2024-03-28T22:36:08Z
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/cgi/oai2
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:87
2024-03-28T02:35:21Z
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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unequal2.pdf
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HTML Summary of #87
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (Text)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2005-03
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Economics
Department of Development Studies
School of Oriental and African Studies
Oya
Carlos
Carlos Oya
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0379-6377
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:96
2018-06-22T15:50:47Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:104
2018-06-22T15:50:48Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:105
2024-02-21T02:55:45Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ144.pdf
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HTML Summary of #105
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (Text)
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (Other)
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (UNSPECIFIED)
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (UNSPECIFIED)
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (UNSPECIFIED)
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry (UNSPECIFIED)
Since the mid-1990s, China’s state leadership has adopted a policy of nurturing the competitiveness of large state-owned industrial enterprises. The implications of this policy have been a matter of debate in the literature. This paper seeks to provide some useful input into the debate. With a view of investigating into the potential of long-term development of large enterprises, we estimate the “sequential production technology” in computing the Malmquist productivity index for various size-groups of enterprises in Chinese industry. Our findings indicate that large enterprises did register the fastest productivity growth and improvement in technical efficiency in the 1994-97 period. It thus appears that large-scale, mainly state-owned Chinese enterprises have exhibited the potential of making noticeable improvements and the relevant state policy does have its justification.
2004-12
Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese Industry
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper Series; No. 144
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:106
2024-03-28T02:35:22Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ143.pdf
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HTML Summary of #106
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (Text)
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (Other)
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (UNSPECIFIED)
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (UNSPECIFIED)
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (UNSPECIFIED)
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly (UNSPECIFIED)
Using a range of specifications that are standard in the relevant literature, this paper finds that China’s rapid and sustained economic growth in the reform era has tended to be negatively correlated with its export growth and positively correlated with its import growth. This finding runs counter to widely-held perceptions on China’s nexus of foreign trade and economic growth, and thus presents a serious challenge for interpretation. On the basis of some further regression analyses, and drawing on a number of applied studies on the subject matter, the paper argues that the finding is plausible and of complex ramifications. The conclusion which this paper arrives at, therefore, is that the Chinese experience has tended to be a case of strategic integration into the world market, rather than conforming to the standard neoclassical thesis of trade regime neutrality.
2004-08
China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the Anomaly
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper Series; No. 143
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:107
2024-02-21T02:55:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ142.pdf
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HTML Summary of #107
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (Text)
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (Other)
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (UNSPECIFIED)
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (UNSPECIFIED)
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (UNSPECIFIED)
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa (UNSPECIFIED)
Ottoman industrialisation in cotton spinning was led by the town of Naoussa in Macedonia. This paper shows that Naoussa capitalists grasped the opportunities created by trade liberalisation, accumulated capital in domestic manufacture of woollen cloth, and secured a regular supply of low-wage female labour and free hydraulic energy. It is further shown that they took advantage of local institutional and political mechanisms within the Christian community independent of the relatively remote Ottoman state. But there was no capitalist transformation of agriculture, even though Naoussa capitalists often owned large land estates. Lack of broader institutional and political influence and absence of capitalist transformation of agriculture hampered the transformation of Naoussa capitalists from a provincial social group into a broad-based capitalist class.
2004-09
Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of Naoussa
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 142
Lapavitsas
Costas
Costas Lapavitsas
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9330-7105
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:108
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ137.pdf
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HTML Summary of #108
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (Text)
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (Other)
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
Does globalisation entail a demand for uniformity, or diversity, of the (political) economic institutions of nation-states? What is the theoretical underpinning of the demand? And what are the implications of the demand for economic development? The conventional literature known as comparative economic systems has been unable to answer these question, because there is an intrinsic tension between its methodology (the neoclassical framework of individualistic rational choices and their equilibrium) and the subject matter (the multiplicity of economic institutions and development experiences in the real world). The new comparative economics has consisted of a variety of attempts to cope with this tension: some aimed at preserving the neoclassical framework at a more fundamental level, while some others aimed at transcending the framework to arrive at a new theory of economic systems and development. This paper argues that attempts that adhere to the neoclassical tradition is likely to lead to dead ends, while attempts that encompass collective as well as individualistic rationality represent more promising directions. Fuller developments of the literature, however, require incorporating objectified institutions and paradigmised technology into its sphere of inquiry. It is submitted that there are important lessons to learn from classical political economy and their modern presentations, particularly Marxian theories of the social forces of production, in this regard.
2004-06
Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late Development
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 137
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:109
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ137.pdf
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HTML Summary of #109
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (Text)
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (Other)
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (UNSPECIFIED)
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (UNSPECIFIED)
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (UNSPECIFIED)
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses (UNSPECIFIED)
The objective of this paper is to assess the role of FDI in China’s economic development with reference to the broader literature on FDI and late development. Three main findings come out from the analyses in the paper. First, it is found that FDI tends to promote the improvement in allocative efficiency, while having a negative impact on productive efficiency. Second, insofar as FDI does promote overall productivity growth, this tends to be a matter of cumulative causation rather than one of single-direction causation. Third, in the context of a comparative analysis of two distinctive regional models, it is found that the economic impact of FDI tends to be more favourable in the inward-looking, capital-deepening pattern of development (the ‘Shanghai model’) than that in the export-oriented, labour-intensive pattern (the ‘Guangdong model’). Further analyses, however, suggest that the ‘Shanghai model’ has its intrinsic problems of sustainability. The scope for applying it to China as a whole is thus judged to be limited.
2004-01
Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional Analyses
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 135
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:111
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ134.pdf
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HTML Summary of #111
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (Text)
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (Other)
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (UNSPECIFIED)
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (UNSPECIFIED)
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (UNSPECIFIED)
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper examines the genesis of liberalisation in India, it argues that once we locate its origin we can understand its direction and underlying political economy with much greater clarity. In particular the paper seeks to answer three questions. Why was reform launched in 1991 when the real economy was essentially in good condition? Why did the state choose a neo-liberal policy package when other options were available? Why did the state sustain liberalisation even after the economy had recovered from the immediate crisis? Existing answers to these questions are found to be inadequate. Instead this paper focuses on an alternative explanation that emphasises continuity, the reforms in 1991 can be traced back to the early 1970s. The Momentum of reform was sustained and assumed a particular form due to an underlying ‘logic of capital’.
2004-01
‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in India
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 134
McCartney
Matthew
Matthew McCartney
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:112
2024-02-09T13:46:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ133.pdf
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HTML Summary of #112
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (Text)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (Other)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (UNSPECIFIED)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (UNSPECIFIED)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (UNSPECIFIED)
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh) (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper examines various schools of trade policy reform and finds little difference between them in regards their essential export optimism. This optimism is based on an unwarranted assumption in cross-country empirical studies. In practise the increasing number of large LDC’s shifting towards export promotion since the 1980s is found to coincide with declining terms of trade for labour-intensive manufactures. So far this decline has been offset by growth in volume. The positive relation is actually dependent on market growth in developed countries rather than domestic policy reform. Marx (the Moor) provides a useful framework in which to analyse this process. His analysis of competition and accumulation within a national economy is transposed to that of international trade. Finally, the increasing integration of capital into ‘value chains’ and the formation of regional trading blocs can be related to the crisis tendencies of competition and the erosion of profit margins.
