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  • 1
    UID:
    almafu_9958090944802883
    Umfang: xiv, 124 : , illustrations ; , 24 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-08470-7 , 9786610084708 , 1-4175-3423-0
    Serie: World Bank e-Library.
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Terms and Abbreviations -- Chapter 1: The Colombia Study: Proposals for Action -- Country Context -- Why a Participatory Approach? -- Chapter 2: Employment, Work, and Opportunities -- Urban Livelihoods: Informality on the Rise -- Deterioration of Formal Employment -- El Rebusque: Insecure and Low Paying -- Barrio Stigma -- The Strain of Changing Gender Roles -- The World of Rural Work -- Issues around Land -- Marketing: The Missing Link -- Environmental Degradation -- Indigenous and Afro-Colombian Aspirations -- Persistent Disadvantages for Rural Women -- Children and Youths: At Work and Endangered -- Organization and Capacity Building as Ways Forward -- Chapter 3: Violence and Insecurity -- The Backdrop of Political Violence -- Fear and Impotence in the Battle for Territory -- Vigilante Justice -- Economic Impact of Violence -- Families and Communities Uprooted: The Internally Displaced -- Youths Caught Up in Violence -- Rising Domestic Abuse: Forms and Causes -- Abuse of Women -- Many Triggers -- Children Battered and Abandoned -- Breaking the Chain of Violence -- Chapter 4: Education and Capacities -- High Hopes for Education -- Schools Failing the Grade -- Useless for Work -- Little Learning, Unmotivated Teachers -- Limited Access and Infrastructure -- Unjustifiably Expensive -- Another Battleground -- The Shame of Discrimination -- Pushed and Pulled Out of School -- Vocational Education Valued but Scarce -- Nonschool Actors in Education -- Education Must Be Relevant -- Chapter 5: Institutional and Policy Challenges -- Weak Institutions: Keeping the Poor Poor -- Unaccountable Politicians, Exclusionary Policies -- Services Denied -- Who Takes the Credit? -- Mixed Reviews for NGOs -- Stigmatized and Divided Communities, Fragile NGOs -- Poor People's Proposals. , Provide Support and Capacity Building for Work -- Improve Schools -- Strengthen Family and Community Institutions -- Increase Public Safety -- Implications for Policy Formulation: From Micro to Macro -- Support Small Producers -- Invest in Community-Driven Development -- Target the Family as a Unit -- Establish Inclusive Accountability Mechanisms across Government -- Develop Tailored and Integrated Strategies -- References -- Annex 1: Methodological Instrument for the Fieldwork -- Research Agenda -- The Study Process -- Annex 2: Selection and Characteristics of Sites -- List of Boxes -- Box 1. Informal Recycling in Pasto -- Box 2. An Urgent Need for Daycare -- Box 3. Child Labor in the Harvest Season -- Box 4. Asociación La Nueva Esperanza -- Box 5. "Be Quiet and Silent" -- Box 6. Vigilante Justice Leads to More Violence -- Box 7. A Dangerous and Stigmatized Neighborhood -- Box 8. Farming Skills of No Use in the City -- Box 9. Alternatives to Juvenile Delinquency -- Box 10. Education and Cultural Expression -- Box 11. Child Hunger -- Box 12. Children's Fears and Hopes in School -- Box 13. Education in the Heart of the Community -- Box 14. Proposals to Overcome Lack of Information -- Box 15. Proposals to Reduce the Vulnerability of Youth -- Box 16. Nonviolent Community Responses to Violence -- Box 17. Magdalena Medio Project: Fostering Peace and Development amid Conflict -- List of Figures -- Figure 1. Youth Delinquency: The Cycle of Acceptance -- Figure 2. Labor Trends among Women in Medellín -- Figure 3. Opportunities and Obstacles: A Youth Training Proposal -- Figure 4. The Rise of Neighborhood Violence, 1995-2002 -- Figure 5. Trends in Domestic Violence -- Figure 6. The Chain of Violence -- Figure 7. Opportunities and Obstacles: A Proposal to Reduce Domestic Violence -- Figure 8. Opportunities and Obstacles: A Proposal for One-Stop Family Services. , Figure 9. Causes and Effects of Dropping Out of School -- Figure 10. Number and Type of Proposals -- Figure 11. Opportunities and Obstacles: Proposal for an Association of Single-Mother Domestic Workers -- List of Tables -- Table 1. Nature under Pressure in Sanquianga -- Table 2. Relative Importance of Educational Actors -- Table 3. Attacking the Causes of High Dropout Rates -- Table 4. Proposals to Support Employment -- Table 5. Proposals to Build Capacity for Work -- Table 6. Proposals to Improve Education -- Table 7. Proposals to Support Families and Communities -- Table 8. Proposals to Improve Public Safety. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5802-2
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 2
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958090936402883
    Umfang: xxii, 281 pages : , illustrations ; , 26 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-04188-9 , 9786610041886 , 1-4175-4355-8
    Serie: A World Bank country study
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- Executive Summary -- PART I: Policy Report -- Introduction -- 1. Why Do Inequalities Matter for Brazil? -- 2. Why is Brazil Such an Unequal Society? -- Inequality in Brazil -- The Causes of Inequality -- Public Policy and Equity -- 3. What Can and Should Public Policy Do About Inequality in Brazil? -- Human Assets and Land: Endowments and Prices -- Public Social Expenditure and Taxation -- 4. Conclusions -- Appendix -- Bibliography -- PART II: Background Papers -- 5. Poverty and Inequality in Brazil: New Estimates from Combined PPV-PNAD Data -- Data -- Methodology -- Implementation -- Poverty and Inequality at the Regional Level -- Poverty and Inequality at Lower Levels of Disaggregation -- Inequality Decompositions -- Conclusions -- References -- 6. Beyond Oaxaca-Blinder: Accounting for Differences in Household Income Distributions across Countries -- Introduction -- Income Distribution in Brazil,Mexico,and the United States -- A General Statement of Statistical Decomposition Analysis -- The Decompositions in Practice: A Specific Model -- The Brazil-United States Comparison -- The Brazil-Mexico Comparison -- Conclusions -- Appendix -- References -- 7. Inequality of Outcomes, Inequality of Opportunities, and Intergenerational Education Mobility in Brazil -- Introduction -- Theoretical Background -- Opportunities and the Distribution of Individual