We study the effects of an unexpected and large migration from Venezuela on Peruvian labor markets. From 2017 to 2019, about 800,000 Venezuelans migrated to Peru, with 84% settling in the Lima metropolitan area. The percentage of Venezuelans in the working age population in Lima increased from nearly 0 to over 10%, with migrants having higher education on average than the local labor force. We propose a simple assignment model of the labor market, which suggests that migration will lead to a reallocation of local workers toward low-skilled jobs. Using synthetic control methods and comparing Lima with a group of other Peruvian metropolitan areas, we find evidence of adjustment in occupational structure in the direction predicted by the model with few decreases in employment of local workers.
In: The journal of negro education: JNE ;a Howard University quarterly review of issues incident to the education of black people, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 168
This article describes a project that generated the recommendations of a panel of experts regarding the jail as a venue for the delivery of behavioral health care services. The project was a component of the MacArthur Foundation's Safety and Justice Challenge initiative, which seeks to address over-incarceration by changing the way jails are conceptualized and used. The recommendations were grounded largely in the sequential intercept model that rests on two core principles: minimize the inappropriate penetration of persons with mental illness into the criminal justice system and recognize that the community is the unit of analysis to address criminal justice–mental health problems successfully. Other topics presented in the context of the initiative included bringing the community to scale, jail diversion, the limits of jail responsibility, and the Affordable Care Act's role in providing insurance coverage for detainees.
In: The journal of negro education: JNE ;a Howard University quarterly review of issues incident to the education of black people, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 73
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: This qualitative study had three aims: (1) to interview a group of military nurses who had served in Afghanistan and Iraq, (2) to determine if the quantitative findings of the larger electronic survey resonated with veteran nurses, and (3) to identify other concerns and issues that were not addressed adequately in the survey. DESCRIPTION: This was a focus group convened to review the results of survey research conducted by Stanton and colleagues in 2016. Based on informal feedback from survey respondents, the investigators decided that a follow-up qualitative study with veteran nurses in the focus group could review the data and analysis from this survey. The group met and reviewed the results and their conversations were recorded and analyzed. METHODS: A multistage focus group approach was used to convene three meetings of nurse veterans (N = 8) who had been deployed and had experienced the reintegration process. RESULTS: During all three interviews, participants reinforced many of the findings of the survey by Stanton and colleagues. A range of life course issues beyond the scope of the electronic survey was also identified by the focus group as problematic during deployment and as challenging during the reintegration process. CONCLUSIONS: Military nurses and other medical caregiver groups might benefit from proactive planning and training that encourage/underscore the benefits of spirituality and mindfulness and other strategies that prepare and support them. Specific resources/toolkits that target common life course concerns have been initiated.
"Independent Russia is approaching the start of its third decade of post-Soviet existence. After the economic chaos of the Boris Yeltsin decade and the recovery and stabilization of the Vladimir Putin decade, Russia's leaders have high ambitions for a return to great power status in the years ahead. Their aspirations are tempered, however, by the realities of Russia's social, economic, and military shortcomings and vulnerabilities, laid painfully bare by the stress test of the recent global financial crisis. Looking ahead, some also calculate that Russia will be increasingly challenged in the Far East by a rising China and in the Middle East by an Iran that aspires to regional hegemony. As a result, Moscow is already seeking to strengthen Russia's ties with Europe and the United States. The West is seen as crucial to Russia's modernization as well as a hedge against what may develop to Russia's east and south in coming decades. This process of Russia's anchoring itself more firmly in the West will proceed with lots of tactical hiccups and sporadic crises. Nevertheless, it will bring consequences and opportunities for U.S. diplomacy and strategic development, some of which the Barack Obama administration's policy of 'reset' is already reaping. But Russian policy toward the United States is conditional on a U.S. approach that engages Russia in positive ways. If that policy were to change, it could push Russia and China closer together on some issues in an effort to constrain the United States."--P. 1 ; Format not distributed to depository libraries. ; "January 2011." ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 30-39). ; Executive summary -- Introduction -- Putin's record -- Medvedev's challenge -- Demographic determinism -- Price paradox -- Corruption complex -- Military malaise -- The 'Near Abroad' -- China -- Iran -- Implications for the United States -- Notes -- About the author. ; "Independent Russia is approaching the start of its third decade of post-Soviet existence. After the economic chaos of the Boris Yeltsin decade and the recovery and stabilization of the Vladimir Putin decade, Russia's leaders have high ambitions for a return to great power status in the years ahead. Their aspirations are tempered, however, by the realities of Russia's social, economic, and military shortcomings and vulnerabilities, laid painfully bare by the stress test of the recent global financial crisis. Looking ahead, some also calculate that Russia will be increasingly challenged in the Far East by a rising China and in the Middle East by an Iran that aspires to regional hegemony. As a result, Moscow is already seeking to strengthen Russia's ties with Europe and the United States. The West is seen as crucial to Russia's modernization as well as a hedge against what may develop to Russia's east and south in coming decades. This process of Russia's anchoring itself more firmly in the West will proceed with lots of tactical hiccups and sporadic crises. Nevertheless, it will bring consequences and opportunities for U.S. diplomacy and strategic development, some of which the Barack Obama administration's policy of 'reset' is already reaping. But Russian policy toward the United States is conditional on a U.S. approach that engages Russia in positive ways. If that policy were to change, it could push Russia and China closer together on some issues in an effort to constrain the United States."--P. 1 ; Mode of access: Internet.