2004-01
Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh)
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 133
McCartney
Matthew
Matthew McCartney
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:113
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ131.pdf
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HTML Summary of #113
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (Text)
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (Other)
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development (UNSPECIFIED)
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic transformation since the late 1970s. It states that China’s reformed economic institutions are a mix of market-conforming and market-supplanting elements, that its developmental achievements so far have been ascribable to the conforming elements whereas the accumulated problems being ascribable to the supplanting elements, and that the problems have tended to outweigh the achievements as the country’s economic transition progresses from the allegedly easy phase to the difficult phase. This paper offers an alternative interpretation of the Chinese experience. The central proposition is that China’s economic institutions could be seen in favourable light both theoretically and with reference to the East Asian development experience. Specifically, the developmental implications of the market-conforming and market-supplanting elements should not be understood in any absolute sense, but rather depend on the appropriate match or otherwise between the institutions and the external environment. The developmental achievements to date indicate that China’s economic reform has managed to achieve a basically appropriate match between the two aspects, although enormous uncertainties still cloud over the future prospects owing to changes both in the external environment and the reform strategies of the state leadership.
2003-11
China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late Development
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 131
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:114
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ130.pdf
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HTML Summary of #114
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (Text)
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (Other)
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
2003-05
Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchange
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 130
Lapavitsas
Costas
Costas Lapavitsas
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9330-7105
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:115
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
econ129.pdf
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HTML Summary of #115
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (Text)
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (Other)
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper provides new national accounts consistent poverty estimates for low-income countries. The properties of the new estimates are compared to the existing estimates by the World Bank based on household survey means. We also use the new estimates to reflect on the recent controversies regarding the relationship between economic growth and poverty reduction. It is argued that the controversy is mainly due to the lack of distinction between what one can refer to as ‘generalized extreme poverty’ in low-income countries and the more ‘normal’ poverty situations in higher income economies.
2001-11
Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed Countries
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 129
Karshenas
Massoud
Massoud Karshenas
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:116
2024-02-21T02:55:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ128.pdf
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HTML Summary of #116
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (Text)
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (Other)
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (UNSPECIFIED)
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (UNSPECIFIED)
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (UNSPECIFIED)
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding (UNSPECIFIED)
Banks in bank-based financial systems tend to engage in long-term lending that requires substantial own capital to guarantee solvency. In market-based systems, in contrast, they tend to undertake short-term lending that requires adequate reserves to guarantee liquidity. Theoretical support for these two approaches to banking can be found in,respectively, Steuart and Smith. The innovative Marxist analysis of banking by Hilferding combined elements of both. Banks in the early stages of development are Smith-like but, as the scale of fixed investment in industry grows, they lend long-term and become Steuart-like, also developing ‘commitment’ relations with enterprises. However, Hilferding also implied, erroneously, that financial systems historically evolve
in a bank-based direction. Based on Hilferding but also drawing on Japanese Marxist analysis of finance, it is suggested instead that bank behaviour in bank-based systems results from institutional changes imposed by policy-makers in order to achieve ‘catching up.’
2002-11
Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and Hilferding
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 128
Lapavitsas
Costas
Costas Lapavitsas
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9330-7105
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:118
2024-02-21T02:55:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
econ_146.pdf
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HTML Summary of #118
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (Text)
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (Other)
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research (UNSPECIFIED)
Assumptions applied in Orthodox Economic methods are criticised for being an inadequate depiction of reality. This is particularly the case from the perspective of Feminist Economics. Gender biases are reflected in the quantitative data sources and methods commonly applied for economic research. These include male biases in statistical data, a focus on outcomes rather than processes as well as the neglect of reproductive work and its interaction with market work. To overcome these problems, this paper introduces between-method triangulation, i.e. the combination of quantitative and qualitative methods of data generation and analysis, as an innovative and more realistic methodology to conduct gendered economic analysis. It draws on the authors’ recent empirical work on the Indonesian and Mauritian labour markets where between-method triangulation was employed. The approach is shown to be able to enhance empirical economic analysis by mutually validating results. Furthermore, the approach is shown to remove gender biases in economic analysis by analysing conflicting evidence and by complementing quantitative with qualitative findings in light of feminist economics theory.
2006-02
The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic Research
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 146
Siegmann
Karin Astrid
Karin Astrid Siegmann
Blin
Myriam
Myriam Blin
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:119
2024-03-28T02:35:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ147.pdf
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HTML Summary of #119
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (Text)
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (Other)
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (UNSPECIFIED)
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (UNSPECIFIED)
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (UNSPECIFIED)
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper, looking at the case study of Mauritius, attempts to understand the factors affecting the relationship between EOP, women’s work burden along different social backgrounds. The analysis is based on between-method triangulation consisting of a quantitative survey in the industrial sector and a qualitative survey in the industrial and services sectors. The main result shows that women and the social reproductive process were not affected in the same way depending on the socioprofessional background of the woman.
2006-02
Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in Mauritius
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 147
Blin
Myriam
Myriam Blin
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:120
2024-03-28T02:35:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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econ_148.pdf
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HTML Summary of #120
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (Text)
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (Other)
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation (UNSPECIFIED)
China’s sustained rapid economic growth over the post-1978 reform era, which is also the era of globalisation, is of worldwide importance. This growth experience has been based mainly on China’s internal dynamics. In the first half of the era, economic growth was propelled by improvement in both allocative efficiency and productive efficiency. From the early 1990s until the present time, however, economic growth has been increasingly based on dynamic increasing returns associated with a growth path that is characterised by capital deepening. In both periods, the growth paths and their associated long-term-oriented institutions contradict principles of the free market economy – i.e., doctrines of globalisation. In the form of an analytical overview, this article seeks to explain and interpret the historical background, logic of evolution, and developmental and social implications of China’s economic transformation. The analytics draws on a range of relevant economic theories including Marxian theory of economic growth, Post-Keynesian theory of demand determination, and Neo-Schumpeterian theory of innovation. It is posited that these alternative theoretical perspectives offer better insights than mainstream neoclassical economics in explaining and interpreting China’s economic transformation.
2006-03
Making Sense of China’s Economic Transformation
Department of Economics
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 148
Lo
Dic
Dic Lo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:137
2024-02-09T13:46:07Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Moza_demo_paper_JSCO2007.pdf
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Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (Text)
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (Other)
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (UNSPECIFIED)
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (UNSPECIFIED)
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (UNSPECIFIED)
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique (UNSPECIFIED)
Compared to other rural women, a high proportion of female wageworkers in rural Mozambique are divorced, separated or widowed. The paper explores the factors underlying this difference and establishes a significant relationship between labor market participation and female divorce or widowhood. The association is likely to work in both directions. Moreover, contrastive exploration suggests that divorced/separated women differ from non-divorced women in many other important respects: They tend to get access to better jobs; also, divorced and separated mothers are remarkably good at investing in their daughters’ education compared to other mothers and to male respondents. The paper concludes by stressing the limits of regression techniques in teasing out causation and the interactions between variables, and by suggesting that policies to increase female access to decently remunerated wage employment could make a substantial difference to the welfare of very poor rural women in Africa and their children.
