BOOK REVIEWS
In: Economic Analysis and Policy, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 271-273
13 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Economic Analysis and Policy, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 271-273
In: Behavioral science, Band 29, Heft 2, S. 138-140
SSRN
In: Economic Analysis and Policy, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 33-43
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is affected by many factors, but too much of our focus has been on antimicrobial usage. The major factor that drives resistance rates globally is spread. The COVID-19 pandemic should lead to improved infection prevention and control practices, both in healthcare facilities and the community. COVID-19 will also have ongoing and profound effects on local, national and international travel. All these factors should lead to a decrease in the spread of resistant bacteria. So overall, COVID-19 should lead to a fall in resistance rates seen in many countries. For this debate we show why, overall, COVID-19 will not result in increased AMR prevalence. But globally, changes in AMR rates will not be uniform. In wealthier and developed countries, resistance rates will likely decrease, but in many other countries there are already too many factors associated with poor controls on the spread of bacteria and viruses (e.g. poor water and sanitation, poor public health, corrupt government, inadequate housing, etc.). In these countries, if economies and governance deteriorate further, we might see even more transmission of resistant bacteria.
BASE
In: Knowledge & policy, Band 9, Heft 4, S. 62-85
ISSN: 2168-7005
World Affairs Online
In: Rural sociology, Band 61, Heft 3, S. 407-426
ISSN: 1549-0831
Abstract As they examine the complex issues currently facing rural America, rural sociologists draw increasingly on studies of community attachment. Because this research tradition has established the superiority of the systemic model, recent studies in rural and urban settings have focused on the conceptualization and operationalization of its components. We introduce four operational refinements to this model, and we test our refined model with data from one geographic area in south‐west Louisiana. We find that, although our operational refinements improve our understanding of community attachment, additional refinements are necessary. We conclude by exploring the implications of community attachment studies for attempts to revitalize community in rural settings.
In: Rural sociology, Band 61, Heft 2, S. 306-325
ISSN: 1549-0831
Abstract To revisit the rural‐urban contrast, we use data from non‐metropolitan and metropolitan subsamples of the 1985 General Social Survey to test whether, compared to personal networks in urban settings, personal networks in rural settings contain ties of greater intensity and role multiplexity, are based more on kinship and neighborhood solidarities rather than on friendship, are smaller, are denser, and have greater educational, race‐ethnic, and religious homogeneity, but less age and gender homogeneity. Our results are generally consistent with these predictions. We then present evidence for rural diversity by comparing data from residents of a two‐parish nonmetropolitan area in southwestern Louisiana to the nonmetropolitan subsample of the GSS. After discussing possible mechanisms for this covariation of spatial and aspatial communities, we conclude by commenting on the potential of network analysis to contribute to the resolution of these and other substantively important problems in rural sociology.
In: International journal of mass emergencies and disasters, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 57-78
ISSN: 2753-5703
Studies of the response of individuals to disasters have relied primarily upon individual factors for explanation. Using data collected in telephone interviews with 594 residents of southwestern Louisiana, we examine the effects of local community and personal network contexts, as well as individual factors on individuals' use of aid from formal organizations. We find that our measures of personal network context significantly affect five of our seven measures of the utilization of formal aid, and that network form affects these outcomes more consistently than network composition does. These effects are generally consistent with our predictions. We also find significant effects of our measure of local community context, the level of owner-occupancy in an area. Living in areas with higher rates of owner-occupancy has a positive effect on three of our measures of formal aid Based upon these findings we conclude that contextual factors exert important effects on individuals' use of formal aid. We suggest that studies of the provision of aid to individuals by organizations should be supplemented with more detailed studies of the effects of personal network and local community contexts on individuals' receipt of specific sources of aid from formal organizations.
In: Pacific Economic Papers, 125
Die Biotechnologie ist von der australischen und japanischen Regierung als eine wichtige Quelle zukünftigen Wirtschaftswachstums beurteilt worden. Die Entwicklungen dieser Technologie sind jedoch von Land zu Land unterschiedlich. In dieser Studie werden die Strukturen der Biotechnologie in verschiedenen Ländern untersucht und dann am Beispiel Japans und Australiens die Maßnahmen der Regierungen beurteilt und verglichen. (DÜI-Xyl)
World Affairs Online
In: National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report
In: Labour & industry: a journal of the social and economic relations of work, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 162-183
ISSN: 2325-5676