Sentences with phrase «economic professors from»

The list also boasts almost 50 economic professors from various British universities.

Not exact matches

«Based on evidence gathered from focus groups and interviews conducted in U.S. coal communities, we argue that coal communities that have experienced mine closures have already begun an economic and social transition, one that is based on reshaping their culture and sense of identity,» wrote professors of Indiana University in a paper published in the March issue of Energy Research and Social Science.
For Carlos Vargas - Silva, associate professor and senior researcher at the University of Oxford's Migration Observatory, the economic impact of migrants can be read in two ways: a fiscal impact — taxes and contributions that new arrivals will make, minus the benefits and services they receive — and the impact that they have on the labor market, which is essentially whether native workers will be displaced from their jobs or not.
«Whole segments of the population would reap enormous benefits, from social inclusion to educational and economic opportunities,» said DePauw University media studies professor Kevin Howley.
Peter Bakker joins General Secretary of the Norwegian WWF, Nina Jensen; Professor Katherine Richardson; Managing Director of the Global Economic Symposium, Thierry Malleret and professor Frank Geels as well as the five members from DNV GL in the AdvisoProfessor Katherine Richardson; Managing Director of the Global Economic Symposium, Thierry Malleret and professor Frank Geels as well as the five members from DNV GL in the Advisoprofessor Frank Geels as well as the five members from DNV GL in the Advisory Board.
The insights provided to Jay came from a history professor in 1967 who advised Jay that when countries go off a gold or silver standard, hard economic times are sure to follow because nations begin to think they do not need to work hard and save to enjoy a better life.
The following chart, constructed from data in the paper, summarizes average equity return (ERP plus risk - free rate) estimates in local currencies for the 59 countries with more than five responses from finance / economic professors, analysts and company managers.
Furthermore, the Fed would like to adhere to the so - called «Taylor Rule» (in spite of Professor Taylor's protestations that it is misinterpreting and misusing his concept), a mathematical construct that purports to make monetary policy more «scientific» by establishing an arithmetic rule for varying the administered interest rate according to the variance of «actual from target inflation» (note that «inflation» refers to the change in a price index in this case, not the phenomenon of inflation of the money supply as such), as well as the variance of economic output from «potential output» (i.e, the so - called «output gap» is incorporated in the formula as well).
But, as Professor Adebayo Adedeji of the UN Economic Commission on Africa recalled: «Three decades after independence our people continue to be excluded from critical and significant contribution to the ethics of the body politic.
Jay W. Forrester, professor of management at MIT whose sophisticated computer modeling of social and environmental issues led to the Club of Rome report on «The Limits of Growth,» sees the political and economic stresses in the world as caused by the necessary transition from worldwide growth to equilibrium.
Rubin, a professor of political science at Duquesne University, assesses environmentalism from the standpoint of liberal constitutionalism; he notes that major environmentalists aspire to transform every segment of human existence, from our economic transactions to our private lives.
After a quiet summer off from classroom duties, at a safe distance from multinational corporations, secularized businessmen, and the as - yet - unredeemed American economic system, maybe — if this survey is accurate — the seminary professors will come back a little closer to This World and this world than they've been in the past.
Professor Ashok Gulati, Infosys Chair Professor for Agriculture at the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations SAVING FOOD FROM THE FARM TO THE FORK: Wastage in rich and poor countries alike, 29 August 2016
A team of researchers, led by Professor Sotaro Kita from the University of Warwick and funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, found that empathic people made larger and more gestures that encouraged interaction with the listener.
Chair: Dr Philip Smith, Chairman, Global Utilities Ltd, Pulse Group Holdings Ltd, and Chair of Milton Keynes Leaders» Forum Speakers: Keith Clarke CBE, former CEO of Atkins Global and Chairman of Forum for the Future Evan Davis, broadcaster and Visiting Professor at The Open University Business School The Festival of Social Science is run by the Economic and Social Research Council and takes place from 2 - 9 November 2013.
This release is based on the findings from from «Using electroencephalography to characterise shallow processing in language comprehension», funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and carried out by Professor Hartmut Leuthold and Professor Anthony Sandford at Glasgow University.
For further information contact Professor Nick Gallent Email: [email protected] Telephone: 01273 873159 ESRC Press Office: Danielle Moore Email: [email protected] Telephone 01793 413122 Jeanine Woolley Email: [email protected] Telephone 01793 413119 Notes for editors: This release is based on the findings from «The Politics of Scale and Network Building in Spatial Planning: Bridging Community Ambition to Strategic Priority in Southern England» funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and carried out by Professor Nick Gallent of the Bartlett School of Planning at University College London.
This release is based on early findings from «Diagnosing reading in a second or foreign language» funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and carried out by Professor J. Charles Alderson at the Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University.
Today's panelists are: WAMC's Alan Chartock, Communications Consultant Theresa Bourgeois, Siena College Economic Professor Aaron Pacitti, and, via phone from the U.S. Virgin Islands, Former EPA Regional Administrator Judith Enck.
«We need [a representative] that knows, that comes from our own social, cultural and economic background in power,» said Dr. Rafael Lantigua, a professor of clinical medicine at Columbia University and a member of the coalition.
Children from low - income families are likely to hear 30 million fewer words than their peers from higher - income families, a deficit that can have far - reaching implications on educational achievement, health and economic status, said Alan Mendelsohn, associate professor of pediatrics and population health at the New York University School of Medicine.
For Alexandra Trkola, a professor of medical virology at UZH, this surprising discovery needs to be studied more closely: «First of all, we need to understand more precisely what significance and impact the genetic, geographical and socio - economic factors of people from different ethnicities have on the formation of these antibodies.»