2007-01
Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural Mozambique
Department of Development Studies
SOAS University of London: Department of Development Studies
Oya
Carlos
Carlos Oya
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0379-6377
Sender
John
John Sender
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:183
2024-02-09T13:46:14Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4C:36303530
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
The_Politics_of_Moral_Authority,_20th_Sept_2007.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #183
The Politics of Moral Authority
The Politics of Moral Authority (Text)
The Politics of Moral Authority (Other)
The Politics of Moral Authority (UNSPECIFIED)
The Politics of Moral Authority (UNSPECIFIED)
The Politics of Moral Authority (UNSPECIFIED)
The Politics of Moral Authority (UNSPECIFIED)
What is at stake, politically, in abandoning claims that one's actions are legitimized by some form of transcendent authority? Analysing this question moves us beyond human rights debates about foundationalism, and asks whether the efficacy of claims made by human rights advocates is undermined by their inability, conceptually and politically, to make the case that human rights are moral truths rather than a more temporal and secular doctrine. Through an analysis of Amnesty International and its ambivalent grounding in Kantian notions of morality, and by considering competing religious and national claims to authority, I assess whether or not human rights activism suffers from an inescapable political ineptitude that must eventually see it decline in the face of more ardent and politically effective authority claims.
2007-09
The Politics of Moral Authority
Department of Politics and International Studies
Governance and Compliance
Department of Politics & International Studies
SOAS Department of Politics and International Studies
Hopgood
Stephen
Stephen Hopgood
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1767
2023-06-12T08:02:03Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:44:32343030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #1767
Assistance to Older Refugees: Review and Case Studies from Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East, Evaluation and Policy Analysis Unit
1998-03
Assistance to Older Refugees: Review and Case Studies from Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East, Evaluation and Policy Analysis Unit
Department of the Languages and Cultures of the Near and Middle East
UNHCR EVAL/01/98 REV.1
Sperl
Stefan
Stefan Sperl
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2007
2024-02-09T13:51:27Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
dalmasca.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #2007
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (Text)
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (Other)
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (UNSPECIFIED)
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (UNSPECIFIED)
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (UNSPECIFIED)
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages (UNSPECIFIED)
2000-06
It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and Wages
School of Finance and Management
CeFiMS, SOAS, University of London
Scaramozzino
Pasquale
Pasquale Scaramozzino
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4917-6560
Dalmazzo
A.
A. Dalmazzo
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2095
2023-06-13T08:13:05Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #2095
The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reform in Developing Countries
2006
The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reform in Developing Countries
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
Anthem Press and World Institute of Development Economic Research WIDER: Working Paper, no. 74/2006
Di John
Jonathan
Jonathan Di John
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2118
2023-06-10T07:58:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #2118
'We are all stranded here together': The local settlement system, freedom of movement and livelihood opportunities for refugees in Arua and Moyo Districts
2005-02
'We are all stranded here together': The local settlement system, freedom of movement and livelihood opportunities for refugees in Arua and Moyo Districts
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
Refugee Law Project Working Paper No. 14
Hovil
Lucy
Lucy Hovil
Kaiser
Tania
Tania Kaiser
Lomo
Zacahry
Zacahry Lomo
Refugee Law Project Working Paper No. 14
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2338
2024-02-09T13:52:21Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
7375626A656374733D50:38303430
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Amartya Sen- A Partial and Personal Appreciation.pdf
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HTML Summary of #2338
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (Text)
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (UNSPECIFIED)
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (UNSPECIFIED)
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (UNSPECIFIED)
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (UNSPECIFIED)
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation (UNSPECIFIED)
1061
2001
Amartya Sen : A Partial and Personal Appreciation
Department of Economics
Centre for Development Policy and Research (CDPR)
SOAS: Centre for Development Policy Research, Discussion Paper 1601
Fine
Ben
Ben Fine
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4301-0730
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2390
2023-06-13T08:46:09Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #2390
Drivers of Change and Development in Malawi
2006-01
Drivers of Change and Development in Malawi
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
Overseas Development Institute, Working Paper 261
Cammack
D
D Cammack
Booth
D
D Booth
Ngwira
N
N Ngwira
Kanyongolo
E
E Kanyongolo
Harrigan
Jane
Jane Harrigan
Mature
M
M Mature
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2540
2024-03-28T02:35:42Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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LiberalisationMarketDeregulation.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #2540
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (Text)
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (Other)
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (UNSPECIFIED)
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (UNSPECIFIED)
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (UNSPECIFIED)
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America (UNSPECIFIED)
1999
Trade Liberalisation, Market Deregulation and Agricultural Performance in Central America
Department of Development Studies
SOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 71
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2998
2023-06-13T09:23:03Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:44:32383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #2998
Nepali: A National Language and its Literature
1988-12
Nepali: A National Language and its Literature
Department of the Languages and Cultures of South Asia
Sterling Publishers and School of Oriental and African Studies
Hutt
Michael
Michael Hutt
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3372
2023-06-13T09:38:25Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #3372
Globalization and Federalism in Emerging Markets
2002-11
Globalization and Federalism in Emerging Markets
Department of Politics and International Studies
Department of Politics & International Studies
Saez
Lawrence
Lawrence Saez
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3373
2023-06-13T11:25:28Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #3373
EU-India Nuclear Energy Co-Operation: Prospects and Challenges
2007
EU-India Nuclear Energy Co-Operation: Prospects and Challenges
Department of Politics and International Studies
Department of Politics & International Studies
European Commission: ENCARI Briefing Paper No. 7
Saez
Lawrence
Lawrence Saez
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3374
2023-06-13T11:37:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #3374
Barriers and Opportunities for EU-India Renewable Energy Collaboration
2006
Barriers and Opportunities for EU-India Renewable Energy Collaboration
Department of Politics and International Studies
Department of Politics & International Studies
European Commission: ENCARI Briefing Paper No. 3
Vipradas
Mahesh
Mahesh Vipradas
Saez
Lawrence
Lawrence Saez
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3375
2018-06-22T15:54:11Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #3375
The United Kingdom, The European Union, and South Asia’s Energy Security. House of Commons, Foreign Affairs Committee Fourth Report of Session 2006-2007
2007
The United Kingdom, The European Union, and South Asia’s Energy Security. House of Commons, Foreign Affairs Committee Fourth Report of Session 2006-2007
Department of Politics and International Studies
Department of Politics & International Studies
House of Commons
Saez
Lawrence
Lawrence Saez
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3687
2023-08-17T08:53:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #3687
Global Poverty Estimates and the Millennium Goals: Towards a Unified Framework
Explores the compatibility of different global poverty estimates. Compares different purchasing power parity exchange rates and discusses their implications for the international poverty lines and poverty comparisons in general. Proposes a method for reconciling national accounts and survey based estimates. Compares aggregate regional and global poverty estimates with those of the World Bank.