Wages -- Simulating the Effects of the Inequality of Opportunities on Earnings -- The Effects of the Inequality of Opportunities on the Distribution of Household Income -- Summary and Conclusion -- References -- 8. Indirect Taxation Reform: Searching for Dalton-Improvements in Brazil -- Introduction -- Taxation in Brazil: Recent Evolution,Trends and Issues. , What is the Impact of Taxation on the Distribution of Secondary Income? -- Dalton Improving Tax Reforms: Analytical Framework -- Identifying Potential Candidates for Raising and Reducing Taxes -- The Pairs of Tax Changes that Satisfy the Dalton Improvement Condition -- Conclusions -- Appendix -- References -- 9. Schooling Expansion in Demographic Transition: A Transient Opportunity for Inequality Reduction in Brazil -- Introduction -- Demographic Background -- Methodology and Data -- The Evolution of Education Between Cohorts: Monotonically Increasing Mean, Decreasing Inequality and Inverted U-Shaped Mean-V -- The Increasing Stock -to-Cohort Time Lag of Educational Attainment -- Simulations: Permanent and Temporary Acceleration of Educational Attainment -- Conclusions -- Appendix -- Bibliography -- 10. Ex-ante Evaluation of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs:The Case of Bolsa Escola -- Introduction -- Main Features of the Bolsa Escola Program -- A Simple Framework for Modeling and Simulating Bolsa Escola -- Estimation of the Discrete Choice Model -- Descriptive Statistics and Estimation Results -- An ex ante Evaluation of Bolsa Escola and Alternative Program Designs -- Conclusions -- References -- 11. The Dynamics of the Skill-Premium in Brazil: Growing Demand and Insufficient Supply? -- Introduction -- Wage-inequality and Education -- Relative Supply, Relative Demand, and the Skill-premium -- What If? Alternative Paths for Supply and Wage-inequality in the Past -- Summary -- Appendix -- References -- TABLES -- Table 2.1: Effect of Regional Differences on Poverty: Brazil -- Table 2.2: Gini Coefficient for Land Distribution -- Selected Countries -- Table 2.3: Labor Market and Schooling Contribution to Income Inequality in Brazil -- Table 2.4: Accounting for Brazil 's Excess Inequality Relative to the United States: Microsimulations. , Table 2.5: Summary of Results of Analysis of Distributional Incidence of Public Social Expenditure -Northeast and Southeast B -- Table 2.6: School attendance and household characteristics (10-15 years old) -- Table 2.7: Redistributive Impact of Direct and Indirect Taxation by Components: Brazil, Metropolitan Areas, 1999 -- Table 3.1: Equity and Efficiency of Indirect Taxation -- Table 3.2: Tax Rates Change and Welfare Effects for Alternative Pairs of Dalton-improving Indirect Tax Reforms, Brazil -- Table A.1: Social sector priorities according to access gaps of the poor relative to the fourth quintile. Brazil, Urban and R -- Table A.2: Results from analysis of distributional incidence of public social expenditure, Brazil NE and SE 1997 -- Table 5.1: Poverty Measures by Region for Different Data Sets Headcount -- Table 5.2: Inequality Measures by Region for Different Data Sets: General Entropy Class c = 0.5 -- Table 5.3: Poverty Estimates by UF in the Northeast: Headcount -- Table 5.4: Inequality Estimates by UF in the Northeast: General Entropy 0.5 -- Table 5.5: Incidence of Poverty in Northeast Brazil: by State and Location Type -- Table 5.6: Decomposing Inequality: PNAD Income Versus PNAD Consumption: General Entropy Class (0.5) -- Table 6.1: Descriptive Statistics -- Table 6.2: FGT Measures -- Table 6.3: Theil Decompositions of Inequality by Population Characteristics -- Table 6.4: Simulated Poverty and Inequality for Brazilian Earnings in 1999, Using 2000 USA Coefficients -- Table 6.5: Simulated Poverty and Inequality for Brazil in 1999, Using 2000 USA Coefficients -- Table 6.6: Simulated Poverty and Inequality for Brazilian Earnings in 1999, Using 1999 Mexico Coefficients -- Table 6.7: Simulated Poverty and Inequality for Brazil in 1999, Using 1994 Mexico Coefficients. , Table 6A.1: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Participation Behavior and Occupational Choice: Brazil and the United States -- Table 6A.2: Estimates for the Mincerian Equation: Brazil (1999) and the United States (1994) -- Table 6A.3: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Demographic Choice: Brazil and the United States -- Table 6A.4: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Educational Structure: Brazil and the United States -- Table 6A.5: Tobit Model Estimates for Non Labour Incomes: Brazil and the United States -- Table 6A.6: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Participation Behavior and Occupational Choice: Brazil and Mexico -- Table 6A.7: Estimates for the Mincerian Equation: Brazil (1999) and Mexico (1994) -- Table 6A.8: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Demographic Choice: Brazil and the Mexico -- Table 6A.9: The Multinomial Logit Estimates for Educational Structure: Brazil and the Mexico -- Table 7.1: Descriptive Statistics -- Table 7.2a: Wage Equations by Cohort Using OLS, for Men -- Table 7.2b: Wage Equations by Cohort Using Heckman Correction (2SLS), for Women -- Table 7.3: Years of Schooling, by Parental Education Levels -- Table 7.4a: Educational Mobility OLS Regressions by Cohort:Men 's Years of Schooling -- Table 7.4b: Educational Mobility OLS Regressions by Cohort: Women's Years of Schooling -- Table 7.5a: Intergenerational Educational Mobility: Cohort 1936-1940 -- Table 7.5b: Intergenerational Educational Mobility: Cohort 1946-1950 -- Table 7.5c: Intergenerational Educational Mobility: Cohort 1956-1960 -- Table 7.5d: Intergenerational Educational Mobility: Cohort 1966-1970 -- Table 7.6a: Contribution of Inequality of Opportunity to Inequality of Family Per Capita Income: 5-year Cohort. Schooling and -- Table 7.6b: Contribution of Inequality of Opportunity to Inequality of Family Per Capita Income: 5-year Cohort. Schooling and. , Table 7.6c: Contribution of Inequality of Opportunity to Inequality of Family Per Capita Income: 5-year Cohort. Schooling and -- Table 8.1: Tax Burden in Brazil, 1996-2000 as Percent of GDP and of Total Revenues (TR), by its Main Taxes and Contributions -- Table 8.2: Tax Burden in Brazil, 1996-2000 as Percentage of Total Revenues, by Levels of Government -- Table 8.3: Indirect Taxation in Brazil, Rates