A cusum procedure based on sequential ranks
In: Naval research logistics: an international journal, Band 37, Heft 5, S. 627-646
ISSN: 1520-6750
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In: Cultural Critique, Heft 3, S. 211
In: Polarizing Development, S. 119-130
In: The politics of self-reliance / by Ngugi wa Thiong'o -- Julius Nyerere and the theory and practice of (un)democratic socIalism in Africa / by John S. Saul -- The challenge of development in Tanzania / by Julius E. Nyang'oro -- The ethical foundation of Julius Nyerere's legacy / by Cranford Pratt -- An economist's reflections on the legacies of Julius Nyerere / by Gerry Helleiner -- Julius Nyerere's critical education thought / by Eunice Njeri Sahle -- Inspiration for a new generation? / by David A. McDonald -- Defining socialism in Tanzania / by Julius K. Nyerere
World Affairs Online
"Critically assessing meanings of the term 'public', this book situates the emergence and expansion of 'public services' within market-based forms of production and consumption. It highlights the potential for making public services more progressive within market societies, but underscores their ongoing capture by private interests and emphasises the inherent limits of reform within a 'bourgeois public sphere'. The author explores opportunities for more expansive forms of non-marketized public services, examining emerging debates on the theory and practice of equitable, participatory and sustainable forms of publicness that go beyond mere ownership. The book then asks how we can build a robust international 'pro-public' movement that juggles universal needs with local context. With a focus on essential public services such as water, electricity and health, the text is global in its scope and written for a broad audience. It will be useful for those interested in social and public policy, public services and public administration, political theory, economic geography, social movements, sustainability and development"--
In the wake of recent widespread failures of privatization efforts, many communities in the global south now seek new, progressive ways to revitalize the public sector. From rural Guatemalan towns holding the state accountable for public health to an alliance of waste pickers in India and decentralized solar electricity initiatives in Africa, people worldwide are rising up with innovative public service solutions to difficult issues. Making Public in a Privatized World explores all of these cases and more, with essays that uncover the radically different ways grassroots movements have proved themselves as successful alternatives of essential public services where privatized efforts have failed. Using numerous in-depth case studies, this book offers probing insights from a diverse range of contributors from across the world, including academics, activists, unionists, and social movement organizers. A timely collection, Making Public in a Privatized World addresses the growing worldwide interest in exciting alternatives to privatization in both developed and developing countries.--
In October 2019, the Internal Revenue Service offered its first guidance on cryptocurrency reporting standards in nearly five years. As digital investments become more commonly accepted, the need for regulation and guidance becomes clearer. Issues such as how to classify cryptocurrencies and how a transaction's purpose impacts reporting standards are currently being addressed across the globe as governments work to develop protocols that organize this rapidly developing field. This note analyzes the developing reporting standards of select countries and the potential impacts on use as cryptocurrencies become more mainstream as a potential investment and method of payment.
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In: Slavic review: interdisciplinary quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European studies, Band 69, Heft 1, S. 185-188
ISSN: 0037-6779
In: Slavic review: interdisciplinary quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European studies, Band 69, Heft 1, S. 185-188
ISSN: 2325-7784
Willard Sunderland and Peter Holquist find in the same cohort of imperial officials—the "technocrats" in the Resettlement Administration—a key moment in the history of Russian statecraft (gosudarstvennost'), linked in turn to the Russian state's career as a "modern colonial empire." Thus, each historian seeks to ensconce within a larger institutional historical framework the burgeoning discussion occasioned over the last two decades by the "imperial turn" in Russian and European historiographies.However, each article situates the resettlement administration in very different developmental narratives, reaching equally distinctive conclusions. guided by the foucauldian notion of "governmentality" and james scott's insights on statecraft, sunderland presents the resettlement administration as a proto-ministry of asiatic russia, whose "experts" would impose in asiatic russia the institutionalization of "difference" between metropolis and periphery—defined and explained by the new hilfsiuissenschaften—that european empire-builders had applied in civilizing their own overseas colonies.
In: Explorations in Ethnic Studies, Band ESS-1, Heft 1, S. 5-5
ISSN: 2576-2915