2004-01-01
Global Poverty Estimates and the Millennium Goals: Towards a Unified Framework
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
ILO Employment Strategy Paper 2004/5
Karshenas
Massoud
Massoud Karshenas
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3707
2024-02-09T13:55:52Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
poverty_report.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #3707
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (Text)
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (Other)
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID (UNSPECIFIED)
2004-02-01
Poverty Reduction Strategy Process and National Development Strategies in Asia: A Report to DFID
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
Centre for Development Policy and Research, SOAS University of London
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:3862
2024-02-09T13:56:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:44:32343030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Mina Blogs, cyber literature.pdf
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HTML Summary of #3862
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran (Text)
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran (Other)
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran (Other)
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran (Other)
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran (Other)
The beginning of the internet era has created new possibilities for the Iranian civil society to circumvent the government imposed total control on the established media and to participate in an emerging independent virtual information society. The spectacular growth of Persian blogs since the summer of 2001 is an indication of the Iranian society's urgent need for alternative means of free expression. The Islamic Republic's conservative factions initiated the creation and expansion of the country's internet infrastracture since 1989. Paradoxically, the same forces have constantly tried to restrict free internet access by imposing severe filtering policies and pursuing dissident internet authors. This ambivalence in the development and socio-political function of the internet in Iran becomes apparent when one closely examines the history of the digitization of the holy city of Qom since Ai Khamenei took over as the country's supreme leader, succeeding Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989. Five case studies on the digital newspaper ROOZ, the online radio station Zamaneh, the web publishing activities of the exiled journlist Ebrahim Nabavi and the exiled writers Reza Ghassemi and Mahshid Amirshahi illustrate how the internet has created new possibilities for the Iranian diaspora communities to re-establish a communication link between exiled dissident intellectuals and their potential readers and recipients in and outside side the country. The final part of the paper deals with the phenomenon of Persian blogs as a means of mass communication for the young population of Iran at large. One peculiarity of Persian blogs can be observed in the use of a new Persian sociolect of weblog (and chatroom) communication. The use of this sociolect reflects an effort by the younger generation of Iranians to redinfe their identities and distance themselves from the burdon of a traditional (religious) culture that they wish to defy.
2007-12
Blogs, Cyber-Literature and Virtual Culture in Iran
Department of the Languages and Cultures of the Near and Middle East
George C. Marshall Center European Center for Security Studies. Occasional Paper, no. 15
Mina
Nima
Nima Mina
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4431
2023-08-17T09:19:33Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #4431
Ethnicity and Sub-Nationalist Movements in the Philippines and Indonesia: Implications for Regional Security
This paper starts with a theoretical and conceptual exploration of nation and state, that are oftentimes trivialized if not misunderstood. The cases of the Philippines and Indonesia are analyzed in terms of nation-state framework and secessionist movements are examined to better comprehend the deep-seated reasons behind their struggle for independence. Finally, the implication of separatism in the region is also discussed
2002
Ethnicity and Sub-Nationalist Movements in the Philippines and Indonesia: Implications for Regional Security
Department of Politics and International Studies
Monograph series (Yuchengco Institute of Philippines-Japan Relations); no. 11.
Buendia
Rizal
Rizal Buendia
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4464
2023-08-17T09:39:30Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
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HTML Summary of #4464
Social Assessment of the Women’s Health and Safe Motherhood Programme Package
2004-12
Social Assessment of the Women’s Health and Safe Motherhood Programme Package
Department of Politics and International Studies
World Bank - Philippines
World Bank- Philippines
Buendia
Rizal
Rizal Buendia
Osteria
Trinidad
Trinidad Osteria
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4465
2024-02-09T13:58:00Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Mapping_and_Analysis_of_Indigenous_Governance-Philippines_Participatory_Governance_Case_Study.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (Text)
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (Other)
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (UNSPECIFIED)
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (UNSPECIFIED)
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (UNSPECIFIED)
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-05-16
Mapping and Analysis of Indigenous Governance Practices in the Philippines and Proposal for Establishing an Indicative Framework for Indigenous People’s Governance: Towards a Broader and Inclusive Process of Governance in the Philippines
Department of Politics and International Studies
United Nations Development Programme
United Nations Development Programme-Bangkok Regional Office
Sambeli
Luisa
Luisa Sambeli
Guiam
Rufa
Rufa Guiam
Mendoza
Lorelei
Lorelei Mendoza
Buendia
Rizal
Rizal Buendia
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4536
2024-02-09T13:58:12Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCPolicyResearchBrief3.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4536
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (Text)
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (Other)
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (UNSPECIFIED)
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (UNSPECIFIED)
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (UNSPECIFIED)
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact (UNSPECIFIED)
2007-01
Privatising Basic Utilities in Sub-Saharan Africa: The MDG Impact
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Economics
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Policy Research Brief No. 3
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4576
2024-02-09T13:58:18Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Document2.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4576
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (Text)
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (Other)
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (UNSPECIFIED)
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (UNSPECIFIED)
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (UNSPECIFIED)
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea (UNSPECIFIED)
2008
North Korea's Nuclear Capacity and the Path of Reform. Written Evidence for the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee Tenth Report, Global Security: Japan and Korea
Department of Politics and International Studies
UK Parliament House of Commons: Select Committee on Foreign Affairs
Kong
Tat Yan
Tat Yan Kong
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4584
2024-02-09T13:58:19Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCPolicyResearchBrief1_Macro_&_HIV-AIDS.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4584
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (Text)
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (Other)
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-09
The Macroeconomic Debate on Scaling up HIV/AIDS Financing
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Policy Research Brief No. 1
Hailu
Degol
Degol Hailu
IPC Policy Research Brief No. 1
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4585
2024-02-09T13:58:20Z
7374617475733D707562
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The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCWorkingPaper12_Monopoly_of_Global_Capital.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4585
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now?
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (Text)
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (Other)
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (UNSPECIFIED)
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (UNSPECIFIED)
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (UNSPECIFIED)
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now? (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-03
The Monopoly of Global Capital Flows: Who Needs Structural Adjustment Now?