and Revenues, 1999 -- Table 8.4: Redistributive Impact of Direct and Indirect Taxation by Components Brazil, Metropolitan Areas, 1999 -- Table 8.5: Decomposing the Distributive Effect of Indirect Taxation by Type of Goods. Brazil Metropolitan Areas, 1999 -- Table 8.6: Equity and Efficiency of Indirect Taxation -- Table 8.7: Tax Rates Change and Welfare Effects for Alternative Pairs of Dalton Improving Indirect Tax Reforms, Brazil -- Table 8.8: Welfare Ranking Between the DALTON Improving Tax Reforms -- Table 8A.1: State Level VAT Incidence (Nominal and Effective) on Food Products of State Basic Food Baskets for All Brazilian -- Table 8A.2a: Welfare Ranking of Alternative DALTON Improving Indirect Tax Reforms (Pair of Taxes) -- Table 8A.2b: Welfare Ranking of Alternative DALTON Improving Indirect Tax Reforms (Pair of Taxes) -- Table 10.1: School Enrollment and Occupation of Children by Age (10-15 Years Old) -- Table 10.2: Sample Means. Characteristics of Children and the Household they Belong to (10-15 Years Old Only) -- Table 10.3: Log Earnings Regression (10-15 Years Old Children Reporting Earnings) -- Table 10.4: Multinomial Logit Coefficients -- Table 10.4a: Multinomial Logit Coefficients -- Table 10.4b: Multinomial Logit Coefficients -- Table 10.5: Simulated Effect of Bolsa Escola on Schooling and Working Status (All Children 10-15 Years Old). , Table 10.6: Simulated Effect on Schooling and Working Status of Alternative Specifications of Conditional Cash Transfer Progr. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5880-4
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 3
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, DC :The World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958066482002883
    Umfang: xii, 380 pages : , illustrations ; , 28 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-08520-7 , 9786610085200 , 1-4175-2351-4
    Serie: World Bank Latin American and Caribbean studies. Viewpoints
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Summary -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Motivation and Conceptual Framework -- 1.1 A conceptual framework -- 1.2 The consequences of high inequality -- Part I: The Nature of Inequality in Latin America -- Chapter 2: Different Lives: Inequality in Latin America -- 2.1 Some conceptual issues -- 2.2 Income inequality and beyond -- 2.3 Measurement-related issues and data limitations -- 2.4 Inequality in Latin America in perspective -- 2.5 Looking inside household income -- 2.6 Inequality beyond income -- 2.7 Conclusions -- Chapter 3: Group-Based Inequalities: The Roles of Race, Ethnicity, and Gender -- 3.1 Who are the people of Latin America? -- 3.2 Inequality among individuals during the lifecycle -- 3.3 Would income inequality decline if returns to human capital were more equal? -- 3.4 Conclusions -- Part II: The Determinants of Inequality in Latin America -- Chapter 4: Historical Roots of Inequality in Latin America -- 4.1 Factor endowments, inequality, and institutions -- 4.2 The persistence of inequality: The colonial period -- 4.3 The persistence of inequality: Post-independence -- 4.4 The 20th century -- 4.5 The 21st century and beyond -- Chapter 5: State-Society Interactions as Sources of Persistence and Change in Inequality -- 5.1 Political and social structures as forces for the reproduction of inequality -- 5.2 The potential for equalizing political and social change -- 5.3 Conclusions -- Chapter 6: Economic Mechanisms for the Persistence of High Inequality in Latin America -- 6.1 Asset distributions: Education and land -- 6.2 Job match quality -- 6.3 Remuneration in the labor markets -- 6.4 Household formation -- 6.5 Conclusions -- Part III: Policies for Lower Inequality -- Chapter 7: Policies on Assets and Services -- 7.1 Education -- 7.2 Property rights, land, and housing. , 7.3 Infrastructure services and the distributional impact of privatization -- 7.4 Conclusions -- Chapter 8: Policies on Markets and Institutions -- 8.1 Markets and inequality -- 8.2 Labor market policies and inequality -- 8.3 Inequality and macroeconomic crises -- 8.4 Conclusions -- Chapter 9: Taxation, Public Expenditures, and Transfers -- 9.1 Taxes and distribution -- 9.2 Public social spending and distribution -- 9.3 Cash transfers and distribution -- 9.4 Conclusions -- Statistical Appendix -- Bibliography -- Boxes -- Chapter 1 -- 1.1 Measuring inequality of opportunities in Brazil -- Chapter 2 -- 2.1 Social class -- 2.2 Mobility in Latin America: What little is known? -- 2.3 Some simple decompositions -- 2.4 Social capital and trust -- 2.5 Disability and distribution -- Chapter 3 -- 3.1 Distribution of the population of the Americas: An historical evolution -- 3.2 Todos Contamos: National census and social inclusion -- 3.3 The challenge of racial, ethnic, and gender identification and measurement -- 3.4 What if we do hold "all else constant?" -- 3.5 Women's other job: Housework -- 3.6 Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition methodology -- 3.7 Econometric methodology -- Chapter 5 -- 5.1 Racial inequality and social spending: Evidence from the United States and Europe -- 5.2 Clientelism and the underprovision of public services in the Dominican Republic -- 5.3 Are there political and social reasons for the contrast between Latin America and East Asia? -- 5.4 Political agency and the potential for redistributive strategy in rich countries: Lessons from the OECD -- 5.5 Increased equity through taxation and social spending in a democratic Chile -- 5.6 Failed redistributive efforts in a fragmented democracy: Social security reforms in Brazil -- 5.7 Neopopulism and policies on social funds in Peru. , 5.8 Transition at the sectoral level? Mexico's targeted antipoverty programs -- 5.9 Popular budgeting in Porto Alegre: Explaining a transition to a new political equilibrium -- 5.10 Local contexts and the transition from clientelism: Ibagué versus Pasto -- Chapter 6 -- 6.1 Schematic representation of household income determination -- Chapter 7 -- 7.1 Business elites and the fear of education: Is there a low-road trap? Evidence from northeastern Brazil and the southern U -- 7.2 Bilingual education: Preserving cultural heritage without being left behind -- 7.3 The poverty reduction potential of land in rural Mexico -- Chapter 8 -- 8.1 Alternative views on the potential impact of market-oriented reforms