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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Other Economics
Feeling The Heat Of Human Rights Branding: Bringing Transnational Corporations Within The International Human Rights Fence, Robert Mccorquodale
Feeling The Heat Of Human Rights Branding: Bringing Transnational Corporations Within The International Human Rights Fence, Robert Mccorquodale
Human Rights & Human Welfare
A review of:
Human Rights Standards and the Responsibility of Transnational Corporations edited by Michael K. Addo. The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 1999. 384pp.
Trends. Environmental Issues: Struggles To Think Globally, Ibpp Editor
Trends. Environmental Issues: Struggles To Think Globally, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article discusses the difficulties of thinking globally in the context of environmentalism and environmental policy, even for proponents of environmental stewardship.
A Tale Of Two Theories: Monopolies And Craft Guilds In Medieval England And Modern Imagination, Gary Richardson
A Tale Of Two Theories: Monopolies And Craft Guilds In Medieval England And Modern Imagination, Gary Richardson
Gary Richardson
No abstract provided.
The Role Of Product Attributes In The Agricultural Negotiations, Julie Caswell
The Role Of Product Attributes In The Agricultural Negotiations, Julie Caswell
Julie Caswell
No abstract provided.
Capitalism And The Value Of Life: Foot-And-Mouth And The Culling Of Herds, Ibpp Editor
Capitalism And The Value Of Life: Foot-And-Mouth And The Culling Of Herds, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes some psychological implications of culling as an intervention to help combat the spread of foot-and-mouth disease.
Poorer European Countries Are Less Concerned About Biotechnology Than Richer Countries, Michael Siegrist
Poorer European Countries Are Less Concerned About Biotechnology Than Richer Countries, Michael Siegrist
RISK: Health, Safety & Environment (1990-2002)
The author examines the relationship between GNP, media coverage, and public perceptions of the utility, risk, and acceptability of medical and food-related applications of biotechnology.
Poverty Research In Latin America And Sen’S Capability Approach, Andres Rius, Andrea Vigorito
Poverty Research In Latin America And Sen’S Capability Approach, Andres Rius, Andrea Vigorito
Andres Rius
No abstract provided.
Quantifying Regulatory Barriers To Asian–U.S. Food Trade, Julie Caswell
Quantifying Regulatory Barriers To Asian–U.S. Food Trade, Julie Caswell
Julie Caswell
Data on U.S. Food and Drug Administration import detentions and alerts are used to quantify regulatory barriers experienced by Asian food products entering the United States. These data offer the only comprehensive means of assessing regulatory barriers without relying on expert opinion, although they fall short of placing a dollar value on the volume of trade affected. The data show that meeting food regulations is a significant barrier to Asian food products entering the United States, especially for products originating in developing and newly industrialized countries.
Unpacking ‘Adam Smith: Critical Theorist?’, Spencer J. Pack
Unpacking ‘Adam Smith: Critical Theorist?’, Spencer J. Pack
Economics Faculty Publications
This paper responds to Keith Tribe's provocative Journal of Economic Literature article, “Adam Smith: Critical Theorist?” There Tribe argued that most people most of the time grossly misread Smith, due, among other things, to their quite inadequate appreciation of Smith's linguistic, social, moral, and theological context. Against Tribe, the paper argues that Smith can profitably be read as both an eighteenth-century moralist and a twenty-first century critic. Smith can be a source of inspiration, wisdom and profundity for contemporary economists. Moreover, Smith can be successfully employed by modern economists to change, deepen, and broaden contemporary economic theory.
Market Structure And Racial Earnings: Evidence From Job Changers, Richard U. Agesa, Jacqueline Agesa, Gary A. Hoover
Market Structure And Racial Earnings: Evidence From Job Changers, Richard U. Agesa, Jacqueline Agesa, Gary A. Hoover
Economics Faculty Research
In his seminal contribution, Gary Becker (1957) suggests that rents in noncompetitive industries provide employers with the latitude to engage in earnings discrimination. Implicit in this theory, is that white workers in noncompetitive industries would capture a disproportion ate share of monopoly rents (excessive wages) relative to their minority counterparts. We utilize wage-change equations to examine earnings shifts for whites and minorities stemming from a job switch to a different market structure. Additionally for each racial group, wage equations of workers before and after the job change are used to calculate difference in-differences estimates of wage change as a result …
On Trademarks, Domain Names, And Internal Auctions, Gideon Parchomovsky
On Trademarks, Domain Names, And Internal Auctions, Gideon Parchomovsky
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Norms & Corporate Law: Introduction, Edward B. Rock, Michael L. Wachter
Norms & Corporate Law: Introduction, Edward B. Rock, Michael L. Wachter
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Islands Of Conscious Power: Law, Norms, And The Self-Governing Corporation, Edward B. Rock, Michael L. Wachter
Islands Of Conscious Power: Law, Norms, And The Self-Governing Corporation, Edward B. Rock, Michael L. Wachter
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Controlling For Seam Problems In Duration Model Estimates: With Application To The Current Population Survey And The Computer Aided Telephone Interview/ Computer Aided Personal Interview Overlap Survey, Charles Romeo
Charles Romeo
No abstract provided.
Management Of Fisheries In Eu: A Principal-Agent Analysis, Frank Jensen, Niels Vestergaard
Management Of Fisheries In Eu: A Principal-Agent Analysis, Frank Jensen, Niels Vestergaard
Niels Vestergaard
In this paper, an EU tax on fishing effort is studied as an alternative to the system of Total Allowable Catches (TACs). The analysis is conducted under imperfect information, and the hypothesis adopted is that the EU lacks information about the costs of individual fishermen. In light of this imperfection, there are at least two reasons for considering an EU tax. First, it can be used to correct part of the market failure associated with fisheries. Second, it can be used to secure correct revelation of fishermen types in light of asymmetric information.