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Essays on Labor and Development EconomicsArora, Ashna January 2018 (has links)
This dissertation studies the impact of institutional interventions on labor markets in the United States, Norway and India. The labor markets studied are diverse, and include the criminal sector in the United States, the healthcare sector in Norway and the market for workfare employment in rural India.
Chapter 1 studies whether juvenile offenders are deterred by the threat of criminal sanctions. Existing research, which studies adolescent crime as a series of on-the-spot decisions, finds that deterrence estimates are negligible at best. This paper first presents a model that allows the return from crime to increase with previous criminal involvement. The predictions of the model are tested using policy variation in the United States over the period 2006-15. The results show that when criminal capital accumulates, juveniles may respond in anticipation of increases in criminal sanctions. Accounting for these anticipatory responses can overturn the conclusion that harsh sanctions do not deter juvenile crime.
Chapter 2 studies the impact of a graduate's first job on her career trajectory, and how job-seeking graduates’ respond to the persistence of these "first job effects". For identification, we exploit a natural experiment in Norway, where doctors' first jobs were allocated through a random serial dictatorship mechanism until 2013. We use administrative data on individual outcomes to confirm empirically that the residency allocation mechanism effectively randomized choice sets of hospitals across medical graduates. We then use the resulting variation in individual doctors’ choice sets to show that first jobs affect doctors' earnings, place of residence, and specialization in the long run.
Chapter 3 evaluates the effects of encouraging the selection of local politicians in India via community-based consensus, as opposed to a secret ballot election. I find that financial incentives aimed at encouraging consensus-based elections and discouraging political competition crowd in younger, more educated political representatives. However, these incentives also lead to worse governance as measured by a fall in local expenditure and regressive targeting of workfare employment. These results can be explained by the fact that community-based processes are prone to capture by the local elite, and need not improve the quality of elected politicians or governance.
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Barriers to Higher Education Among CalWORKs RecipientsRamirez, Esther, Rodriguez, Melissa M 01 June 2019 (has links)
Individuals and families in poverty face an abundance of barriers to self-sufficiency with the lack of higher education being the most prominent of them. The California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs) program has been the primary intervention to aid poverty following the welfare reform of 1996. Through their work first approach the CalWORKs program intends to set recipients on the path to self-sufficiency. Although education is the biggest weapon against poverty, CalWORKs recipients face a plethora of barriers while pursuing a college degree, as CalWORKs regulations are rigid and unsupportive toward higher education. Due to the minimal research focusing particularly on CALWORKs recipients, there was a need to further examine the barriers these recipients face while pursuing higher education. This qualitative study explored the barriers hindering CalWORKs recipient’s progression toward college completion. This study administered 11 face to face interviews with active and former CalWORKs recipients in Riverside County, California. The data gathered were transcribed and analyzed to identify recurrent themes regarding barriers toward college completion among CalWORKs recipients. The major themes identified by the study were: lack of knowledge, conflicting roles, lack of self-confidence, and unrealistic requirements by the CalWORKs program. The implications of these findings for CalWORKs stakeholders were discussed.
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Coming to community college via welfare reform : an exploration of expectations and experience of women in Washington's WorkFirst programKostick, Susan 16 February 2001 (has links)
This qualitative study explores the experiences of women who are welfare
recipients attending a community college under the auspices of a new program,
Washington State's WorkFirst/Work Study program. The study, conducted over
two academic quarters, includes in-depth interviews with WorkFirst/Work Study
students, observations in a weekly seminar, and interviews with community
college staff who work in the program.
The overarching research question is: "What are the challenges and the
transition issues confronted by women who are living in poverty and participating
in a community college program?" The research elicits responses about the
women's expectations and fears about education, their aspirations for themselves
and their children, what they hope to gain from the college experience and what
barriers may interfere. The study identifies five contextual issues in the women's
lives: family background and history, relationships, physical and psychological
health, housing, and finances. And the study explores the participants' experience
with and attitudes toward four thematic areas: parenting, welfare, work and
school. A major goal was to give voice to these women.
Underlying assumptions are that community college administrators and
faculty want to improve access, success and satisfaction with the college for poor
women; that learning about how poor women experience the community college
gives college personnel valuable information; that Washington community colleges
have an interest in working with WorkFirst; and that better understanding of
WorkFirst/Work Study participants' experiences is valuable to the colleges and
benefits low-income students.
The women interviewed are highly motivated and believe that an education
is key to a better life for them and their children. Some of the barriers they face are
embedded in the restrictions and requirements of the WorkFirst program.