and inequality -- 8.2 The evolution of small-scale firms in the "Third Italy" -- 8.3 Unions, firms, and the expansion of high-value export crops in Petrolina-Juazeiro in northeastern Brazil -- 8.4 Institutions, macroeconomic policy, and volatility -- Chapter 9 -- 9.1 Do tax incidence numbers mean much? -- 9.2 Issues in the valuation of public services -- 9.3 Summarizing benefit incidence using Gini income elasticities (GIE) -- Figures -- Summary -- 1. Difference in average years of education between top and bottom quintiles for people 31-40 and 51-60, in 2000 -- 2. Trends in income inequality in Latin America between the early 1990s and early 2000s -- 3. The elasticity of poverty reduction with respect to growth for different levels of inequality -- 4. Wages of various groups in relation to the wages of white males -- 5. Marital sorting and income inequality -- 6. Distribution of mathematics and reading test scores for 15-year-olds in Brazil, Mexico, and OECD countries -- 7. Tax revenue in relation to GDP per capita -- 8. Average and marginal incidence of access to various health services. , 9. Targeting to the poor and reach among the poor for different types of programs in Brazil -- Chapter 1 -- (Box 1.1) Inequality of opportunities as a share of total inequality, 1996 -- 1.1 A simple conceptual framework -- 1.2 Perceptions of fairness regarding the income distribution in Latin America -- 1.3 Inequality and poverty with a constant mean -- 1.4 Growth elasticities become less negative with inequality -- Chapter 2 -- 2.1 Income shares by deciles (household per capita income) -- 2.2 Household per capita income distribution, excluding the richest 1 percent, Mexico, 2000 -- 2.3 Equivalized household income -- 2.4 Indices of aggregate welfare for Argentina under alternative assumptions of a society's aversion to inequality -- 2.5 Brazil's consumption inequality in international perspective -- 2.6 Distribution of household per capita income, per region, 1990s -- 2.7 Difference in average years of education between top and bottom quintiles, per country -- 2.8 Hourly wage gap between skilled and unskilled workers, men aged 25 to 55 -- 2.9 Hourly wage gap between semi-skilled and unskilled workers, men aged 25 to 55 -- 2.10 Increase in hourly wages for college-educated workers, men aged 25 to 55 -- 2.11 Labor market outcomes by gender -- 2.12 Ratio of number of children under age 12 years of age per household between bottom and top quintiles -- 2.13 School enrollment rates by age and country -- 2.14 Gaps in access to services, by country -- Chapter 3 -- (Box 3.1) The changing ethnic composition of the Americas -- 3.1 Completed primary education or less, by race, ethnicity, and gender -- 3.2 Proportion of workers in service or managerial occupations, by group and country -- 3.3 Wage gaps by race/ethnicity and gender -- 3.4 Urban gender wage gap-ratio of women's hourly wages to men's hourly wages. , (Box 3.7) a. Nonindigenous male vs. American Indian male (simulating earnings regression coefficients) -- (Box 3.7) b. Nonindigenous male vs. American Indian male (simulating only education) -- (Box 3.7) c. Nonindigenous male vs. American Indian male (simulating both a and b) -- 3.5 Actual and simulated earnings distributions for white and indigenous men in Bolivia -- 3.6 Actual and simulated earnings distributions for Indo-Guyanese men and women -- Chapter 5 -- 5.1 The syndrome of weak and unequal states: correlations between the rule of law and development outcomes -- 5.2 Political financing and its impact, by type -- 5.3 Impact of bribes in shaping policy, according to a survey of firms by a recipient group, Peru, 2001 -- 5.4 The rise and fall of the labor share in Argentina -- Chapter 6 -- 6.1 Income and education inequalities across countries -- 6.2 Lorenz curves of years of schooling, selected countries -- 6.3 Difference in mean incomes per hundredth of the mean-normalized distribution: U.S.-Brazil and U.S.-Brazil (with U.S. conditional distribution of education) -- 6.4 Income and land inequalities across countries -- 6.5 Labor force participation and inequality across countries -- 6.6 Unemployment and inequality across countries -- 6.7 Informality and inequality across countries -- 6.8 Returns on schooling and inequality across countries -- 6.9 Distribution of and returns on education explain some of the differences between income distributions -- 6.10 Marital sorting and inequality across countries -- 6.11 Youth dependency and inequality across countries -- 6.12 Old-age dependency and inequality across countries -- 6.13 The role of reproductive behavior in accounting for differences in income distribution between Brazil and the United States -- 6.14 Total public spending and income inequality. , 6.15 Public expenditure on primary education and income inequality. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5665-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 4
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London ; : Pluto Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9958087704602883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (320 p.)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-84964-012-2 , 0-585-42622-8
    Serie: Contemporary Irish studies
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The formation of Northern Irish -- Some words about words -- 1 The Nature of Division: Ethnicity, Nationalism and Sectarianism -- Some definitions -- The dimensions of ethnic division in Northern Ireland -- Ethnicity and nationalism -- A sectarian conflict? -- Conclusion -- 2 The Significance of Social Class -- The distribution of life chances -- The other apartheid -- Class as a social identity -- Class as a political identity -- Why ethnonational rather than class politics? -- Conclusion -- 3 The Status and Position of Women -- The domestic sphere of labour -- The regulation of fertility -- The public sphere: work -- The public sphere: education -- The public sphere: politics -- Conclusion -- 4 Official Representations of the Conflict in Northern Ireland: The British State and the Media -- The media and the outbreak of the troubles -- Public relations and dirty tricks -- Advertising for peace -- Regulating the media -- Keeping their own house in order : self- censorship and the reference upwards system -- Media battles: Real Lives and Death on the Rock -- Explicit