Analyzes effectiveness of international interventions through their impact on foreign exchange rates; examples of UN peacekeeping in Lebanon and economic sanctions in South Africa.
Among the most prominent generic signals of Dostoevskii's The Possessed are those suggesting allegory. Allegory is one of several genres in the novel referred to by name. The narrator characterizes Stepan Trofimovich's romantic poema as "some sort of allegory" (9) and remarks that, after the most intimate of encounters with his patroness, Stepan Trofimovich would sometimes "jump up from the couch and beat the wall with his fists," all of which "without the slightest allegory" (12). Concerning the climax of Iuliia Mikhailovna's soirée, an allegorical representation of the various literary schools and tendencies of the day, the narrator reports, "It would have been difficult to imagine a more pitiful, tactless, talentless, and vapid allegory than that 'literary quadrille'" (389). On a more fundamental level, the work's second epigraph, the passage from the Gospel of Luke describing the exorcism of a possessed man and the flight of the demons into a herd of swine, provides an allegorical foundation for the entire action, projecting the work against biblical history.
Abstract A brand choice model that incorporates both reference and observed prices is proposed for frequently purchased products. The model is composed of a probability-of-purchase component and a reference-price-formation component. Empirical testing of the model using coffee UPC scanner panel data demonstrates that for two of the three brands, the model predicts probability of purchase better than do standard demand models that utilize only current observed brand prices.
ABSTRACTIssues relating to the construction of marketing models are discussed. These include determining the level of aggregation of model construction, specifying the structure of the model, and the aggregation level of data to be employed in estimating model parameters. These issues are addressed through specifying and estimating both consumer‐level and firm‐level models and comparing the results. An important conclusion is that inferences about consumer behavior should not be drawn from firm‐level models since aggregation bias may exist.