«Self - administered treatment for keloid scars can reduce the economic burden on the healthcare system and provide a treatment option for patients who have limited access to medical care,» comments Professor Jeffrey Karp from Brigham and Women's Hospital at Harvard Medical School, US, an expert on medical device design who was not involved in this study.
But a new study from an MIT professor reveals an economic tension underneath this practice: Migrants who hang on to their old cuisines often pay more to eat, because they tend to move to places where their familiar foods are more expensive.
• When Justin Esarey, an assistant professor of political science at Rice University in Houston, Texas, applied for an NSF grant, he was careful to follow a directive from Congress «that any awards made by NSF's division of political science must foster national security or economic development,» wrote Mervis on ScienceInsider.
Speaking about the research, Professor Mireia Jofre - Bonet from the Department of Economics at City, University of London and lead author of the study, said: «Our study confirms the close relationship between health and the economic environment as we found that the 2008 Great Recession led to a decrease in risky behaviour, such as smoking and drinking, but also an increase in the likelihood of obesity, diabetes and mental health problems.
«It would be very hard to go backwards on that — they would first need to withdraw and re-propose, and by the time everything is resolved, the year would be more or less over,» says James Stock, a Harvard University economics professor who served on the White House Council of Economic Advisers from February 2013 to July 2014.
Professor Yajun Chen, from the School of Public Health at Sun Yat - Sen University, in Guangzhou said: «The prevalence of obesity in China is alarming as the country undergoes rapid economic transition, leading to changes to traditional diet, increased sedentary lifestyles and reduced physical activity.
The dataset used in the research by Professor Hatton, from the European Social Survey, provided a unique opportunity to analyse immigration opinion over a decade that spans the economic turbulence brought about by the global financial crisis.
Ed Barbier, the John S. Bugas Professor of Economics and Finance in the UW College of Business, was a co-author of «The economic value of grassland species for carbon storage,» along with researchers from Northern Arizona University, the University of Illinois, the University of Minnesota, Australia's Western Sydney University, the University of Nebraska, Western Washington University and the University of Michigan.
The project will be supervised by Professor Cathy Thornton and Dr Ed Dudley with wider support from obstetricians, midwives, physicists, qualitative methods and health economic specialists.
The Juliana W. and William Foss Thompson Professor of Education and Society at HGSE, Lesaux conducts research focusing on promoting the language and literacy skills of today's children and youth from diverse linguistic, cultural, and economic backgrounds.
The study, conducted by McCartney, Boston College Associate Professor Eric Dearing, and Samford University Professor Beck Taylor, looked at reading and math achievement of more than 1,300 children in middle childhood from economic backgrounds ranging from poor to affluent.
Beland, an Associate Professor at Louisiana State University, and Murphy, an Assistant Professor at the University of Texas and Associate at the Centre for Economic Performance at LSE, collected data from schools in Birmingham, Leicester, London and Manchester in 2013.
Professor Richard Thaler from the University of Chicago received the 2017 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work in behavioral finance.
One can be concerned with the recovery from the current serious recession, a matter of one or two years; one can be concerned with the economic development of the United States and of the world in the next decade; and one can be concerned with the long - run evolution of a world of limited resources, the matter to which you give stress in your address to Professor Daly and in your reference to the puberty of the economic world.
To learn what's wrong with the signatories» read of economic literature, review the following excerpt from an e-mail exchange I had over the weekend with William D. Nordhaus, the Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale, whose work is at the heart of the piece's rejection of the need for «drastic» steps to curtail greenhouse gas emissions (as if that's the only kind of response being considered):
Dr. Helm, a professor of energy policy at Oxford and an economic adviser to Britain's secretary of state for energy and climate change, recently discussed what he views as America's lucky break with natural gas and what we can learn from Europe's energy policy mistakes.
Roger Pielke Junior, a professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado, has attacked the IPCC for including in one of its reports a reference to an abstract in 2006, that indicated economic losses from disasters increased between 1970 and 2005.
In its first week, fivethirtyeight published a piece from Rodger Pielke Jr. (an environmental studies professor who focuses on climate impacts) in which it was argued that climate change is not causing increased economic losses.
«The sooner global emissions start to fall, the lower the risk not only of major climate disruption, but also of economic disruption that could otherwise arise from the need for subsequent reductions at historically unprecedented rates, should near - term action remain inadequate,» says another of the report's authors, Michael Grubb, professor of international energy and climate change policy at University College London's Institute of Sustainable Resources.
It was analyzed by the EPA using results from two economic forecasting models: the ADAGE model developed at Research Triangle Institute (RTI) in North Carolina; and the IGEM model run by a consulting firm founded by Dale Jorgenson, a professor at Harvard.
The Quiet Triumph featured some international arbitration experts from China, including Professor Tang Houzhi, the former Vice Chairman of the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC).
Her disabilities from the accident prevented her from completing her PhD on time and GJEL Accident Attorneys employed consulting experts combined with research to show that in addition to the damages she suffered in the form of medical costs and pain and suffering, the client also suffered significant economic loss because of the injuries resulting in her obtaining her full time teaching position as a history professor a full one year after she would have otherwise.
I have found an article by Professor Cindy Shannon (a Quandamooka woman from North Stradbroke Island) on acculturation to be a useful guide in illuminating the path from historical trauma, anger / shame, low socio - economic status and chronic disease to unacceptably early mortality (Shannon 2002).
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