censorship: the 1988 broadcasting ban -- Conclusion -- 5 Alternative Representations of the Conflict in Northern -- Ireland: Republican and Loyalist Murals The history of wall murals in Northern Ireland -- Irish republicanism -- Republican murals -- Ulster loyalism -- Loyalist murals -- Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Good times for a change? -- References -- Index -- abortion 111 -13 -- academic performance -- 125-8 -- 129 -- academic subject choice 128-9 -- Adams, Gerry 79-80 -- advertisements by British state -- 157-8 -- portraying benefits of peace 181-2 -- portraying causes of terrorism 167-71 -- portraying ethnoreligious divisions 171-8 -- portraying solution 178-81 -- portraying terrorist problem 64. , terrorism 165-6 -- Alliance Party 79 -- Anglo-Irish Agreement 205 -- armed struggle -- in republican murals 217-19 -- republican shift away from 221-2 -- republican shift away from 224 -- arts, as subject choice 128 -- as site of ethnopolitical tension -- 30-3 -- 34-8 -- association football -- impact of political violence on 32-3 -- in international context 35-8 -- recruitment practices 31-2 -- At the Edge of the Union[documentary] 1 -- background papers 155 -- Bangor 76 -- BBC Northern Ireland 150-1 -- BBC [British Broadcasting Corporation] -- relationship with state 184 -- relationship with state 185 -- relationship with state 191 -- relationship with state 195 -- self-censorship 185 -- self-censorship 186-7 -- self-censorship 188 -- self-censorship 189 -- women employed in 118 -- Beck, Ulrich 61 -- Belfast -- middle class nationalists in 82 -- revival of 66-7 -- Belfast Celtic football club 30 -- Bloody Sunday 164 -- Boal, Fred 74 -- Bolton, Roger -- 189 -- 192 -- briefings 155 -- British imperialism -- despatch to Northern Ireland 153 -- in republican murals 214 -- in republican murals 216-22 -- loyalist paramilitary collusion with 230 -- public relations 154 -- public relations 154 -- public relations 156-7 -- public relations 156-7 -- termination as republican objective 223 -- British soldiers, and nationalist women 135 -- British state -- 164 -- approach to Northern Ireland 6-8 -- approach to Northern Ireland 152-3 -- approach to republicanism 168-9 -- approach to republicanism 200 -- Death on the Rock controversy 192-4 -- Death on the Rock controversy 192-4 -- public relations 154-7 -- Real Lives controversy 190-1 -- regulation of media 182-3 -- regulation of media 194-7 -- relationship with Catholic schools 24 -- relationship with media 184 -- relationship with media 185. , relationship with media 190 -- unionist mistrust of 19-20 -- unionist mistrust of 48 -- violence omitted in advertisements 162-4 -- Britishness -- 16-20 -- 24-5 -- 47 -- 236-7 -- Broadcasting Ban [1988] 7 -- business classes 65-6 -- Campbell, Gregory 190 -- capitalism -- 4-6 -- 63-4 -- Catholic church -- advice for abused women 110 -- interpretation of hunger strikes 53-4 -- link with nationalism 52-4 -- link with nationalism 58-9 -- membership of 14 -- Catholic schools -- 23-4 -- 25 -- 27 -- censorship of media -- broadcasting ban 194-7 -- Official Secrets Act 182-3 -- self-censorship 184-90 -- self-censorship 184-90 -- self-censorship 193 -- self-censorship 193 -- church 109-10 -- church attendance -- 14-15 -- 14-15 -- 58-9 -- 58-9 -- demographic trends 12-13 -- education of 23-4 -- education of 25 -- education of 27 -- experiences 123-5 -- history of wall murals by 203-4 -- identity 15-16 -- life chances 41-3 -- loyalist mural portrayals of 248-51 -- newspaper allegiance 28 -- Citizens [advertisement] 6 -- citizenship, in unionist discourse 56-7 -- civil rights demonstrations -- 151-2 -- 164 -- civil service -- 41-2 -- 117 -- civil society 144-8 -- Clar na mBan 147-8 -- Clarke, Liam 208 -- Cliftonville football club -- 31 -- 34 -- colonialism -- as source of conflict 54 -- as source of conflict 214 -- communication -- between ethnoreligious groups 52 -- between ethnoreligious groups 56 -- between ethnoreligious groups 58 -- within ethnoreligious groups 79-80 -- community politics 145 -- companies, state assistance for 65-6 -- constitutional preferences 46-51 -- constitutional status 6-8 -- consumption patterns 66-7 -- contraception 111 -- controlled [state]schools -- 23 -- 24-5 -- 27-8 -- courts, Diplock courts 71 -- cricket 29-30 -- Cuchulainn 239 -- cultural divisions -- language 26-8 -- media 28 -- names 26. , pluralism in official discourse 171-4 -- sport 29-38 -- Death on the Rock [documentary] 4 -- Defence, Press and Broadcasting Committee 183 -- Democratic Unionist Party [DUP] -- Democratic Unionist Party [DUP] 91-2 -- Democratic Unionist Party [DUP] 137-8 -- Democratic Unionist Party [DUP] 235 -- Democratic Unionist Party [DUP] 243 -- demographic trends 12-14 -- Derry City football club 32-3 -- Derry, civil rights march in 151-2 -- Devlin, Bernadette 136 -- devolution, unionist attitudes to 48 -- Dickson, Anne 137 -- Diplock courts 71 -- direct rule -- 6-8 -- impact on middle classes 17-18 -- impact on middle classes 49-50 -- impact on middle classes 65-7 -- impact on middle classes 81-2 -- impact on middle classes 86-7 -- impact on middle classes 91 -- impact on nationalists 49-50 -- impact on nationalists 81-4 -- impact on unionists 17-18 -- impact on unionists 19-20 -- impact on unionists 86-9 -- impact on unionists 91 -- impact on unionists 203 -- impact on working classes 68 -- impact on working classes 82-4 -- impact on working classes 87-9 -- nationalist attitudes to 49-50 -- public expenditure under 7-8 -- public expenditure under 17 -- public expenditure under 65 -- unionist attitudes to 47 -- disinformation 156-7 -- documentaries -- 188-9 -- 190-4 -- domestic labour, gendered division of -- 102-6 -- 119 -- domestic sphere, impact of political violence on -- 134 -- 165-6 -- domestic violence 106-11 -- Donegal Celtic football club 34-5 -- Drumm, Maire 132-3 -- Easter Rising [1916] 214 -- economy -- capitalism 4-6 -- capitalism 63-4 -- employment in flexible economy 5-6 -- employment in flexible economy 119 -- informal economy 121-2 -- education -- class divisions in 73-4 -- ethnic divisions in 23-6 -- gender divisions in 125-9 -- impact of direct rule on 81 -- impact of direct rule on 86. , impact of direct rule on 87 -- language teaching 27-8 -- women employed in 117 -- elections -- to Northern Ireland Assembly 141 -- to Northern Ireland Forum 137-9 -- to Northern Ireland