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Working Paper, no.12
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4588
2024-02-09T13:58:20Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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IPCWorkingPaper10_Dutch_Disease.pdf
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HTML Summary of #4588
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (Text)
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (Other)
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (UNSPECIFIED)
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (UNSPECIFIED)
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (UNSPECIFIED)
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA (UNSPECIFIED)
2005-11
Why is the 'Dutch Disease' Always a Disease? The Macroeconomic Consequences of Scaling up ODA
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Working Paper, no.10
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4596
2024-02-09T13:58:21Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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IPCCountryStudy3_Moldova_Finances.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4596
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (Text)
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (Other)
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (UNSPECIFIED)
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (UNSPECIFIED)
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (UNSPECIFIED)
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-07
Gearing Public Finance to Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Moldova
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Country Study No. 3
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4597
2024-03-28T02:36:08Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCCountryStudy12_Uzbekistan.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4597
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (Text)
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (Other)
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (UNSPECIFIED)
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (UNSPECIFIED)
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (UNSPECIFIED)
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan (UNSPECIFIED)
2007-11
A Proposed Strategy for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Uzbekistan
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Country Study No. 12
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4598
2024-02-09T13:58:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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undp_mdg2005.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4598
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (Text)
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (Other)
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (UNSPECIFIED)
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (UNSPECIFIED)
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (UNSPECIFIED)
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies (UNSPECIFIED)
2005-01
MDG-Based PRSPs Need More Ambitious Economic Policies
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
United Nations Development Programme: Policy Discussion Paper
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4601
2023-08-17T11:23:17Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #4601
Economic Alternatives for Sub-Saharan Africa: ‘Poverty Traps’, MDG-Based Strategies And Accelerated Capital Accumulation Draft Paper for the G-24 Meeting, 15-16 September 2005
2005-09
Economic Alternatives for Sub-Saharan Africa: ‘Poverty Traps’, MDG-Based Strategies And Accelerated Capital Accumulation Draft Paper for the G-24 Meeting, 15-16 September 2005
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
G-24: Intergovernmental Group of 24
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4605
2024-02-09T13:58:24Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCWorkingPaper_1.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4605
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (Text)
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (Other)
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (UNSPECIFIED)
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (UNSPECIFIED)
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (UNSPECIFIED)
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-07
Can Privatisation and Commercialisation of Public Services Help Achieve the MDGs? An Assessment
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Economics
International Poverty Centre: Working Paper, no.22
Kessler
Tim
Tim Kessler
Bayliss
Kate
Kate Bayliss
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9018-5085
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4610
2023-08-17T12:11:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #4610
Post-conflict Privatisation: A Review of Developments in Serbia and Bosnia Herzegovina
2005-11
Post-conflict Privatisation: A Review of Developments in Serbia and Bosnia Herzegovina
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Economics
Overseas Development Institute: ESAU Working Paper, no.12
Bayliss
Kate
Kate Bayliss
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9018-5085
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4682
2023-08-17T12:25:26Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #4682
Strengthening the Employment Impact of an MDG-Based Development Strategy for Yemen
2006-09
Strengthening the Employment Impact of an MDG-Based Development Strategy for Yemen
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Country Study No. 4
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4684
2024-02-09T13:58:37Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
IPCPolicyResearchBrief4.pdf
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HTML Summary of #4684
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (Text)
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2007-10
The Macroeconomic Implications of MDG-Based Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Policy Research Brief No. 4
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4685
2023-08-17T12:44:31Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #4685
Addressing Global Imbalances: A Development-Oriented Policy Agenda
2006-07
Addressing Global Imbalances: A Development-Oriented Policy Agenda
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre: Working Paper, no.3
Izurieta
Alex
Alex Izurieta
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4686
2023-08-17T12:56:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #4686
Rising Wealth Inequality and Changing Social Structure in Rural China, 1988-1995, WIDER Working Paper No. 160
1999-05
Rising Wealth Inequality and Changing Social Structure in Rural China, 1988-1995, WIDER Working Paper No. 160
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Development Studies
WIDER Working Paper 160
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
Brenner
Mark
Mark Brenner
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4888
2024-02-09T13:59:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D58:44:32303530
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
migrationMENAreport-1
text/html
HTML Summary of #4888
The Relationship between Migration within and from the Middle East and North-Africa and Pro-Poor Policies
The Relationship between Migration within and from the Middle East and North-Africa and Pro-Poor Policies (Text)
2004-07-01
The Relationship between Migration within and from the Middle East and North-Africa and Pro-Poor Policies
Centre for Gender Studies
Centre for Gender Studies
Department for International Development ; Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter
Al-Ali
Nadje
Nadje Al-Ali
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3857-411X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4889
2024-02-09T13:59:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D58:44:32303530
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
UNRISD_Report_final.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4889
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (Text)
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (Other)
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (UNSPECIFIED)
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (UNSPECIFIED)
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (UNSPECIFIED)
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey (UNSPECIFIED)
2002
Women’s Movements in the Middle East: Case Studies of Egypt and Turkey
Centre for Gender Studies
Centre for Gender Studies
United Nations Research Institute for Social Development
Al-Ali
Nadje
Nadje Al-Ali
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3857-411X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:4890
2024-02-09T13:59:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D58:44:32303530
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Women_and_Migration_in_Europe_Report.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #4890
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (Text)
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (Other)
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (UNSPECIFIED)
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (UNSPECIFIED)
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (UNSPECIFIED)
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe (UNSPECIFIED)
2003
Women Migrant Organization and Citizenship in Europe
Centre for Gender Studies
Centre for Gender Studies
EU
Al-Ali
Nadje
Nadje Al-Ali
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3857-411X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5008
2023-08-18T13:09:06Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363830
7375626A656374733D58:44:32303530
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #5008
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (Text)
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (Other)
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (UNSPECIFIED)
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (UNSPECIFIED)
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (UNSPECIFIED)
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers (UNSPECIFIED)
A Research Consultancy by the Refugee Studies Centre (Oxford University) for the Conflict and Humanitarian Affairs Department, Department For International Development, United Kingdom
2005-02
Middle East. Developing DFID’s Policy Approach to Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons. Vol 2: Commissioned Papers
Centre for Gender Studies
Centre for Gender Studies
Oxford: Refugee Studies Centre; London: DFID
El-Abed
Oroub Anwar Bader
Oroub Anwar Bader El-Abed
Fabos
Anita
Anita Fabos
Al-Ali
Nadje
Nadje Al-Ali
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3857-411X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5092
2024-02-09T13:59:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D4C:36343030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
SOAS_ShibboLeap_report.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5092
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (Text)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (Other)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (UNSPECIFIED)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (UNSPECIFIED)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (UNSPECIFIED)
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-05
ShibboLEAP Project Final Report: School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
Library and Information Services
SOAS University of London
Rennie
Colin
Colin Rennie
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5108
2023-08-19T08:18:30Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #5108
The Future of Small Farms for Poverty Reduction and Growth. 2020 Discussion Paper; No.42
2007-05
The Future of Small Farms for Poverty Reduction and Growth. 2020 Discussion Paper; No.42
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Discussion Paper, no. 42
Dorward
Andrew
Andrew Dorward
Wiggins
Steve
Steve Wiggins
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5113
2023-08-19T11:44:54Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #5113
Institutions and Economic Policies for Pro-poor Agricultural Growth
2004
Institutions and Economic Policies for Pro-poor Agricultural Growth
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
IFPRI Discussion paper DSG 15
Rao
Neetha
Neetha Rao
Morrison
Jamie
Jamie Morrison
Fan
Shenggen
Shenggen Fan
Smith
Laurence
Laurence Smith
Lofgren
Hans
Hans Lofgren
Poulton
Colin
Colin Poulton
Tchale
Hardwick
Hardwick Tchale
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5130
2023-08-19T12:07:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #5130
Evaluation of the 2006/7 Agricultural Input Subsidy Programme, Malawi. Final Report
2008-03
Evaluation of the 2006/7 Agricultural Input Subsidy Programme, Malawi. Final Report
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Wadonda Consult
Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security
Overseas Development Institute
Michigan State University
SOAS
Jayne
Thom
Thom Jayne
Boughton
Duncan
Duncan Boughton
Slater
Rachel
Rachel Slater
Valerie
Kelly
Kelly Valerie
Dorward
Andrew
Andrew Dorward
Chirwa
Ephraim
Ephraim Chirwa
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5131
2023-08-19T12:23:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #5131
Reforming the Smallholder Coffee Sector in Malawi: A Case Study of Smallholder Commercialisation
2007-03
Reforming the Smallholder Coffee Sector in Malawi: A Case Study of Smallholder Commercialisation
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Future Agricultures Consortium
Chirwa
Ephraim
Ephraim Chirwa
Kydd
Jonathan
Jonathan Kydd
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5132
2023-08-19T12:37:24Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #5132
Traditional domestic markets and marketing systems for agricultural products. Background paper for 2008 World Development Report
This paper examines the major types of marketing system linking producers and consumers of domestically consumed agricultural products in different contexts, and the opportunities and constraints these offer to poor producers (and consumers). The marketing system is considered to involve physical assembly, handling, storage, transport, processing, wholesaling, and retailing of agricultural products, together with services directly supporting these activities, such as market information, establishment of grades and standards, financing of marketing activities, and price risk management. The authors consider marketing systems for four major types of product: cereals, roots and tubers, livestock products, and fruit and vegetables. For each of these they briefly discuss the major characteristics of supply and demand that affect market structures and prospects for growth in domestic demand being supplied by domestic smallholder farmers. This leads on to examination of different marketing systems that have developed for these products in different contexts, and consideration of the effectiveness of these systems in supporting growth and serving the interests of poor consumers and producers. Specific issues around problems of price instability and risk management are considered for cereals, and new opportunities arising from the spread of information and communication technologies examined. The paper concludes with discussion of the opportunities and constraints for small scale farmers engaging with these marketing systems, and of policies to support small farmer engagement.
