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Wage Scars from Involuntary Job Loss: Evidence and Comparisons from the NLSY79 and NLSY97 CohortsOdongo, Kennedy Rodgers 24 May 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Three Microeconometric Studies of Displaced Workers / Displaced WorkersCrossley, Thomas 01 1900 (has links)
<p>This thesis comprises three essays. The first two essays examine what inferences can be drawn about the structure of wages from the experiences of displaced workers using the Ontario Ministry of Labour Plant Closure Survey. The third essay examines the effect of unemployment benefits on household consumption during spells of unemployment, with a particular emphasis on durables purchases. It employs data from a second and new data source, the Canadian Out of Employment Panel.</p>
<p>The first essay revisits the issue of what can be learned about wage tenure profiles from displaced worker data. The positive relationship between wages and tenure in cross section data is consistent with the accumulation of firm specific capital. Alternatively, it may be explained by unobserved heterogeniety across workers, or by endogenous mobility. Displaced worker data is quite helpful in correcting for the first possible bias, and less so for the second. The relationship between various estimation strategies in the literature is illustrated. Estimates that control for individual heterogeniety and endogenous mobility driven by systematic differences in the pay policies of firms are presented. In this data, 10 years of tenure appears to raise wages
by about 7%.</p>
<p>The second essay examines intra-industry wage differentials. Even after conditioning on a rich set of worker and job characteristics, firm of employment is a significant determinant of wages. Estimates that employ the longitudinal nature of data demonstrate that sorting of workers across firms by unobserved ability can explain about half of the observed differentials. Firm wage differentials are observed within narrow industries, consistent across broad occupational groups, and robust to conditioning on differences in the mix of skills or job characteristics. Further "high wage" firms exhibit high average tenures suggesting that positive wage premia are associated with reduced mobility. These observations imply that compensating wage
differentials are also a poor candidate explanation for the observed differentials. The results are more consistent with models based on rents or some firm monopsony power. The results also raise questions about the interpretation of wage regressions which ignore firm heterogeneity, and about the sources of wages losses among displaced workers.</p> <p> The final essay examines how households smooth consumption over the income losses due to an unemployment spell. A model of "internal capital markets" is proposed, which suggests that households adjust the timing of the replacement of small durables to income flows. The plausibility of this model is investigated empirically, using a series of program changes in the Canadian unemployment insurance scheme for exogenous variation in transitory income. The data are consistent with the predictions of the "internal capital markets model" while rejecting both a standard life cycle model and a "rule of thumb" model of household expenditure patterns.</p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Sex role identity and vocational interests of enrollees in traditional and nontraditional displaced homemaker programs in VirginiaHowlett, Sandra E. January 1981 (has links)
There were two primary purposes of this study. The first purpose was to describe and compare the sex role identical and vocational interests of enrollees in traditional and nontraditional displaced homemaker proqrams. The second purpose was to deteraine if sex ro1e identity and vocational interests changed from the beginning to the end of the program cycle. The secondary purposes of this study included (a) a description of the sex role identity of instructors in displaced homemaker programs and a determination of change of sex role identity from the beginning to the end of the program cycle, as well as (b) the establishment of demographic profiles of enrollees and instructors.
The sample consisted of 35 enrollees and 10 instructors in four displaced homemaker programs in Virginia. The instruments used in this study were the BEM Inventory and Self-Directed Search. Program information and demographic information on enrollees and instructors was also collected. Descriptive analysis was used for the study.
It can be concluded that there was a significant difference in the sex role identity of enrollees in traditional and nontraditional displaced homemaker programs both before and after program activities. Therefore, sex role identity was a significant variable for these selected displaced homemaker programs enrollees. However, due to the small sample, generalizability to the population of displaced homemakers is only speculative.
In addition, the data suggested that while most enrollees did not change in their sex role identity from the beginning to the end of the program cycle, those enrollees who did change were enrolled in nontraditional programs and tended to move toward more sex-type roles. As indicated in the literature, strongly sex-typed attitudes may impair the enrollees’ ability to perform in nontraditional occupational settings where flexibility is desirable if not necessary.
