1,512 research outputs found

    Unwell: A Study on the Perception of Black and Aged Bodies, McKenzie Clarke, Spring 2020

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    Mckenzie Clarke is a rising senior from Murfreeboro, Tennessee. Her professional goal is to become a tenured professor of English

    Learning to See: A Reflection on Intergenerational Experiences, McKenzie Clarke, Spring 2020

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    Mckenzie Clarke is a rising senior from Murfreeboro, Tennessee. Her professional goal is to become a tenured professor of English

    What Mrs. Callie Terrell Taught Me About Strength and Fragility That I Did Not Know, McKenzie Clarke, Spring 2020

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    Mckenzie Clarke is a rising senior from Murfreeboro, Tennessee. Her professional goal is to become a tenured professor of English

    What the News Taught Me About Age and Ageism I Did Not Know, McKenzie Clarke, Spring 2020

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    Mckenzie Clarke is a rising senior from Murfreeboro, Tennessee. Her professional goal is to become a tenured professor of English

    Jill Burrett, counsellor, Sydney, 1978? [picture] /

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    Title devised by cataloguer based on acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Staff of the Family Court of Australia 1975-86.; Inscriptions: "Jill Burrett counsellor and later DCC Sydney. Now a successful author."--In ink on label.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn5742916

    How can we learn whether firm policies are working in africa ? challenges (and solutions?) for experiments and structural models

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    Firm productivity is low in African countries, prompting governments to try a number of active policies to improve it. Yet despite the millions of dollars spent on these policies, we are far from a situation where we know whether many of them are yielding the desired payoffs. This paper establishes some basic facts about the number and heterogeneity of firms in different sub-Saharan African countries and discusses their implications for experimental and structural approaches towards trying to estimate firm policy impacts. It shows that the typical firm program such as a matching grant scheme or business training program involves only 100 to 300 firms, which are often very heterogeneous in terms of employment and sales levels. As a result, standard experimental designs will lack any power to detect reasonable sized treatment impacts, while structural models which assume common production technologies and few missing markets will be ill-suited to capture the key constraints firms face. Nevertheless, the author suggests a way forward which involves focusing on a more homogeneous sub-sample of firms and collecting a lot more data on them than is typically collected.Microfinance,Small Scale Enterprise,E-Business,ICT Policy and Strategies,Banks&Banking Reform

    Impact assessments in finance and private sector development : what have we learned and what should we learn ?

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    Until recently rigorous impact evaluations have been rare in the area of finance and private sector development. One reason for this is the perception that many policies and projects in this area lend themselves less to formal evaluations. However, a vanguard of new impact evaluations on areas as diverse as fostering microenterprise growth, microfinance, rainfall insurance, and regulatory reform demonstrates that in many circumstances serious evaluation is possible. The purpose of this paper is to synthesize and distil the policy and implementation lessons emerging from these studies, use them to demonstrate the feasibility of impact evaluations in a broader array of topics, and thereby help prompt new impact evaluations for projects going forward.Access to Finance,,Debt Markets,Banks&Banking Reform,Microfinance

    Revisiting Jon McKenzie?s Perform or else: Performance, labour and pedagogy

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    Tim Edkins and Stevphen Shukaitis interviewed Jon McKenzie on 24 March 2013 about his book Perform or else: From discipline to performance (2001a), its current resonance and his recent research. We begin by asking about Perform or else?s playful tone and composition. Then we ask about contemporary labour struggles, including in the state of Wisconsin where he is based as a Professor of English and Director of DesignLab at University of Wisconsin. We end by discussing how he sees the current role of the university. We focus on how DesignLab forms part of his applied research program, based on the multifaceted conception of performance theorised in Perform or else and instantiated in higher education

    Hermits and the Wells

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    An interview with children\u27s author Coby McKenzie on her background and illustration and publication process by Tess Hart
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