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Global Value Chains, Industrial Upgrading, and Local Labor Markets
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An Assessment of Propensity Score Matching as a Nonexperimental Impact Estimator: Evidence from Mexico's PROGRESA Program
In: The journal of human resources, Band XLI, Heft 2, S. 319-345
ISSN: 1548-8004
Thirty Years of the Annual Survey of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children & Youth: A Glance Over the Decades
In: American annals of the deaf: AAD, Band 143, Heft 2, S. 71-76
ISSN: 1543-0375
Advances in Nowcasting Economic Activity: Secular Trends, Large Shocks and New Data
In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP15926
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Working paper
Following the Trend: Tracking GDP When Long-Run Growth is Uncertain
In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP10272
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Working paper
Dividend Momentum and Stock Return Predictability: A Bayesian Approach
In: FRB Atlanta Working Paper No. 2021-25
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Dividend Momentum and Stock Return Predictability: A Bayesian Approach
In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP16613
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Structural Scenario Analysis with Svars
In: CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP12579
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Working paper
Structural Scenario Analysis with SVARs
In: Journal of Monetary Economics, Forthcoming
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Working paper
Chaos, co-existence, and the potential for collective action: HIV-related vulnerability in Brazil's international borders
In a country where quality HIV/AIDS prevention and care has been foremost on the national agenda, Brazil's extensive and diverse borders are one of the last unstudied potential hotbeds of HIV vulnerability. We carried out a rapid assessment of HIV-related services and the social context of HIV/AIDS at the Brazilian borders including current governmental and community response. The assessment was implemented in six frontier municipalities using the WHO's strategic approach methodology, which combines existing epidemiologic data with field-based qualitative data collection techniques, including observation of service delivery points and in-depth interviews and focus groups with local leaders, providers, and community members, in order to recommend context-specific HIV prevention strategies. This paper focuses on the qualitative findings regarding the role of the social context in shaping HIV vulnerability at the Brazilian borders. We documented a profound lack of governmental structure and response to HIV/AIDS at the borders as well as a notable absence of social cohesion and mobilization among the diverse population groups and communities situated at the borders with regard to HIV/AIDS. The weak governmental and community response is situated within a larger socio-political context of economic inequity and social division, which must be addressed if an effective response to HIV can be developed at Brazil's international borders. Possibilities for encouraging a collective response among the diverse border populations are explored.
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US Interest Rate Surprises and Currency Returns
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Dividend Momentum and Stock Return Predictability: A Bayesian Approach
In: WBS Finance Group Research Paper
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