No significant difference was found in the sex role identity of instructors in traditional and nontraditional programs at either the pre- or posttest stage. Therefore, sex role identity was not a variable determining instructor involvement with a traditional or nontraditional displaced homemaker program. Sex role identity of 40 percent of the instructors moved toward less sex-typed roles form the beginning to the end of the program cycle suggesting an increased flexibility in role. The androgynous role of these instructors could provide a role model which may encourage enrollees to consider a wider range of behavioral and career options.
The data suggested that a significant difference in vocational interests existed only at the posttest stage. Thus, it may be concluded that program enrollment may not be contingent upon vocational interest but rather may be dependent upon program availability. In addition, the data suggested that while most enrollees did not change in their vocational interests from the beginning to the end of the program cycle, those enrollees who did change were in traditional displaced homemaker programs. Change in category of vocational interests remained within those occupational areas typically considered feminine.
Data on all enrollees indicated a wider distribution of vocational interests at the posttest stage. The career exploration component included in all programs may have attributed to the increased range of vocational interests expressed by enrollees. / Ed. D.
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Internally Displaced Peoples: Potential Spoilers for Peace?Oskarsson, Gelanie January 2012 (has links)
Armed hostilities and conflicts have not only killed hundreds of thousands, but have alsodisplaced millions of families and communities around the world, forcing them to move out oftheir homes and seek shelter somewhere else. Some have crossed borders and sought refuge inother countries (refugees). Internally displaced peoples (IDPs) are those victims of conflict whohave remained within their own countries, suffering from constant displacements and numerousviolations to their human rights. However, they are not mere helpless victims of conflict anddisplacement, but instead some of them are also heralded as heroes because of their activeparticipation in and contributions to the peace process. Already viewed both as victims andheroes, this qualitative desk study looks at a third perspective to the IDP community: can theyalso be seen as potential spoilers to peace processes? An analytical framework outlining some conditions to spoiling activities and behaviour has beendeveloped in this study as a basis to facilitate research into this topic. The framework is thenapplied to a case study, chosen because of its community’s heterogeneity: the IDPs of Mindanao,also known as the Bakwit. Through consulting previous research and current relevant newsreports on the Bakwit, their opinions and attitudes toward the conflict, their proposed solutions toending the conflict, as well as, their role in the peace process in Mindanao are discussed in thisstudy. With the application of the analytical framework on the case of the IDPs in Mindanao, thisresearch has found out that because of their direct involvement in conflict, limited politicalparticipation, and limited socioeconomic inclusion, the Bakwit has the potential to spoilingactivities and behaviour. Their exposure to majority of the conditions and characteristics thattrigger spoiling behaviour could hinder them in participating in the peace building process. Thus,the analytical framework has also been used to conclude what governments and the internationalcustodians can do to prevent IDPs from engaging in spoiling activities and to ensure that conflictresolution, negotiations, and peace building activities are more sustainable.
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Environmental Refugees, the XXI Century Imperative ChallengeAlves Pereira, Marisa January 2013 (has links)
There are new challenges, facing the 21st century and one of them is the discussion around climate change and global warming. This phenomenon brings with it a deeper problem, which is the fact that millions of people have their lives strongly damaged as a consequence of the climate changes. There is no international instrument that protects these climate victims, which in this thesis are referred to as environmental refuges. This thesis focused on trying to evaluate solutions to the problem of environmental refugees. To achieve this we first had a look at the different types of forced migration since it would define which type of solution would suit this type of refugees the best. We had a look at the "Oustees" which are the people who are forced to move due to development projects in the different countries. Then we had a look at Bangladesh as one of the case studies since it is one of the countries at higher risk of suffering the adverse consequences of climate change, which forces many people to move internally or to cross the border to India. We were able to conclude that cross border migration increases tensions between countries and between social groups of the receiving communities. Since these people need protection and since these types of tensions threaten peace and security in some...
