Four years of industrial reconstruction in Free China
In: China Quarterly, Band 6, S. 383-393
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In: China Quarterly, Band 6, S. 383-393
In: China Quarterly, Band 5, S. 565-572
In: Canadian public policy: Analyse de politiques, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 173-191
ISSN: 1911-9917
In this article, we examine multidimensional aspects of job quality in Canada. Six broad dimensions of job quality were assessed: income and benefits, career prospects, work intensity, working-time quality, skills and discretion, and social environment. Results from both descriptive and latent class analysis reveal a great deal of variation in job quality across sectors and socio-demographic groups. In particular, we found that some of the largest labour market segments, such as hospitality and personal services, are associated with many negative job features. Moreover, workers with atypical contracts or in part-time employment have many disadvantages in the workplace other than being low-paid.
In: Social science quarterly, Band 100, Heft 3, S. 885-896
ISSN: 1540-6237
ObjectiveThis article examines social mobility among the children of immigrants, whose population has become increasingly diverse over time.MethodsUsing data from Canadian censuses, we focus on group differences by racial minority status in two aspects: (1) intergenerational progress in educational attainment, which indicates the ability to achieve higher education regardless of parents' education, and (2) the relationship between education and labor market outcomes, which reveals the ability to convert educational qualifications into economic well‐being.ResultsOur analysis in general paints a very positive picture for the children of immigrants regarding the first aspect, while mixed results are evident for the second aspect. In particular, some racial minority groups are characterized by high educational attainment and average earnings, while some experienced low education mobility across generations and low labor market returns to education.ConclusionThe results suggest that there are divergent paths of socioeconomic integration among the second‐generation racial minority groups.
This article offers a cross-country overview of child poverty, changes in child poverty, and the impact of public policy in North America and Europe. Levels and changes in child poverty rates in 12 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries during the 1990s are documented using data from the Luxembourg Income Study project, and a decomposition analysis is used to uncover the relative role of demographic factors, labor markets, and income transfers from the state in determining the magnitude and direction of the changes. Child poverty rates fell noticeably in only three countries and rose in three others. In no country were demographic factors a force for higher child poverty rates, but these factors were also limited in their ability to cushion children from adverse shocks originating in the labor market or the government sector. Increases in the labor market engagement of mothers consistently lowered child poverty rates, while decreases in the employment rates and earnings of fathers were a force for higher rates. Finally, there is no single road to lower child poverty rates. Reforms to income transfers intended to increase labor supply may or may not end up lowering the child poverty rate.
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This paper documents levels and changes in child poverty rates in 13 OECD countries using data from the Luxembourg Income Study project, and focusing upon an analysis of the reasons for changes over the 1990s. The objective is to uncover the relative role of income transfers from the state in determining the magnitude and direction of change in child poverty rates, holding other demographic and labour market factors constant. As such the paper offers a cross-country overview of child poverty, changes in child poverty, and the impact of public policy in North America and Europe.
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Working paper
This paper documents levels and changes in child poverty rates in 12 OECD countries using data from the Luxembourg Income Study project, and focusing upon an analysis of the reasons for changes over the 1990s. The objective is to uncover the relative role of income transfers from the state in determining the magnitude and direction of change in child poverty rates, holding other demographic and labour market factors constant. As such the paper offers a cross-country overview of child poverty, changes in child poverty, and the impact of public policy in North America and Europe.
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Despite the climate of economic development and the promotion of "ethnic minority culture," I argue that the emphasis on nomadic way of life depicted by Han cultural hegemony constitutes an internal-Orientalism that views ethnic Mongolian culture as the Other whose cultural elements have been selectively incorporated into, and exploited by political and cultural agents in China. Generalized imaginings of the ethnic Mongolian group tend to adhere to the stereotypical images such as horse riding and milk-tea drinking. Nevertheless, their cultural and spiritual practice of Shamanism are removed by the official cultural agents in order to allow China to fit into the Socialist modernity. Today, ethnic Mongolian minority's Culture is marginalized, and Mongolian language and cultural heritage are on the edge of extinct. This article serves as a patch for the missing Mongolian perspective of cultural study on the ethnic Mongolian group on Chinese mainland. I analyze Mongolian Culture in China from the lens of internal-Orientalism. Grounded in textual analysis, I examine "Boundless Grassland", "The Believer's Last Word", "JunMa, CangLang, GuXiang", "Fu Qin Yu You Er Qu", "Da Sheng Kui Shang Hao" "The Mongol Conquest in World History" by applying Edward W. Said's notion of Orientalism vis-à-vis the cultural study done by Mongolian scholar Borjigidai Uyunbilig. The texts I investigated in this article collectively represents the existence of intended partial preservation of Mongolia culture and the diminish of religious tradition and spiritual practices in their everyday lives.
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Despite the climate of economic development and the promotion of "ethnic minority culture," I argue that the emphasis on nomadic way of life depicted by Han cultural hegemony constitutes an internal-Orientalism that views ethnic Mongolian culture as the Other whose cultural elements have been selectively incorporated into, and exploited by political and cultural agents in China. Generalized imaginings of the ethnic Mongolian group tend to adhere to the stereotypical images such as horse riding and milk-tea drinking. Nevertheless, their cultural and spiritual practice of Shamanism are removed by the official cultural agents in order to allow China to fit into the Socialist modernity. Today, ethnic Mongolian minority's Culture is marginalized, and Mongolian language and cultural heritage are on the edge of extinct. This article serves as a patch for the missing Mongolian perspective of cultural study on the ethnic Mongolian group on Chinese mainland. I analyze Mongolian Culture in China from the lens of internal-Orientalism. Grounded in textual analysis, I examine "Boundless Grassland", "The Believer's Last Word", "JunMa, CangLang, GuXiang", "Fu Qin Yu You Er Qu", "Da Sheng Kui Shang Hao" "The Mongol Conquest in World History" by applying Edward W. Said's notion of Orientalism vis-à-vis the cultural study done by Mongolian scholar Borjigidai Uyunbilig. The texts I investigated in this article collectively represents the existence of intended partial preservation of Mongolia culture and the diminish of religious tradition and spiritual practices in their everyday lives.
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In: Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, Band 140, S. 361-373
In: Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, Band 130, S. 69-82
In: Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, Band 127, S. 561-571
In: Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, Band 125, S. 113-124
In: The Canadian journal of economics: the journal of the Canadian Economics Association = Revue canadienne d'économique, Band 44, Heft 3, S. 781-803
ISSN: 1540-5982
Abstract The paper proposes and applies statistical tests for poverty dominance that check for whether poverty comparisons can be made robustly over ranges of poverty lines and classes of poverty indices. This helps provide both normative and statistical confidence in establishing poverty rankings across distributions. The tests, which can take into account the complex sampling procedures that are typically used by statistical agencies to generate household‐level surveys, are implemented using the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (SLID) for 1996, 1999, and 2002. Although the yearly cumulative distribution functions cross at the lower tails of the distributions, the more recent years tend to dominate earlier years for a relatively wide range of poverty lines. Failing to take into account SLID's sampling variability (as is sometimes done) can inflate significantly one's confidence in ranking poverty. Taking into account SLID's complex sampling design (as has not been done before) can also decrease substantially the range of poverty lines over which a poverty ranking can be inferred.