Veritable Records of the Ming Dynasty”, an official record of the Ming dynasty compiled by scholar-officials after the death of each emperor). As discussed in the case, many of the “primary sources” may have been lost not merely to time and the dislocations associated with dynastic successions in e.g. 1644, 1911, and 1949 but to specific bureaucratic sabotage during the later Ming dynasty.
The absence of such primary documentation and access to original-language literature meant that we were reliant on English-language sources. Fortunately, these include a vast array of specialist tracts. Instead of relying on standard popularizations (e.g. Levathes 2014, When China Ruled the Seas; 436 Google Scholar citations), we used works by scholars of China and Chinese history (e.g. Dreyer 2007; Needham 1971; Cham 1988, 2007; Finlay 1991). We believe that this allowed us to better survey disputes over interpretations of the voyages’ meaning and impact; furthermore, our more capacious selection mitigates the problems mentioned by Lustick (1996). We relied most heavily on those sources that themselves seemed to be closest to archaeological, documentary, and other more-primary records.
In the Kennedy case, we benefitted from greater availability of documentary records. We consulted the secondary literature (the work of John M. Logsdon and Walter A. Macdougall, as well as a dissertation by Teasel Muir-Harmony, was particularly helpful). We also consulted contemporaneous media and other sources. However, we viewed these works more as a guide to initial surveys in archival and other primary-source research. We conducted searches for relevant records in compilations of government records such as the Foreign Relations of the United States series (for both the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations) and The American Presidency Project as well as searches among the CIA’s online reading room of declassified documents. Furthermore, we employed records held by the John F. Kennedy Library. Many of the Kennedy Library’s holdings have been digitized, but some have not. To collect those records that were unavailable, I visited the library in November 2016 to find and photograph relevant documents. (This required only a day of research, as opposed to the much longer periods that would have otherwise been necessary, because of the volume of records available online already, because of the narrow nature of our research interests, and because most of the processing of those records occurred offsite after my visit.) Documents were saved for later reference as computer files and prepared for sharing where necessary by converting them to PDFs. Finally, the processing of the Kennedy Library’s tapes allowed us to consult an unusually rich vein into the president’s thinking; the volumes compiled by the Presidential Recordings Project at the Miller Center of the University of Virginia helped us understand how the Moon project fit into the president’s thinking.
Our exposition of our research on the Kennedy case was limited in the text by the demands of the journal publication process. Consequently, as with the Ming case, much of our argumentation and fuller expositions of our findings are presented in a Supplementary Information.
References in this Data Overview
Levathes, Louise. 2014. When China Ruled the Seas: The Treasure Fleet of the Dragon Throne. Open Road Media.
Lustick, Ian S. 1996. History, Historiography, and Political Science: Multiple Historical Records and the Problem of Selection Bias. American Political Science Review 90(3):605-618.
Supplementary Information
This article’s online appendix is available at International Organization, on Harvard Dataverse, and http://www.paulmusgrave.info
Replication Data for: New Questions for an Old Alliance: NATO in Cyberspace and American Public Opinion
Replication data, IRB forms, and other results for New Questions for an Old Alliance: NATO in Cyberspace and American Public Opinion
Replication Data for: Hitting Back or Holding Back in Cyberspace
Replication code and data for Hitting Back or Holding Back in Cyberspace, Conflict Management and Peace Science
Replication Data for: Cheerleading in Cyberspace: How the American Public Judges Attribution Claims for Cyberattacks
These files contain raw data, cleaned data, code to analyze and clean data, output files (including Stata logs, tables in .tex format, and charts in .pdf format), and documentation files (including questionnaires for the MTurk experiment and appendix)
sj-pdf-1-cmp-10.1177_07388942221111069 - Supplemental material for Hitting back or holding back in cyberspace: Experimental evidence regarding Americans’ responses to cyberattacks
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-cmp-10.1177_07388942221111069 for Hitting back or holding back in cyberspace: Experimental evidence regarding Americans’ responses to cyberattacks by Marcelo M Leal and Paul Musgrave in Conflict Management and Peace Science</p
Conversations with Paul Auster
Interviews with the author of The New York Trilogy, In the Country of Last Things, and The Brooklyn Follies.Cover -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chronology -- Translation -- Interview with Paul Auster -- An Interview with Paul Auster -- Memory's Escape-Inventing the Music of Chance: A Conversation with Paul Auster -- The Making of Smoke -- The Manuscript in the Book: A Conversation -- An Interview with Paul Auster -- The Futurist Radio Hour: An Interview with Paul Auster -- Paul Auster: Writer and Director -- Off the Page: Paul Auster -- Paul Auster: The Art of Fiction -- Jonathan Lethem Talks with Paul Auster -- A Conversation with Paul Auster -- The Making of The Inner Life of Martin Frost -- Interview: Paul Auster -- A Connoisseur of Clouds, a Meteorologist of Whims: The Rumpus Interview with Paul Auster -- Interview: Paul Auster on His New Novel, Invisible -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y -- ZInterviews with the author of The New York Trilogy, In the Country of Last Things, and The Brooklyn Follies.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Portrait of Paul Ham at the National Library of Australia, 15 November 2011 /
Title from nformation supplied by photographer.; Part of the collection: Podcast photograph of author Paul Ham at the National Library of Australia, 15 November 2011.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia
Author, Dr. Paul Wehr. c. 1980
Dr. Paul Wehr, as he appeared c. 1980. Dr. Wehr was a professor of history at UCF and the author of Like a Mustard Seed: the Slavia Settlement (1982 - Mickler Publishing House), a history of the early years of Slavia and St. Luke\u27s history.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-images/1413/thumbnail.jp
Michael Rodriguez interviews author Paul Clemens
Author Paul Clemens talks about his book "Made in Detroit," the genre of memoir, and writing about race. Clemens is interviewed by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the MSU Main Library
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