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Lebensbedingungen und psychische Gesundheit der Bewohner der Würzburger Gemeinschaftsunterkunft für Asylbewerber / Living conditions and mental health of residents of the shared accommodation centre for asylum seekers in Würzburg, GermanyAlbers [geb. Ottmers], Hannah Maike January 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Hintergrund: Über die psychische Gesundheit von Asylsuchenden in Deutschland ist wenig bekannt. Ziel dieser Studie ist, (1) die psychische Gesundheit der Asylsuchenden in der Würzburger Gemeinschaftsunterkunft zu beschreiben, (2) ihre Wahrnehmung der aktuellen Lebensbedingungen zu erfassen, sowie (3) mögliche Zusammenhänge zwischen beiden Bereichen zu untersuchen. Methoden: Alle Bewohner der Würzburger Gemeinschaftsunterkunft, welche zum Zeitpunkt der Befragung mindestens 16 Jahre alt waren und den Studienfragebogen in einer der Sprachen Arabisch, Amharisch, Farsi, Russich, Somali, Deutsch oder Englisch ausfüllen konnten, konnten an dieser Querschnittbefragung teilnehmen. Das Vorhandensein von psychischen Erkrankungen (Somatoformes Syndrom, Depressive Syndrome, Angstsyndrome, Alkoholsyndrom und eine Screeningfrage für PTBS), sowie das Ausmaß an psychosozialem Stress wurden mittels des PRIME-MD Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) gemessen. Die subjektive Einschätzung der Lebensbedingungen durch die Teilnehmer wurde mit einem für die spezifischen Bedingungen entwickelten Fragebogen erfasst. Die Ergebnisse wurden deskriptiv dargestellt und Korrelationen zwischen der Bewertung der Lebensbedingungen und ausgewählten Parametern der psychischen Gesundheit wurden mittels Chi-Quadrat-Tests und des Spearman Rangkorrelationskoeffizienten berechnet. Ergebnisse: Insgesamt nahmen 183 Bewohner an der Befragung teil. Der PHQ konnte für 140 Teilnehmer ausgewertet werden, der Fragebogen zu aktuellen Lebensbedingungen für 113 Teilnehmer. Die häufigsten PHQ-Syndrome waren das Somatoforme Syndrom (38,6%; n=54), Depressive Syndrome (25,7% (n=36) Major Depressives Syndrom; 22,8% (n=32) andere depressive Syndrome) und Angstsyndrome (11,4% (n=16) Paniksyndrom, 9,3% (n=13) andere Angstsyndrome). Bei 38,6% (n=54) ergab der PHQ für mehr als ein Syndrom ein positives Ergebnis. Die Lebensbedingungen in der Gemeinschaftsunterkunft wurden größtenteils negativ bewertet und ihre Auswirkungen auf die eigene Gesundheit wurden im Mittel als „ziemlich stark“ beurteilt. Eine schlechtere Bewertung der Lebensbedingungen und eine längere Aufenthaltsdauer in der Gemeinschaftsunterkunft waren in univariaten Analysen mit einem schlechteren Ergebnis bezüglich verschiedener Parameter der psychischen Gesundheit assoziiert (z.B. depressive Syndrome, psychosoziale Belastung). Schlussfolgerung: Verschiedene Limitationen der Studie müssen berücksichtigt werden (z.B. Querschnittdesign, mangelnde Validierung der Fragebogenübersetzungen). Dennoch zeigen diese Ergebnisse eine deutliche Unzufriedenheit der Studienteilnehmer mit den Lebensbedingungen in der Gemeinschaftsunterkunft auf und lassen eine hohe Prävalenz psychischer Erkrankungen in der Studienpopulation vermuten. / Background: Little is known regarding mental health of asylum seekers in Germany. The objectives of this study are (1) to evaluate the mental health status of asylum seekers residing in the shared accommodation centre of Würzburg, Germany, (2) to describe their perception of current living conditions in the centre, and (3) to investigate potential associations between both aspects. Methods: Eligible participants for this cross-sectional study were all residents of the shared accommodation centre aged at least 16 years and who were able to fill in the survey questionnaire in one of the languages Arabic, Amharic, Farsi, Russian, Somali, German or English. The presence of mental disorders (including somatoform disorders, depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, alcohol abuse, and a screening question on PTSD) as well as the amount of psychosocial stress, were assessed with the PRIME-MD Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ). The participants’ perception of current living conditions was investigated with questions specifically developed for the study population. After descriptive analyses of the results, associations between the perceptions of living conditions and selected parameters of mental health were investigated with chi-squared-tests or Spearman's rank correlation coefficient, as appropriate. Results: Of 183 completed questionnaires, 140 were included in analyses of the PHQ and 113 in descriptive analyses of the living conditions. The most common PHQ-syndromes were somatoform syndrome (38.6%, n=54), depressive syndromes (25.7% (n=36) major depressive syndrome, 22.8% (n=32) other depressive syndromes) and anxiety syndromes (11.4% (n=16) panic syndrome, 9.3% (n=13) other anxiety syndromes). Overall, 38.6% (n=54) scored positive for more than one syndrome. The perception of current living conditions was mainly negative. A longer duration of residence in the centre as well as a more negative perception of current living conditions were associated with worse mental health outcomes in univariate analyses (e.g. regarding depressive symptoms and psychosocial stress). Conclusion: The study had some limitations, including the cross-sectional design and a lack of validated translations of survey instruments. However, the results indicate a potentially high prevalence of psychosocial stress and mental disorders in the study population as well as a strong dissatisfaction with current living conditions in the accommodation centre.