Nevertheless, these women say they are better off on welfare, working and going to
school than they were when they were among the working poor. The study
questions the value of some vocational education and suggests that more low-income
women could be recruited to community college earlier in their lives. / Graduation date: 2001
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A study of welfare-to-work policy in Hong KongLiu, Yuch-lam. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M. P. A.)--University of Hong Kong, 2006. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
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Livet med ett nytt hjärta : Patienters upplevelser och copingstrategierJohansson, Emmelie, Larsson, Jennifer, Thuresson, Emelie January 2010 (has links)
Background: For patients with severe heart disease, may heart transplantation be the only opportunity for survival. Previous research highlights the importance of the nurse's role as supporters and knowledge brokers. People who has undergone heart transplant may be changed forever. Having to undergo a heart transplant can lead to that patients end up in a traumatic crisis. People's perception of herself and her perception of the world is also changing when the body is injured or suffers a disease. Aim: The aim of this study is to elucidate patients' experiences of living with a new heart, and to focus on the coping strategies used by patients to manage their new situation. Method: A literature review was chosen as the method. The 12 items used in the study have been based on studies of seven qualitative and five quantitative approaches. Articles were published after year 1995. Results: Two main categories emerged from the analysis: Patients' experiences of living with someone else's heart, and patients' coping strategies to deal with the new heart. The most important results were about emotional turmoil, changes in health, psychological adjustment and defense mechanisms. Conclusion: To have received a new heart gives different experiences. It is important that the nurse has knowledge and understanding of these individual experiences that patients can feel.
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The transient relief problem in Pima County; with special reference to non-resident health-seekersBarclay, Josephine, 1905- January 1937 (has links)
No description available.
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The growth of social assistance receipt in CanadaStark, Alan A. 11 1900 (has links)
The research undertaken in this thesis examines social assistance (welfare) receipt
in Canada during the 1981-95 period to determine the forces responsible for the dramatic
growth in welfare use observed during the 1990s. The influence of changes in welfare
benefits, labour market conditions, and the availability of unemployment insurance on
welfare use during this period is examined using two distinct, but complementary
approaches.
The first approach investigates this issue from an aggregate standpoint, using
Survey of Consumer Finances micro data to construct welfare usage rates for employable
singles without children (male and female) and lone mothers. Separate analyses are
performed for each of these sub-groups using aggregate province level data.
The second approach attacks the issue from a microeconomic standpoint,
employing duration analysis to examine the path leading individuals from employment to
welfare receipt. Using the 1988-90 longitudinal file of the Labour Market Activity
Survey, semi-parametric duration models are estimated to determine how the job loss, reemployment
and welfare take-up processes are affected by incentives in welfare benefits,
labour market conditions, availability of unemployment insurance as well as demographic
variables. The estimates from the duration analysis are applied to administrative data on
inflows of persons into the pool of non-employed to simulate and decompose rates of
welfare incidence over the 1984-95 period.
Results from these two approaches present a relatively consistent picture of
welfare use in Canada during the 1990s. Both approaches find strong evidence of
important labour market effects. Thus, the economic downturn of the early 1990s played
a significant role in the growth of welfare use during this period, particularly in Ontario
and Quebec.
The evidence concerning the importance of interactions with the unemployment
insurance system and changes in benefit generosity is mixed. Both UI effects and benefit
effects are found to be important determinants of welfare use but only among specific
types of families. The simulation results indicate these factors can account for only a
minor amount of the variation in predicted welfare incidence in the 1990s.
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Predictors of Receiving and Responding To a Non-Suicidal Self-Injury Disclosure From a FriendMahdy, Jasmine C. 28 August 2013 (has links)
Young adults who self-injure may prefer to disclose these experiences to peers versus professionals, however, past research has demonstrated that their responses are rated as less helpful compared to other recipients. To better understand this phenomenon, the current study sought to investigate NSSI disclosures from the point of view of the disclosure recipient. Given the relation between various interpersonal trait variables (e.g., receptiveness, responsiveness, agreeableness), relationship factors (friendship quality, duration), and intimate self-disclosures, aspects of particular individuals and relationships may also play a role in the context of peer-to-peer NSSI disclosures and how effective these disclosure responses may be. An online battery of questionnaires was administered to examine these research questions in a population of 230 university students (178 females, M age = 18.38). 107 participants reported receiving a NSSI disclosure from a friend. Having a history of NSSI, lower social support, and greater perceived relative power were found to significantly predict receiving a NSSI disclosure from a friend and receptiveness and social support were found to significantly predict the recipients’ degree of helpful responding to the NSSI disclosure. Findings illuminate the important role of friends and of the friendship itself in facilitating the help-seeking process and promoting NSSI cessation. Research directions and implications are discussed.
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Transient solutions to enduring problems Lansing's single mother parents' struggles to survive amid conflicting beliefs and perspectives on poverty, welfare and workfare, and inadequate resource supplies /Teshome Tadesse, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Michigan State University. Dept. of Anthropology, 2006 / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Nov. 20, 2008) Includes bibliographical references (p. 426-444). Also issued in print.
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Consequences of maternal welfare receipt for children : the case of educational attainment in young adulthood /Ku, In-hoe, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 157-175).
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