2006-03
Traditional domestic markets and marketing systems for agricultural products. Background paper for 2008 World Development Report
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
The World Bank
Poulton
Colin
Colin Poulton
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5136
2023-08-19T12:50:56Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #5136
Promoting Agriculture for Social Protection or Social Protection for Agriculture: Policy and Research Issues
2006-08
Promoting Agriculture for Social Protection or Social Protection for Agriculture: Policy and Research Issues
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Future Agricultures
Wheeler
R. S.
R. S. Wheeler
Chirwa
Ephraim
Ephraim Chirwa
Buckley
C. P.
C. P. Buckley
MacAuslan
I.
I. MacAuslan
Kydd
Jonathan
Jonathan Kydd
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5137
2023-08-19T13:10:18Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Evaluation of adoption of NERICA and other improved upland rice varieties following varietal promotion activities in Nigeria: A study for the Gatsby and Rockefeller Foundations. Final report
A survey undertaken in 2005 in Ekiti and Kaduna states in Nigeria shows considerable uptake of NERICA1 (30% of farmers in Ekiti and 42% and 19%, respectively, in PVS and near-PVS villages in Kaduna). The proportion of upland rice area under NERICA1 is lower than the proportion of farmers growing it but is increasing more rapidly, with 13%, 27% and 9% of 2005 upland rice areas under NERICA1 in Ekiti and in Kaduna PVS and near-PVS villages, respectively. Seed shortage is the major reason given for non-adoption of NERICA1, the first-time seed source for which is reported as other farmers. Evaluation of varieties by growers rates NERICA1 highly for almost all criteria. All varieties are rated poorly for bird resistance in Ekiti, but NERICA1 is considered to perform the least poorly for this.
2006-08
Evaluation of adoption of NERICA and other improved upland rice varieties following varietal promotion activities in Nigeria: A study for the Gatsby and Rockefeller Foundations. Final report
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Gatsby and Rockefeller Foundations
Philip
D.
D. Philip
Abalu
G.
G. Abalu
Ogungbile
D.
D. Ogungbile
Spencer
D.
D. Spencer
Dorward
Andrew
Andrew Dorward
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5139
2024-03-28T02:36:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Working Paper 2 (Revised)_AG0154.pdf
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HTML Summary of #5139
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (Text)
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-04
Making Agricultural Market Systems Work for the Poor: Promoting Effective, Efficient and Accessible Coordination and Exchange
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Project title: Preparation of the DFID RNRA Team Working Paper 2: Making Markets Work for the Poor
Kydd
Jonathan
Jonathan Kydd
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5140
2022-12-16T10:43:26Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #5140
Overcoming Market Constraints to Pro-Poor Agricultural Growth in Sub Saharan Africa
2004-11
Overcoming Market Constraints to Pro-Poor Agricultural Growth in Sub Saharan Africa
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
Paper prepared for the Africa Commission, November 2004
Dorward
Andrew
Andrew Dorward
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5141
2024-02-09T13:59:54Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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call_to_action_rep.pdf
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HTML Summary of #5141
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (Text)
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2004
Reaching the poor: a call to action Investment in smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
FARM-Africa; Harvest Help; Centre for Development and Poverty Reduction, Imperial College
Jowett
A.
A. Jowett
Urey
Ian
Ian Urey
Poulton
Colin
Colin Poulton
Peacock
C.
C. Peacock
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5142
2018-06-22T15:55:51Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #5142
The Role of Market-based Economic Development in Strengthening Food Security
2003-08
The Role of Market-based Economic Development in Strengthening Food Security
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
Forum for Food Security in Southern Africa
Dorward
Andrew
Andrew Dorward
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5338
2018-06-22T15:56:04Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #5338
Radical Islamism in Egypt: Discursive Struggle
1994
Radical Islamism in Egypt: Discursive Struggle
Department of Politics and International Studies
Department of Politics & International Studies
Inter-University Consortium for Arab Studies
Ismail
Salwa
Salwa Ismail
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5579
2018-06-22T15:56:18Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:42:323030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #5579
The politics of loss, alienation and nostalgia after the ‘Gujarat’ Earthquake
2008
The politics of loss, alienation and nostalgia after the ‘Gujarat’ Earthquake
Department of Anthropology and Sociology
International Centre for Ethnic Studies
Simpson
Edward
Edward Simpson
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5359-8259
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5580
2024-02-09T14:01:09Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:42:323030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Simpson_Paper.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5580
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (PDF)
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (Other)
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (UNSPECIFIED)
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (UNSPECIFIED)
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (UNSPECIFIED)
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001 (UNSPECIFIED)
In the aftermath of natural disasters there is typically an upsurge of collective public action and protest. Individual concerns inter-mingle with collective endeavours in both traditional and new ways. This article explores such collective forms of public action in the aftermath of the 2001 earthquake in Gujarat, and the role of nostalgia as a mobilising political force in particular. Nostalgia emerges as both a creative and cathartic force, but its effects on public action are short-lived. It is argued that nostalgia has a short life span not simply because the disaster moves into the past and new concerns come to the fore but because the changing dynamics of the relationship between individuals and social collectives make nostalgia an unsustainable form of collective representation.