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The politics of ???environmental refugee??? protection at the United NationsMcNamara, Karen Elizabeth, School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Science, UNSW January 2006 (has links)
This thesis seeks to better conceptualise how and why there is an absence of international protection for ???environmental refugees???, and to place these findings in the critical geopolitics literature. A poststructuralist framework, drawing on Foucault???s ideas of discourse, subjectivity, power and governance, was deemed most appropriate for this thesis, and provided a means of differentiation from previous literature on ???environmental refugees???. This thesis develops a genealogy of the subject category of ???environmental refugees??? since the 1970s, to better understand how the United Nations, Inter-Governmental Organisations (IGOs), Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and the media have constructed environmental issues and refugees in texts. Fieldwork undertaken in 2004 enabled me to conduct 45 semistructured interviews with United Nations diplomats and representatives from IGOs and NGOs. Critical scrutiny of these interview texts revealed the constructions of ???environmental refugees??? as various subject identities, particularly in relation to climate change. Pacific ambassadors to the United Nations were also interviewed in 2004 to explore how they negotiated discourses on climate change and ???environmental refugees???, and attempted to articulate their concerns at the United Nations. This thesis contends that an absence of policy at the United Nations to protect ???environmental refugees??? has been produced by a combination of discursive and institutional politics. Unequal power structures at the United Nations have limited the capacity of small island states to lobby and articulate concerns, while subject categories of ???environmental refugees??? have been constructed in ways that alter the terms of debate, evade legal response, or deflect blame away from the perpetrators of environmental damage. Reasons for this policy absence have been the shifting attitudes towards environmental issues and the role of multilateral political institutions. The overall contribution of this thesis is to critical geopolitics, through its examination of the role of multilateralism, representations of environmental issues causing population displacement, and how and why policy absences are created within multilateral institutions such as the United Nations.
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The illusion of peace: the fate of the Baltic Displaced Persons, 1945-1952Eastes, Victoria Marite Helga 15 May 2009 (has links)
Following the end of World War II, the Allied forces faced an immediate large- scale refugee crisis in Europe. Efforts focused on returning the millions of refugees to their homes as quickly as possible. Though the majority did return home, nearly a million refugees from Soviet-controlled Eastern Europe refused to do so. Reclassified as Displaced Persons (DPs) and placed in holding camps by the Occupational Authorities, these refugees demanded that Allied leaders give them the chance to immigrate and resettle elsewhere. Immigration historians of this period have focused mainly on the experiences of the Jewish refugees during the Holocaust and the establishment of Israel. Other studies depict the chaos in Germany immediately following the war, describing the DPs as an unstable factor in an already unstable situation. While important, these works tend to overlook the fate of non-Jewish refugees who would not return to their homes. Additionally, these works overlook the many immigration and resettlement schemes put in place to solve the DP situation and stabilize Europe, focusing instead on economic forces and growing Cold War tensions. This thesis looks at the experiences of the Baltic DPs, those from Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. Beginning with a brief history of the three countries and their people’s experiences during the war, this study also looks at their lives in the DP camps and explores their reasons for not returning home. It also recounts the Allies’ decision to promote resettlement rather than repatriation as the solution to the refugee problem by focusing on the immigration programs of the four main recipient countries, Britain, the United States, Canada, and Australia. This thesis argues that the majority of the Baltic DPs came from educated, middle class backgrounds and as such, they were widely sought after by the recipient countries as the most suitable for immigration. A final argument is that disagreements over their fate between the United States, England, and the Soviet Union, fueled the Cold War.
