2,642 research outputs found
Larry O. Spencer, Conference Author Presentation
Gen. Larry O. Spencer, USAF (Ret.), author of Dark Horse: A Journey from the Horseshoe to the Pentago
Journal of Mechanism and Institution Design / The existence of equilibrium flows
Alfred Galichon, Larry Samuelson, Lucas Verne
When is Trust Robust?
We examine an economy in which interactions are more productive if agents can trust others to refrain from cheating. Some agents are scoundrels, who cheat at every opportunity, while others cheat only if the cost of cheating, a decreasing function of the proportion of cheaters, is sufficiently low. The economy exhibits multiple equilibria. As the proportion of scoundrels in the economy declines, the high-trust equilibrium can be disrupted by arbitrarily small perturbations or by arbitrarily small infusions of low-trust agents, while the low-trust equilibrium becomes impervious to perturbations and infusions of high-trust agents. Scoundrels may thus have the effect of making trust more robust
Larry Gragg
Audio of the 2/23/2014 UNLV Libraries Author Event featuring Larry Gragg, author of Bright Light City: Las Vegas in Popular Culture. Remarks by CGR Director Dave Schwartz and historian Michael Green. Dr. Gragg\u27s talk is about the interactions between Benjamin Bugsy Siegel and the Las Vegas community
Larry Ruttman papers, undated, 1997-2015.
Lawrence A. (Larry) Ruttman is an attorney and author. This collection contains drafts, manuscripts, notes, research, correspondence, interviews, photographs, news clippings, book reviews, and VHS tapes documenting the research, writing, publication, and promotion of Ruttman’s two books, Voices of Brookline and American Jews and America's Game, as well as other work in the field of biographical cultural history.Donated by Larry Ruttman,Larry RuttmanBSLW RDA ENRICHEDBSLW Authority Control Project - 04-06-2017
Excerpt from broadcast by Larry Smith
Broadcast excerpt from Larry Smith, Station KFI, discussing Japanese American's loyalty to the United States.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections
Disappearing Private Reputations in Long-Run Relationships
For games of public reputation with uncertainty over types and imperfect public monitoring, Cripps, Mailath, and Samuelson (2004) showed that an informed player facing short-lived uninformed opponents cannot maintain a permanent reputation for playing a strategy that is not part of an equilibrium of the game without uncertainty over types. This paper extends that result to games in which the uninformed player is long-lived and has private beliefs, so that the informed player’s reputation is private. We also show that the rate at which reputations disappear is uniform across equilibria and that reputations disappear in sufficiently long discounted finitely-repeated games.Reputation, Imperfect Monitoring, Repeated Games, Commitment, Private Beliefs
A reading and discussion with poet Larry Schug
The author of Obsessed with Mud (1997), Caution: Thin Ice (1993), Scales Out of Balance (1990), and the forthcoming volume The Turning of Wheels, Larry Schug’s poetry seeks to capture and keep alive the passing moments we live in. Join us Friday for a reading of his work followed by a discussion of the art and process of poetry
The New Jersey African American history curriculum guide, grades 9 to 12. by Larry A. Greene, Lenworth Gunther.
The New Jersey African American history curriculum guide is a resource for New Jersey high school teachers who wish to incorporate African American experiences into their teaching of U.S. history. The guide provides narratives, keywords, suggested activites, and bibliographies.CONTENTS:
Foreword -- About the Authors -- Preface -- How to Use This Guide -- Acknowledgments -- Unit 1 African Beginnings -- Unit 2 Africa, Europe, and the Rise of Afro-America, 1441-1619 -- Unit 3 African American Slavery in the Colonial Era, 1619-1775 -- Unit 4 Blacks in the Revolutionary Era, 1776-1789 -- Unit 5 Slavery and Abolition in Post-Revolutionary and Antebellum America, 1790-1860 -- Unit 6 African Americans and the Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Unit 7 The Reconstruction Era, 1865-1877 -- Unit 8 The Rise of Jim Crow and The Nadir, 1878-1915 -- Unit 9 World War I and the Great Migration, 1915-1920 -- Unit 10 The Decade of the Twenties: From the Great Migration to the Great Depression -- Unit 11 The 1930s: The Great Depression -- Unit 12 World War II: The Struggle for Democracy at Home and Abroad, 1940-1945 -- Unit 13 The Immediate Postwar Years, 1945-1953 -- Unit 14 The Civil Rights and Black Power Era: Gains and Losses, 1954-1970 -- Unit 15 Beyond Civil Rights, 1970-1994
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