2008-05-21
The rise and fall of collective public action in the aftermath of the Gujarat Earthquake of 2001
Department of Anthropology and Sociology
London School of Economics and Political Science
Simpson
Edward
Edward Simpson
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5359-8259
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5581
2024-02-09T14:01:10Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:42:323030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Edward_Simpson_NGPA_Paper_23.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5581
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (PDF)
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (Other)
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (UNSPECIFIED)
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (UNSPECIFIED)
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (UNSPECIFIED)
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India (UNSPECIFIED)
In this paper, I analyse and reason with the patterns of discrimination evident in the reconstruction initiatives following the 2001 earthquake in Gujarat. I do so in order to explain what discrimination there was, and how and why such discrimination was related to broader patterns of social polarisation. After the earthquake, the political state of Gujarat made the headlines following widespread violence in 2002. This led to a flurry of publications in which anger and indignation led to the over-statement of the links between the government, social life in the state, and the politics of religious (Hindu-Muslim) communalism. This paper is an attempt to chip away to the impression thus created of a land consumed only by the violent compulsions of Hindu nationalism. I do so not through polemic, but ethnography, as a way of suggesting it is simply wrong to conflate state complicity in the anti-Muslim violence of 2002 with all other routine operations performed by government. Given Gujarat’s reputation for Hindu nationalism, my analysis unsurprisingly confirms the scholarship of others by showing how some powerful Hindu-oriented non-governmental organisations have drawn power and resources away from the state to parade before the people as if they govern. However, more importantly, the ethnography of the mixed-fortunes of Muslims in the rubble also illustrates some of the limits to the power of the Hindu nationalists: the data shows that the Hindu nationalists have not hijacked the state in its entirety and their influence is clearly curtailed and imperfect. By clothing the Hindu nationalist in unassailably powerful terms, the academic critic, I argue, has paradoxically almost become culpable in the success of the nationalist, by conferring on their rhetoric the status of reality, and on them power.
2008-07-31
Was there discrimination in the distribution of resources after the earthquake in Gujarat? Imagination, epistemology, and the state in western India
Department of Anthropology and Sociology
London School of Economics and Political Science
Simpson
Edward
Edward Simpson
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5359-8259
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5688
2024-02-09T14:01:30Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363730
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
0707StudySeptrevPC.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5688
Considering a war with Iran
Considering a war with Iran (PDF)
Considering a war with Iran (Other)
Considering a war with Iran (UNSPECIFIED)
Considering a war with Iran (UNSPECIFIED)
Considering a war with Iran (UNSPECIFIED)
Considering a war with Iran (UNSPECIFIED)
The paper is a strategic studies analyis of the war-fronts, weapon systems and political-military tactics of a U.S.-Iranian war, including the U.S. use of nuclear weapons.
2007
Considering a war with Iran
Centre for International Studies & Diplomacy
CISD
Plesch
Dan
Dan Plesch
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3322-728X
Butcher
Martin
Martin Butcher
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5707
2024-03-28T02:36:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363730
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
RSA_Corporate_Rights-Plesch_and_Blankenburg.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5707
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (Text)
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (Other)
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (UNSPECIFIED)
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (UNSPECIFIED)
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (UNSPECIFIED)
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability (UNSPECIFIED)
2007-05
Corporate rights and responsibilities: restoring legal accountability
Centre for International Studies & Diplomacy
the RSA (Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce)
Blankenburg
Stephanie
Stephanie Blankenburg
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5785
2018-06-22T15:56:33Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5789
2018-06-22T15:56:33Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5790
2024-03-28T02:36:24Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
econ145.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5790
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (PDF)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2005-03
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Centre for Development, Policy and Research (CDPR)
Department of Economics
Department of Development Studies
Department of Economics Working Paper; No.145
Oya
Carlos
Carlos Oya
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0379-6377
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5791
2024-03-28T02:36:24Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
WB_SenderCramerOya_2005.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5791
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (Text)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (Other)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2005-03
Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan Africa
Department of Economics
Department of Development Studies
World Bank Social Protection Discussion Paper Series; No.0525
Oya
Carlos
Carlos Oya
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0379-6377
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5792
2024-02-09T14:01:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363730
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
WMDMar10FINAL.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5792
The Future of Britain's WMD
The Future of Britain's WMD (Text)
The Future of Britain's WMD (Other)
The Future of Britain's WMD (UNSPECIFIED)
The Future of Britain's WMD (UNSPECIFIED)
The Future of Britain's WMD (UNSPECIFIED)
The Future of Britain's WMD (UNSPECIFIED)
2006-03
The Future of Britain's WMD
Centre for International Studies & Diplomacy
The Foreign Policy Centre
Plesch
Dan
Dan Plesch
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3322-728X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5803
2024-02-09T14:01:47Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
lewis.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5803
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (PDF)
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (Other)
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa (UNSPECIFIED)
2004-07
The Lewis Model and the Diverging Development Paths of Asia and Africa
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
SOAS
Karshenas
Massoud
Massoud Karshenas
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5804
2024-02-09T14:01:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
ldcr2008_Karshenas_en.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5804
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (PDF)
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (Other)
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries (UNSPECIFIED)
2008-07
Poverty Trends in Least Developed Countries
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
Geneva
Karshenas
Massoud
Massoud Karshenas
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5805
2024-02-09T14:01:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
Yemen.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #5805
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (Text)
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (Other)
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen (UNSPECIFIED)
2006
Macroeconomic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Yemen
Department of Economics
Department of Economics
UNDP
Abu-Ismail
Khalid
Khalid Abu-Ismail
McKinley
Terry
Terry McKinley
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:5921
2018-06-22T15:56:40Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #5921
Looking at the Crisis through Marx: Or Is It the Other Way about?
Looking at the Crisis through Marx: Or Is It the Other Way about? (Other)
2008-11
Looking at the Crisis through Marx: Or Is It the Other Way about?
Department of Economics
Fine
Ben
Ben Fine
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4301-0730
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6131
2024-02-09T14:02:34Z
7374617475733D7375626D6974746564
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353630
7375626A656374733D58:42:373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
TheLivingBibliographyOfBurmaStudies.pdf
indexcodes.txt
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HTML Summary of #6131
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (PDF)
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (Other)
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (UNSPECIFIED)
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research (UNSPECIFIED)
2002-06
The Living Bibliography of Burma Studies: The Secondary Research
Department of History
Department of History
Department of History, School of Oriental and African Studies
Charney
Michael W.
Michael W. Charney
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3910-155X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6208
2022-07-04T19:22:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #6208
Toolkit for Monitoring and Evaluation of Agricultural Water Management Projects
2008
Toolkit for Monitoring and Evaluation of Agricultural Water Management Projects
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
The World Bank
Roux
Julienne
Julienne Roux
Burton
Martin
Martin Burton
Smith
Laurence
Laurence Smith
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6209
2023-09-22T10:07:19Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #6209
Guidance Manual: Management of Impacts of Irrigation Development on Fisheries
2007
Guidance Manual: Management of Impacts of Irrigation Development on Fisheries
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
IWMI and WorldFish Center
Lorenzen
K.
K. Lorenzen
Garaway
C.
C. Garaway
Burton
Martin
Martin Burton
Nguyen-Khoa
S.
