Showing 1461 - 1470 of 5709 Items
Statement by Anonymous collected by Joan Uraneck on March 27, 2014
Date: 2014-03-27
Access: Open access
Statement by Anonymous collected by Joan Uraneck on November 3, 2014
Date: 2014-11-03
Access: Open access
Statement by Tania Morey Paul collected by Rachel George on October 30, 2014
Date: 2014-10-30
Access: Open access
Statement by Bobbi Johnson collected by Meredith Eaton on June 27, 2014
Date: 2014-06-27
Access: Open access
Statement by Bo Yerxa collected by Marcie Lister on December 18, 2014
Date: 2014-12-18
Access: Open access
Framing ICT Usage in the Real Estate Industry
Date: 2013-04-12
Creator: Steven Jones
Access: Open access
- The real estate industry, like many, is one based on a competitive consumer culture in which professionals vie for the business and, ultimately, the loyalty of customers. In this case, those customers are purchasing what, for most, is a significant investment, requiring them to navigate various legal and regulatory processes that might be impossible without the assistance of a knowledgeable, seasoned agent. It is the presence of agency that renders real estate unique from retail and other industries where goods and services trade hands. Furthermore, the rise of various information and communication technologies (ICT) over the course of the past 25 years may have led to new challenges for real estate agents and allied professionals. Some scholars surmise that the increased prevalence of ICTs in various industries can become disruptive to those industries, causing individuals and organizations working within them to either adapt accordingly or become obsolete (Bower and Christensen 1995; Markus, et al. 2006).
Interest group issue appeals: Evidence of issue convergence in senate and presidential elections, 2008-2014
Date: 2000-05-01
Creator: Michael M. Franz
Access: Open access
- Interest groups now play a prominent role in the air war. Their collective investment in election campaigns has skyrocketed in the aftermath of Citizens United. Yet questions remain about whether interest group advertising affects the content of the specific issues being discussed. Do groups enter campaigns and engage voters on the same issues as their candidate allies? Or does the presence of more advertisers introduce competitive issue streams? This paper examines ad buys in Senate elections between 2008 and 2014 and the presidential elections of 2008 and 2012. A primary goal of the paper is to uncover the effect of high and low levels of "issue convergence" on election outcomes. Strategists often express concern that too many voices on behalf of a candidate can weaken the impact of ads. One might expect that as convergence between a candidate and his or her allies goes up (meaning the issue content of the ad buys overlaps across advertisers), the impact of ads on votes will increase. Ad effects should be weaker when a candidate's ads discuss different issues from allied groups and party committees. The results, however, suggest that high rates of issue convergence are only weakly related to election outcomes (and not always in consistent ways).
How Did Exchange Rates Affect Employment in US Cities?
Date: 2013-05-07
Creator: Yao Tang, Haifang Huang
Access: Open access
- We estimate the effects of real exchange rate movements on employment in US cities between 2003 and 2010. We explore the differences in the composition of local industries to construct city-specific changes in exchange rates and estimate their effects on local employment in manufacturing industries and in nonmanufacturing industries. Controlling for year and city fixed effects, we find that a depreciation of the US dollar increased local employment in the manufacturing industries, our proxy for the tradable sector. The depreciation also increased employment in the nonmanufacturing industries, the nontradable sector. Furthermore, the effects on nonmanufacturing employment were stronger in cities that had a higher fraction of manufacturing employment, indicating the exchange rate movements’ indirect effects through the manufacturing industries. We also consider an alternative definition of the tradable sector that is broadened to include five service industries. The findings are similar.
Reflections questionnaire response by Luv Kataria on March 31, 2021
Date: 2021-01-01
Creator: Luv Kataria
Access: Open access
- This is a response to the Documenting Bowdoin & COVID-19 Reflections Questionnaire. The questionnaire was created in March 2021 by staff of Bowdoin's George J. Mitchell Department of Special Collections & Archives. The author is from the class of 2024.
A molecular analysis of green crab diets in Casco Bay, Maine
Date: 2015-03-01
Creator: Aidan W. Short, David B. Carlon
Access: Open access
- A new wave of green crabs Carcinus maenus is sweeping through the Gulf of Maine (GOM). While first reports of green crabs in the GOM date from the early 1900s, populations in southern GOM have exploded in the last five years. In the Casco Bay region, this unusually high abundance is associated with poor commercial shellfish landings and the decline of eel grass habitat (Zostera marina). To determine the mechanistic roles green crabs play in direct and indirect ecological interactions, it is important to understand diet breadth, and how feeding preferences change in response to ecological context. Since green crabs are omnivorous, traditional approaches to diet analysis via hard parts suffer from substantial bias. We are using DNA barcoding and next generation sequencing (NGS) to analyze green crab diets from a longitudinal sampling design in Casco Bay. In addition to a temporal dimension, our design includes two habitats: clam flats and eel grass beds. We have now sampled ~ 1000 crabs and have processed 460 individual stomachs from a range of sizes and both sexes. Here we will present: our sampling design, our NGS pipeline, and preliminary analysis from a lobster-specific (Homarus americanus) probe. Presenting author status: Undergraduate Preferred presentation type: Poster Preferred topics: 3. Biological invasions; 18. Molecular ecology Benthic Ecology Meeting, 2015 Quebec City, Canada Aidan Short was an undergraduate student at Bowdoin College when this research was conducted.