64 research outputs found
Construction, Concentration, and (Dis)Continuities in Social Valuations
I review and integrate recent sociological research that makes progress on three interrelated questions pertaining to social valuation: (a) the degree of social construction relative to objective constraints; (b) the degree of concentration in social valuations at a single point in time; and (c) the conditions that govern two broad forms of temporal discontinuity—(i) fashion cycles, especially in cultural expression and in managerial practices, and (ii) bubble/crash dynamics, as witnessed in such domains as authoritarian regimes and financial markets. In the course of the review, I argue for the importance of identifying how objective conditions constrain social construction and suggest two contrarian mechanisms by which this is accomplished—valuation opportunism and valuation entrepreneurship—and the conditions under which they are more or less effective
The Role of Information and Financial Reporting in Corporate Governance and Debt Contracting
We review recent literature on the role of financial reporting transparency in reducing governance-related agency conflicts among managers, directors, and shareholders, as well as in reducing agency conflicts between shareholders and creditors, and offer researchers some suggested avenues for future research. Key themes include the endogenous nature of debt contracts and governance mechanisms with respect to information asymmetry between contracting parties, the heterogeneous nature of the informational demands of contracting parties, and the heterogeneous nature of the resulting governance and debt contracts. We also emphasize the role of a commitment to financial reporting transparency in facilitating informal multiperiod contracts among managers, directors, shareholders, and creditors
Exposing Politicians’ Peccadilloes in Comparative Context: Explaining the Frequency of Political Sex Scandals in Eight Democracies Using Fuzzy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis
This article was published in the journal Political Communication [© Taylor & Francis Group]. The definitive version is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2012.737434Political sex scandals are largely absent in some democracies but proliferate in others. However, there have so far been few if any comprehensive attempts to document the actual number of sex scandals that have occurred and to explain their presence (and, indeed, absence), and the one study that has (Barker's 1994 study) ended in the early 1990s and had numerous problems in relation to defining and documenting such scandals. Based on extensive research, this article documents the number of sex scandals in eight advanced industrial democracies and tries to explain their occurrence using Charles Ragin's fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis. The article has three goals: to determine the number of sex scandals in different democracies, explain why this might be, and demonstrate the utility of fuzzy set qualitative case analysis for small- and medium-N comparative research
The association between geographical factors and dental caries in a rural area in Mexico
The aim of this study was to investigate the association between markers of oral disease and geographical factors influencing access to dental care (DMFT score) among school children in Central Mexico. Retrospective data were collected during an international service-learning program between 2002 and 2009. A sample of 1,143 children (55% females; mean age 12.7±13.1years) was analyzed. The mean DMFT score, represented largely by untreated tooth decay, was 4.02 (4.76). The variables that had the most significant effect on the DMFT score were proportion of paved roads between the community and dental services, and the availability of piped potable water. The DMFT score increased in proportion to the percentage of paved roads. In contrast, the DMFT score decreased with the availability of piped potable water. Similar results were found for untreated tooth decay. The main variable associated with a significant increase in dental fillings was proportion of paved roads. Together with Brazilian reports, this is one of the first investigations of the association between geographical factors and oral health in an underdeveloped setting
Escândalos, marolas e finanças: para uma sociologia da transformação do ambiente econômico
A note on nutrition during late pregnancy in West African Dwarf sheep
ABSTRACTThree groups, each of 12 West African Dwarf ewes weighing 17·5 kg at mating, had mean daily digestible organic matter intakes over the final 7 weeks of pregnancy of 249, 435 and 538 g/ewe (Treatments I, II and III respectively). Mean plasma concentrations in Treatments I, II and III were: glucose, 384, 527 and 538mg/l; non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), 672, 441 and 427 μequiv/1; and ketones, 44·1, 30·5 and 27·3 mg/1. The differences in all metabolites between Treatment I and Treatments II and III were significant (i) <0·001). The mean birth weights of the single lambs from ewes in Treatments I to III were 1·1, 1·7 and 1·8 kg, those from ewes in Treatment I being significantly lighter than those from ewes in Treatments II and III. Lamb birth weights were significantly and positively related to energy intake and to plasma glucose concentrations, and significantly and negatively related to plasma NEFA and ketone concentrations.The results indicate that the effect of undernourishment during late pregnancy in West African Dwarf sheep may be greater than in European breeds, and that the concentrations of blood metabolites may have a use in monitoring and regulating nutritional state in this genotype.</jats:p
An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of Monitoring Intensity on the Relation between Equity Incentives and Earnings Management
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