S. Nguyen-Khoa
Smith
Laurence
Laurence Smith
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6211
2023-09-22T10:07:42Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363930
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030:33393032
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license.
text/html
HTML Summary of #6211
Stakeholder-oriented valuation to support water resources management processes
2006
Stakeholder-oriented valuation to support water resources management processes
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy (CeDEP)
Centre for Development, Environment and Policy
FAO
Renault
D.
D. Renault
Nguyen-Khoa
S.
S. Nguyen-Khoa
Perrot-Maitre
D.
D. Perrot-Maitre
Smith
Laurence
Laurence Smith
Emerton
L.
L. Emerton
Hermans
L.
L. Hermans
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6266
2024-02-09T14:02:59Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D53:38363630:38363730
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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OD_4.20_Lit_Rev.pdf
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Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (PDF)
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (Other)
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (UNSPECIFIED)
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (UNSPECIFIED)
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (UNSPECIFIED)
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples (UNSPECIFIED)
2001
Implementation of Operational Directive 4.20 on Indigenous Peoples: An Independent Desk Review, Background Paper 1: A Review of Selected Issues Related to Indigenous Peoples
Department of Politics & International Studies
Centre for International Studies & Diplomacy
World Bank
Sasser
Brandie
Brandie Sasser
Weber-Venghaus
Svenja
Svenja Weber-Venghaus
Rao
Rahul
Rahul Rao
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3289-7460
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6336
2018-06-22T15:57:05Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6342
2018-06-22T15:57:06Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353630
7375626A656374733D58:42:373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #6342
An Account of the Old Burmese Royal Court: The Eighteenth-century Shway-boun Nidan in Translation
1995
An Account of the Old Burmese Royal Court: The Eighteenth-century Shway-boun Nidan in Translation
Department of History
Department of History
Saw Tun
U.
U. Saw Tun
Charney
Michael W.
Michael W. Charney
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3910-155X
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6446
2018-06-22T15:57:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353630
7375626A656374733D58:42:373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #6446
A Guide to Colonial Sources on Burma. Ethnic and Minority Histories of Burma in the India Office Records, British Library.
2008
A Guide to Colonial Sources on Burma. Ethnic and Minority Histories of Burma in the India Office Records, British Library.
Department of History
Department of History
Orchid Press
Sadan
Mandy
Mandy Sadan
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6447
2018-06-22T15:57:13Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353530:38353630
7375626A656374733D58:42:373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #6447
Learning to Listen: a Manual for Oral History Projects
2008
Learning to Listen: a Manual for Oral History Projects
Department of History
Department of History
Wanida Press
Sadan
Mandy
Mandy Sadan
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6497
2018-06-22T15:57:16Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #6497
Macroeconomic Policies for Employment Generation: Africa South of the Sahara
1994
Macroeconomic Policies for Employment Generation: Africa South of the Sahara
Department of Development Studies
Paper prepared under the ILO/UDNP project Economic Policy and Employment. Geneva: ILO/UNDP
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6507
2022-12-16T11:59:36Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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text/html
HTML Summary of #6507
Orthodox and Heterodox Policies for Growth in Africa south of The Sahara
1998
Orthodox and Heterodox Policies for Growth in Africa south of The Sahara
Department of Development Studies
CDPR Discussion Paper 0298. Centre for Development Policy and Research (CDPR), SOAS
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6522
2024-02-09T14:03:51Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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IPCTechnicalPaper3.pdf
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HTML Summary of #6522
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (Text)
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (UNSPECIFIED)
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (UNSPECIFIED)
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (UNSPECIFIED)
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (UNSPECIFIED)
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered (UNSPECIFIED)
This paper inspects the standard policy rule that under a flexible exchange rate regime with perfectly elastic capital flows, monetary policy is effective and fiscal policy is not. The logical validity of the statement requires that the effect of an exchange rate change on the domestic price level be ignored. The price level effect is noted in some textbooks, but not formally analyzed. When it is subjected to a rigorous analysis, the interaction between changes in the exchange rate and the domestic price level significantly alters the standard policy rule. The logically correct statement would be, under a flexible exchange rate regime with perfectly elastic capital flows the effectiveness of monetary policy depends on the values of the import share and the sum of the trade elasticities. Inspection of data from developing countries indicates the effectiveness of monetary policy under flexible exchange rates can be quite low even if capital flows are perfectly elastic.
2008-06
The Effectiveness of Monetary Policy Reconsidered
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre, Technical Paper 3
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6538
2024-02-09T14:03:55Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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Republic of Moldova- Economic Policies.pdf
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HTML Summary of #6538
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (Text)
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (UNSPECIFIED)
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (UNSPECIFIED)
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (UNSPECIFIED)
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (UNSPECIFIED)
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction (UNSPECIFIED)
2005
The Republic of Moldova: economic policies for growth, employment and poverty reduction
Department of Development Studies
Department of Development Studies
Chisinau: UNDP and Sida
Cornea
Giovanni Andre
Giovanni Andre Cornea
Jahan
Selim
Selim Jahan
Osmani
Siddiq
Siddiq Osmani
Spoor
Max
Max Spoor
Izman
Felicia
Felicia Izman
Reynolds
Michael
Michael Reynolds
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6542
2018-06-22T15:57:18Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #6542
Kwacha Appreciation 2005 – 2006: Implications for the Zambian Economy
2007
Kwacha Appreciation 2005 – 2006: Implications for the Zambian Economy
Department of Development Studies
UNDP
Mukungu
Allan
Allan Mukungu
Seshamani
Venkatesh
Venkatesh Seshamani
Patel
Shruti
Shruti Patel
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6547
2024-02-09T14:03:57Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
7375626A656374733D50:38303430
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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The Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction- The Case Study of Vietnam, .pdf
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Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (Text)
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (UNSPECIFIED)
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth (UNSPECIFIED)
2004-04
Macroeconomics of Poverty Reduction: Case Study of Viet Nam, Seeking Equity within Growth
Department of Development Studies
Centre for Development Policy and Research (CDPR)
UNDP
Roy
Rathin
Rathin Roy
Thang
Nguyen
Nguyen Thang
Lim
Joseph
Joseph Lim
Weeks
John
John Weeks
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7064-5208
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6564
2022-06-29T19:25:26Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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HTML Summary of #6564
The Transnationalisation of Care: Sahrawi Refugee Children in a Spanish Host Program
2005-04
The Transnationalisation of Care: Sahrawi Refugee Children in a Spanish Host Program
Department of Development Studies
Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford
Crivello
G.
G. Crivello
Chatty
Dawn
Dawn Chatty
Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
Elena
Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:6572
2024-02-09T14:04:04Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
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IPCTrainingModule1.pdf
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Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (Text)
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (UNSPECIFIED)
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (UNSPECIFIED)
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (UNSPECIFIED)
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (UNSPECIFIED)
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy (UNSPECIFIED)
2007
Training Modules of the Research Programme. Economic Policies, MDGs and Poverty: Training Module No. 1 Fiscal Policy
Department of Development Studies
International Poverty Centre
Patel
Shruti
Shruti Patel
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