Forum 137-9 -- to Northern Ireland Forum 140 -- to Northern Ireland Forum 140 -- employment -- ethnic divisions in 41 -- ethnic divisions in 123-4 -- low pay 71 -- low pay 116 -- low pay 120-1 -- low pay 123-4 -- manufacturing and service sector 69-70 -- manufacturing and service sector 87 -- manufacturing and service sector 113-15 -- of middle classes 65 -- part-time 70 -- part-time 105 -- part-time 118-20 -- employment law 120 -- endogamy, ethnic divisions 40 -- entertainment, in Belfast 67 -- Ervine, David 245 -- ethnicity -- and endogamy 40 -- and identity 15-22 -- and identity 95-9 -- and identity 209-13 -- and identity 235-7 -- definition of 10-11 -- education divisions 23-6 -- language 26-8 -- media 28 -- names 26 -- sport 29-38 -- ethnicity and nationalism -- and ethnoreligious identity 78-9 -- class divisions 84-6 -- class divisions 89-95 -- of loyalists 234-5 -- of nationalists 45-6 -- of unionists 45 -- reflected in 45-6 -- support for republicanism 85-6 -- support for republicanism 207 -- ethnonational conflict -- as feature of Northern Ireland 3-4 -- in modern society 4 -- in modern society 4 -- in modern society 56 -- in modern society 56 -- ethnonational identity -- discourse of 98-9 -- in murals 209-13 -- in murals 235-7 -- predominant over class 95-9 -- ethnopolitical division, and religion 52-9 -- ethnoreligious groups -- communication between 52 -- communication between 56 -- communication between 58 -- communication within 79-80 -- ethnoreligious identity -- and political alignment 78-9 -- and political violence 80 -- and social class 75 -- and women 's work experiences 123-5. , in state advertisements 171-8. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-7453-1244-6
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-7453-1254-3
    Sprache: Englisch
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  • 5
    UID:
    almafu_9958095819602883
    Umfang: xxvi, 474 pages : , illustrations : , 23 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-281-11317-4 , 9786611113179 , 0-8213-6827-3
    Serie: Directions in development. Poverty
    Inhalt: This book presents some basic theoretical concepts of public finance with a particular emphasis on its impact poverty reduction. Eight case studies from Latin America and Africa illustrate how these concepts are applied in practice and the implementation issues that emerge.
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Foreword; Preface; Abbreviations; Chapter 1 Public Finance for Poverty Reduction: An Overview Blanca Moreno-Dodson and Quentin Wodon; Part One Concepts in Public Finance:Debt,Taxation, Public Expenditure Tracking Surveys, and Benefit Incidence Analysis; Chapter 2 Debt Sustainability for Low-Income Countries: A Review of Standard and Alternative Concepts Danny Cassimon, Blanca Moreno-Dodson, and Quentin Wodon; Table 2.1 Debt Sustainability Thresholds and Policy Performance for IDA14; Chapter 3 Revenue Design and Taxation Eric M. Zolt , Table 3.1 Comparative Levels of Tax Revenue, Selected Years, 1985-97 Table 3.2 Comparative Composition of Tax Revenue, Selected Years, 1985-97; Chapter 4 Assessing Front-line Service Delivery: Public Expenditure Tracking Surveys Ritva Reinikka and Jakob Svensson; Table 4.1 Leakage of Public Funds for Education, Uganda, 1991-95; Chapter 5 The Impact of Budgets on the Poor: Tax and Expenditure Benefit Incidence Analysis Jorge Martinez-Vazquez; Part Two Case Studies from the Latin America and the Caribbean Region , Chapter 6 Analyzing Debt Sustainability: An Application of SimSIP Debt for Paraguay Bernhard G. Gunter and Quentin WodonFigure 6.1 Initial Conditions and Basic Macroeconomic Assumptions; Figure 6.2 Results of Different Export Growth Scenarios; Figure 6.3 Assumptions on Public Domestic Debt; Figure 6.4 Results of the Baseline, Pessimistic, and Optimistic Scenarios; Figure 6.5 Results of Different Revenue and Expenditure Scenarios; Table 6.1 Short- and Long-Term Consistency Matrices; Table 6A.1 Trends in Paraguay's Debt, 1991-2000 , Chapter 7 Evaluating a Tax System: Mexico Jorge Martinez-Vazquez Table 7.1 Marginal Effective Corporate Tax Rates on Domestic Capital Investment; Table 7.2 Tax Burden by Income Decile: Baseline Scenario; Table 7.3 Tax Burden by Income Decile: Alternate Scenario; Table 7.4 Distribution of Net Income among Income Deciles; Table 7.5 Distribution of Gross Income among Deciles: Base Scenario; Table 7.6 Distribution of Gross Income among Deciles: Alternate Scenario , Chapter 8 Measuring Targeting Performance through Public Expenditure Tracking Surveys: Peru José R. López-Cálix, Lorena Alcázar, and Erik Wachtenheim Table 8.1 Correlation between Expenditure and Poverty, by Department, 2001; Figure 8.1 Lorenz Curves in Selected Social Programs; Table 8.2 Household Access to Social Programs, by Poverty Level, 2001; Figure 8.2 Lorenz Curves for Health Care Expenditures; Figure 8.3 Lorenz Curves for Education Expenditures; Table 8.3 Targeting of Individual Beneficiaries by Food Assistance, Health Care, and Education Programs, 2000 , Figure 8.4 Access to Social Programs, 2001 , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-6826-5
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Fallstudiensammlung
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 6
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D. C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958090930802883
    Umfang: vii, 76 pages : , illustrations ; , 1 CD-ROM (4 3/4 in.) , 26 cm. +
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-09822-8 , 9786610098224 , 1-4175-2615-7
    Serie: World Bank working paper ; no. 40