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"The kind of people Canada wants": Canada and the Displaced Persons, 1943-1953Gilmour, Julie Frances 15 September 2011 (has links)
In 1947 the federal government of Canada began a program to move European Displaced Persons (DP) out of the International Refugee Organization (IRO) camps in Germany and Austria. This program, designed to fill chronic labour shortages in Canada’s resource industries and contribute to a solution for Europe’s refugee crisis, occurred in a transitional moment in Canadian society. Canadians emerged from World War Two with a new sense of Canada’s role in the world, but despite a changed international climate, a new discourse of human rights and a potentially robust economy, old perceptions of race, immigration and economic management lingered in the postwar years complicating the work of a new generation of civil servants, politicians and industry operators.
This is a history of the transition. It demonstrates the ways that old and new ideas of the nation, citizenship, race and immigration co-existed. It highlights the significance of the beginnings of a debate on the elimination of discrimination based on race in Canada’s immigration policy; shows the link between economic prosperity and popular support for immigration; and demonstrates the importance of individuals within industry, the civil service and in government in national decision-making.
This is an international history, spanning the Atlantic and bringing a global perspective to local experience in Canadian industries. Chapters on the federal decision making process are supplemented by evidence from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), the IRO, the Ontario Ministry of Education and forestry, mining and hydro industries. It uses a variety of methodologies including policy history, oral history, public opinion polling, gender, ethnicity and labour studies to investigate the implications of these decisions for Canadian society.
It demonstrates that the 1947-1951 movement of DPs was initiated primarily under dual pressure from Canadians who had served abroad and industry leaders who had previously used POW labour to solve on going shortages in the bush. These decisions were strongly informed by both the crisis in Europe and Canadian assumptions about race, labour and citizenship. By examining the expectations Canadians had for the behaviour of its newest arrivals and future citizens this study highlights the foundations of Canadian citizenship in 1947: community participation, contribution to the development of the economy, and political loyalty to the nation.
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"The kind of people Canada wants": Canada and the Displaced Persons, 1943-1953Gilmour, Julie Frances 15 September 2011 (has links)
In 1947 the federal government of Canada began a program to move European Displaced Persons (DP) out of the International Refugee Organization (IRO) camps in Germany and Austria. This program, designed to fill chronic labour shortages in Canada’s resource industries and contribute to a solution for Europe’s refugee crisis, occurred in a transitional moment in Canadian society. Canadians emerged from World War Two with a new sense of Canada’s role in the world, but despite a changed international climate, a new discourse of human rights and a potentially robust economy, old perceptions of race, immigration and economic management lingered in the postwar years complicating the work of a new generation of civil servants, politicians and industry operators.
This is a history of the transition. It demonstrates the ways that old and new ideas of the nation, citizenship, race and immigration co-existed. It highlights the significance of the beginnings of a debate on the elimination of discrimination based on race in Canada’s immigration policy; shows the link between economic prosperity and popular support for immigration; and demonstrates the importance of individuals within industry, the civil service and in government in national decision-making.
This is an international history, spanning the Atlantic and bringing a global perspective to local experience in Canadian industries. Chapters on the federal decision making process are supplemented by evidence from the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), the IRO, the Ontario Ministry of Education and forestry, mining and hydro industries. It uses a variety of methodologies including policy history, oral history, public opinion polling, gender, ethnicity and labour studies to investigate the implications of these decisions for Canadian society.
It demonstrates that the 1947-1951 movement of DPs was initiated primarily under dual pressure from Canadians who had served abroad and industry leaders who had previously used POW labour to solve on going shortages in the bush. These decisions were strongly informed by both the crisis in Europe and Canadian assumptions about race, labour and citizenship. By examining the expectations Canadians had for the behaviour of its newest arrivals and future citizens this study highlights the foundations of Canadian citizenship in 1947: community participation, contribution to the development of the economy, and political loyalty to the nation.
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