47,157 research outputs found

    The Social Democratic Party and the Question of Public Ownership 1982-1991

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    The paper studies the shift in managing the state or public enterprises from a perspective of policy learning during the period 1982-1991 in Sweden. There was a significant reversal in the policy around state enterprises sector from 1982 towards a more market oriented business approach. The aim here is to investigate whether this transformation is a case of policy learning. How and where are policies formulated, and which sources are relevant to detect evidence of a possible learning process? If this shift could be described in terms of learning: When, how and why did the elite among the bureaucrats and politicians learn? The results seem to indicate that there is no specific event or paradigmatic shift that happened during the actual mandatory period 1982-1991. It was rather more of a gradual adaptation on the issue of state enterprises, mostly triggered by earlier experiences as well as the last major economic crisis in the 1970s and early 1980s. The actual learning that took place had its sources mainly from within the party.Social Democratic Party; public ownership; privatization; state enterprises; policy learning; knowledge

    Consumption and Capital Mobility in the Nordic Countries

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    I use a consumption-based test to examine the importance of income constraints and the degree of capital mobility across the Nordic countries over the period 1968-96. In particular, I explore the effects of financial deregulation of the 1980s. The estimating equation is derived along the lines of Bayoumi and MacDonald (1995). The results indicate that Nordic financial markets are highly integrated, but that the consumption behavior of a significant part of the Nordic population is constrained by income. There is no evidence that financial deregulation altered the consumption behavior of households or increased the degree of capital mobility across countries.Consumer behavior; international capital mobility; financial deregulation

    Investigation of Perognathus as an experimental organism for research in space biology Progress report, 1 Jan. - 31 Mar. 1966

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    Hibernation characteristics of pocket mice and temperature effect on torpidit

    Investigation of Perognathus as an Experimental Organism for Research in Space Biology Summary Progress Report, 3 Jan. - 30 Sep. 1967

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    Hypoxia induced hypothermia and hemoglobin oxygen affinity in Perognatu

    Mathematical Model Investigating the Effects of Neurostimulation Therapies on Neural Functioning: Comparing the Effects of Neuromodulation Techniques on Ion Channel Gating and Ionic Flux Using Finite Element Analysis

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    Neurostimulation therapies demonstrate success as a medical intervention for individuals with neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease. Despite promising results from these treatments, the influence of an electric current on ion concentrations and subsequent transmembrane voltage is unclear. This project focuses on developing a unique cellular-level mathematical model of neurostimulation to better understand its e↵ects on neuronal electrodynamics. The mathematical model presented here integrates the Poisson-Nernst-Planck system of PDEs and Hodgkin-Huxley based ODEs to model the e↵ects of this neurotherapy on transmembrane voltage, ion channel gating, and ionic mobility. This system is decoupled using the Gauss-Seidel method and then the equations are solved using the finite element method on a biologically-inspired discretized domain. Results demonstrate the influence of transcranial electrical stimulation on membrane voltage, ion channel gating, and transmembrane flux. Simulations also compare the e↵ects of two di↵erent types of neurostimulation (transcranial electrical stimulation and deep brain stimulation) showcasing cellular-level di↵erences resulting from these distinct forms of electrical therapy. Hopefully this work will ultimately help elucidate the principles by which neurostimulation alleviates disease symptoms

    Investigation of Perognathus as an experimental organism for research in space biology Progress report, 1 Jul. - 30 Sep. 1966

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    Body temperature regulatory mechanism and extreme environment response of pocket mous

    Strong irradiation of protostellar cores in Corona Australis

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    The importance of the physical environment in the evolution of newly formed low-mass stars remains an open question. In particular, radiation from nearby more massive stars may affect both the physical and chemical structure of these kinds of young stars. Aims: To constrain the physical characteristics of a group of embedded low-mass protostars in Corona Australis in the vicinity of the young luminous Herbig Be star R CrA. Methods: Millimetre wavelength maps of molecular line and continuum emission towards the low-mass star forming region IRS7 near R CrA from the SMA and APEX are presented. The maps show the distribution of 18 lines from 7 species (H2CO, CH3OH, HC3N, c-C3H2, HCN, CN and SiO) on scales from 3" to 60" (400-8000 AU). Using a set of H2CO lines, we estimate the temperatures and column densities in the region using LTE and non-LTE methods. The results are compared with 1-D radiative transfer modelling of the protostellar cores. These models constrain which properties of the central source, envelope, and environment can give rise to the observed line and continuum emission. Results: Most of the H2CO emission from the regions emerges from two elongated narrow ridges dominating the emission picked up in both interferometric and single-dish measurements. The temperatures inferred from the H2CO lines are no less than ~30 K and more likely 50-60 K, and the line emission peaks are offset by ~2500 AU from the location of the embedded protostars. The temperatures can not be explained by the heating from the young stellar objects themselves. Irradiation by the nearby Herbig Be star R CrA could, however, explain the high temperatures. The elevated temperatures can in turn impact the physical and chemical characteristics of protostars and lead to enhanced abundances of typical tracers of photon dominated regions seen in single-dish line surveys of embedded protostars in the region.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 21 pages, 28 figures; Added footnote in Section 2.

    The Decentralization of Wage Bargaining: Four Cases

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    The paper contributes to the discussion about the possible trends and processes towards decentralization of wage bargaining or wage setting within the OECD-countries since the 1970s. Based on a data set of 16 OECD countries from 1950 to 2000 our results show that in terms of bargaining level the trend is clear towards decentralization since the 1970s, even though there are important exceptions. In terms of confederal involvement the major decrease occurs among the Nordic countries and the Netherlands, whereas many of the other countries have had a status quo more or less. In terms of government involvement, however, the change is the almost non-existent. The overall tendency is still towards less centralisation, even though a number of countries have not changed or have moved in the opposite direction. Sweden, Denmark, UK and the Netherlands experience the largest decreases in decentralization overall. The processes of decentralization of wage bargaining look very differently in each country. It may occur through changes in the collective agreements themselves or through individual wage-setting outside the system of collective agreements. And the decentralization process may occur both in a context of cooperation between the labor-market organizations or in a setting of conflicts.Wage bargaining; wage setting; collective agreements; centralization; decentralization; labour market models; OECD
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