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- Foreword -- Abstract -- Acknowledgments -- Acronyms and Abbreviations -- Executive Summary -- 1. The Promise of Reform -- ECA is Different -- Power Sector Reforms are Urgent -- Proper Sequencing is Critical -- Net Political Benefits Explain Variation in Progress -- Taking Care of Institutions in the Energy Reform Roadmap -- Identifying Outcomes is Difficult -- 2. Getting the Utilities off the Books -- Quantifying the Sector Losses -- Deficits Declined for Different Reasons -- Relationship Between the Electricity Sector Deficit and the Fiscal Deficit -- Reform Savings Did Not Go to Social Spending -- Conclusions -- 3. Creating More Efficient Companies -- Improve Transparency and Accountability -- Revenue per kilowatt hour Rose -- Generation Costs Declined -- System Losses Held Steady -- Collection Rates Varied -- Mixed Results on Operational Efficiency -- Focus on Service Quality -- Regional Companies Take on the Challenge -- Conclusions -- 4. Maintaining Power to the Poor -- Household Energy Use Patterns Differ -- Tariffs Rose -- The Burden Increased -- Consumption is Low -- Gas May Be Filling the Gap -- Enforcement is Necessary -- Searching for Better Transfers -- Conclusions -- 5. Local Versus Global Environmental Benefits -- Did the Reforms Achieve Environmental Benefits? -- There Were Unintended Environmental Costs -- Damage from Dirty Fuel Use May Be Large -- Conclusions -- Annexes -- Annex A: Overview of the Reform Process in Eight ECA Countries -- Annex B: Proceeds from Privatization of Electric Utility Companies -- Annex C: Tariff Losses, Commercial and Collection Losses, as Share of Total Losses -- Annex D: Fiscal Balance and Electricity Sector Financial Deficit (Million USD and share of GDP -- Annex E: Efficiency Indicators -- Annex F: More on the Methodology for Estimating Health Effects. , Annex G: Base Emission Factors -- Annex H: More on Factors Leading to Low Contribution of Power Sector Toward Health Damages -- Annex I: Changes in Generation Mix in the Past Decade -- Annex J: Proposed Energy Issues to be Addressed and Sample Questions in LSMS/HBS Surveys -- References -- TABLE OF FIGURES -- Figure 1.1: Suggested Sequencing of Power Sector Reforms in ECA -- Figure 2.1: The Electricity Sector's Losses Declined,1993-2001 -- Figure 2.2: Power Sector Losses are Weakly Correlated with Fiscal Deficits,1995-2000 -- Figure 2.3: Poor Countries Spend Less on Poor People (1997-2000) -- Figure 2.4: Social Spending on Education, Health and Social Assistance Did Not Increase (as percent of GDP) -- Figure 3.1: Nominal Revenues Increased Marginally, 1991-2001 -- Figure 3.2: System Losses Stayed Stable, 1990-2002 -- Figure 3.3: Collection Rates Differ by Country, 1990-2002 -- Figure 4.1: Residential Electricity Tariff -Index of CPI Adjusted Real Tariffs -- Figure 4.2: Enough for Three Light Bulbs and a Refrigerator -- Figure 4.3: Electricity Tariffs are Higher Than Those for Gas, 1992-2002 -- Figure 4.4: Burden of Arrears is the Same for the Poor and Non-poor, 2000-2002 -- Figure 4.5: Alternative Subsidy Scheme -- Figure 5.1: Fuel Required to Produce 1 Megawatt-hour of Electricity, 1992-98 -- Figure 5.2: Electricity Contributes in Small Measure to Health Damages -- TABLE OF TABLES -- Table 1.1: ECA is Different -- Table 1.2: Timeline of Reforms in the Electricity Sector in ECA -- Table 1.3: Independence of Regulatory Institutions: Paper and Practice -- Table 1.4: Investment Climate Varies Among Reformers -- Table 3.1: Suggested Indicators of Production Efficiency -- Table 3.2: Reported Generation Costs Went Down, 1990-2002 (cents/kilowatt hour) -- Table 3.3: Aggregate Impact of Reform on Collection Rates in Tbilisi. , Table 3.4: Service Quality Improved -- Table 4.1: Urban Network Energy Use in ECA, (percent of households) -- Table 4.2: Urban Non-network Energy Use in ECA (percent of households) -- Table 4.3: Shares of Spending on Electricity Went Up, 1993 -2002 -- Table 4.4: Consumer Surplus Fell -- Table 4.5: Electricity Expenditure as a Share of Total Energy Expenditure, 1993-2002 -- Table 4.6: Simulation of Subsidy Cost-effectiveness for Tbilisi, Georgia -- Table 5.1: Exposure to Indoor Air Pollution is High -- TABLE OF BOXES -- Box 2.1: Untangling the Quasi-fiscal Deficit -- Box 2.2: Calculating the Implicit Subsidies (Sector Losses) -- Box 2.3: Social Spending in Latin America Increased Since the 1990s -- Box 3.1: Private Sector Improving Household Collections in Georgia -- Box 3.2: Opportunistic Behavior by the Private Sector? -- Box 4.1: Simulation of Alternative Subsidy -- Box 5.1: Reform Measures Expected to Result in Environmental Quality Improvements -- Box 5.2: Estimating the Power Sector's Contribution to Air Pollution and Health Damage -- Box 5.3: Methodology for Calculating Damages from Indoor Air Pollution. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5900-2
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 7
    UID:
    almafu_9958124482102883
    Umfang: v, 62 pages ; , 26 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-14141-7 , 9786610141418 , 1-4175-9098-X
    Serie: World Bank working paper, no. 49
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- Firm Size, Financing, Access to Credit, and Credit Constraints -- Financial Institution Ownership and Access to Credit -- Financial Access as an Obstacle to Growth Compared to Other Variables -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- References -- LIST OF TABLES -- 1. The Dataset: Characteristics of Sample Firms -- 2. The Dataset: Alternative Classifications of Firm Size -- 3. Firm Size and Sources of Finance: Working Capital and New Investments -- 4. Bank Ownership: No. and Percentage of Firms by Ownership Category -- 5. Access to Credit and Credit Constraints-Breakdown per Type of Bank -- 6. Firm Size and Finance Related Obstacles to Growth -- A.1. GDP, Population, and Branch Density per State -- A.2. The Dataset (Size, Region, Industry, Manager's Education, Sales Growth) -- A.3. Definition and Construction of Variables -- A.4. Source of Finance-Working Capital -- A.5. Source of Finance: New Investments -- A.6. Overdrafts, Credit Lines and Trade Credit -- A.7. Firm Size and Number of Banks Firms Do Business with -- A.8. Size, Region, Education, Industry, and Sales Growth Effects on Access to Credit and Credit Constraints -- A.9. Reasons for Not Applying for a Bank Loan and Reasons for Bank Loan Rejection -- A.10. The Importance of Collateral and Shares of Collateral -- A.11. Regression Results-Firm Characteristics, Performance and the Probability of Having a Loan -- A.12. The Impact of Firm Size on the Likelihood of Having a Loan: Model 2 -- A.13. The Likelihood of Having a Loan According to Its Duration -- A.14. The Impact of Bank Ownership on the Firm's Likelihood of Having a Loan-Model 2-Sample Split by Bank Ownership -- A.15. The Impact of Bank Ownership on the Firm's Likelihood of Having a Loan-Model 2-Consolidated Sample -- A.16. Probability of Having a Loan from a Public Bank or a BNDES Credit Line. , A.17. Obstacles to Growth-Firm Size and Other Factors -- A.18. The Relative Importance of Obstacles to Growth and Firm Size. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-6130-9
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-6129-5
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 8
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958095810002883
    Umfang: xxxii, 98 pages ; , 26 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-281-19139-6 , 9786611191399 , 0-8213-7345-5
    Serie: World Bank working paper ; no. 126
    Inhalt: This study is based on research on secondary textbook and school library provision in Botswana, Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Togo, as well as existing recent country reports on textbook provision and an extensive desk research. Considerable variations exist in Sub-Saharan African textbook requirements needed to meet secondary curriculum specifications just as significant differences exist between and within countries in regard to the average price of recommended textbooks. Some countries have no approved textbooks list. This study aims to discuss the tex
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Executive Summary; Résumé analytique; Introduction: Methodology and Constraints; PART I: Secondary Textbooks; Table 1. Secondary Textbook Requirements and Costs in Selected Countries; Table 2. Average Unit Textbook Costs by Grade Levels in Selected Countries (U.S. dollars); Table 3. Simplified Accounts of a Church School; Table 4. Simplified Accounts of a Government of Lesotho (GoL) School; Table 5. Purchasing Power of School Textbook Budgets (based on 11 Uganda Schools); Table 6. Textbook Availability in Lesotho Schools (2003) , Table 7. Secondary Textbook Distribution Systems in Selected CountriesPART II: Secondary School Libraries; Box 1. Example of Alternative Page Requirements; Table 8. Cost of Basic Textbook Provision at One School in Uganda for S1 to S6 (2002); Table 9. National Cost of Basic Textbook Provision for S1 to S6; Table 10. Unit Costs per Student of Basic Textbook Provision (including the cost of provision of teachers' copies); Box 2. Typical Annual Rental Fee Formula; Table 11. Cash Flow by Grade Levels in a Schematic Full Textbook Rental Scheme , Table 12. Cash Flow Summary of Table 11 for All Grades , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-7344-7
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Arbeitspapier ; Graue Literatur
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
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    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958096983402883
    Umfang: xi, 437 pages : , illustrations ; , 24 cm.
    ISBN: 1-280-00524-6 , 9786610005246 , 0-585-18058-X
    Serie: WBI development studies
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Empirical puzzles of Chilean stabilization policy / Guillermo A. Calvo and Enrique G. Mendoza -- Comment: An alternative view of Chile's macroeconomic policy / Roberto Zahler -- Chile's take-off : facts, challenges, lessons / Klaus Schmidt-Hebbel -- Capital markets in Chile, 1985-97 : a case of successful international financial integration / Nicolas Eyzaguirre and Fernando Lefort -- Market and state principles of reform in Chilean education : policies and results / Cristián Cox and María José Lemaitre -- Health sector reforms in Chile / Osvaldo Larrañaga -- Poverty and income distribution in a high-growth economy : Chile, 1987-95 / Alberto Valdés -- Effectiveness of the State and development lessons from the Chilean experience / Mario Marcel -- Privatizing and regulating Chile's utilities, 1974-2000 : successes, failures, and outstanding challenges / Eduardo Bitrán, Antonio Estache, José Luis Guasch, and Pablo Serra -- Chile's political economy in the 1990s : some governance issues / Alejandro Foxley T. and Claudio Sapelli. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-4500-1
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 10
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    almafu_9958106783502883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (256 p.)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-134-28997-9 , 1-134-28998-7 , 1-280-30247-X , 9786610302475 , 0-203-48322-7
    Serie: Museum meanings
    Inhalt: Reshaping Museum Space pulls together the views of an international group of museum professionals, architects, designers and academics highlights the complexity, significance and malleability of museum space, and provides reflections upon recent developments in museum architecture and exhibition design. Various chapters concentrate on the process of architectural and spatial reshaping, and the problems of navigating the often contradictory agendas and aspirations of the broad range of professionals and stakeholders involved in any new project.Contributors review rece
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Cover; Reshaping Museum Space: Architecture, Design, Exhibitions; Copyright; Contents; Figures; Notes on contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part IOn the nature ofmuseum space; 1 Rethinking museum architecture: Towards a site-specific history of production and use; 2Black box science in blackbox science centres; 3 Space and the machine: Adaptive museums, pervasive technology and the new gallery environment; 4 Creative space; Part IIArchitectural reshaping; 5From cultural institution tocultural consumer experience:Manchester Art GalleryExpansion Project , 6 Spatial culture, way-finding and the educational message: The impact of layout on the spatial, social and educational experiences of visitors to museums and galleries7 The Grande Galerie de l'Evolution: An alternative cognitive experience; 8Producing a public for art:Gallery space in thetwenty-first century; 9Towards a new museumarchitecture:Narrative and representation; Part IIIInside spaces; 10Building on Victorian ideas; 11Representing Enlightenmentspace; 12The studio in the gallery?; 13When worlds collide:The contemporary museumas art gallery , 14Constructing and communicatingequality:The social agency of museum spacePart IVCreative space; 15Threshold fear; 16From cathedral of cultureto anchor attractor; 17The vital museum; Index , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-415-34345-3
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-415-34344-5
    Sprache: Englisch
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