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This book presents theoretical discussions and practical examples
of Action Research from Scandinavia, Latin America and Africa,
primarily dealing with how to combine nature conservation and
management with local democratic community development, seeing the
renewal of Commons as a way to transcend the present dichotomy
between these two dimensions.
Contemporary society encounters profound economical,
socio-ecological and political crises challenging the democratic
foundation of our societies. This book addresses the potentials and
challenges for Action Research supporting democratic alternatives.
It offers a broad spectrum of examples from Scandinavian Action
Research showing different openings towards democratic development.
The book's first part contributes with a wide range of examples
such as Action Research in relation to the Triple Helix/Mode II
contexts, to design as a democratic process, to renewal of welfare
work and public institutions, to innovation policies combining
Action Research with gender science. In the second part of the book
epistemological and ontological dimensions of Action Research are
discussed addressing questions of validity criteria related to
Action Research, the transformation of knowledge institutions and
the specific character of creativity in Action Research. The book
offers a basis for theoretical as well as practical oriented
discussions and critical reflections within the field of Action
Research and related research orientations, involving a wide range
of actors.
This is the third of three volumes containing edited versions of papers and commentaries presented in invited symposium sessions of the Eighth World Congress of the Econometric Society. The papers summarize and interpret recent key developments and discuss future directions in a wide range of topics in economics and econometrics. The papers cover both theory and applications. Written by leading specialists in their fields these volumes provide a unique survey of progress in the discipline.
This is the second of three volumes containing edited versions of papers and commentaries presented in invited symposium sessions of the Eighth World Congress of the Econometric Society. The papers summarize and interpret recent key developments and discuss future directions in a wide range of topics in economics and econometrics. The papers cover both theory and applications. Written by leading specialists in their fields these volumes provide a unique survey of progress in the discipline.
These three volumes contain edited versions of papers and commentaries presented in invited symposium sessions of the Eighth World Congress of the Econometric Society. The papers summarize and interpret recent key developments and future directions in a wide range of topics in economics and econometrics. They cover theory and applications and provide a unique survey of progress in the discipline.
Written by Lars Peter Hansen (Nobel Laureate in Economics, 2013)
and Thomas Sargent (Nobel Laureate in Economics, 2011), Uncertainty
within Economic Models includes articles adapting and applying
robust control theory to problems in economics and finance. This
book extends rational expectations models by including agents who
doubt their models and adopt precautionary decisions designed to
protect themselves from adverse consequences of model
misspecification. This behavior has consequences for what are
ordinarily interpreted as market prices of risk, but big parts of
which should actually be interpreted as market prices of model
uncertainty. The chapters discuss ways of calibrating agents' fears
of model misspecification in quantitative contexts.
At the core of the rational expectations revolution is the insight
that economic policy does not operate independently of economic
agents' knowledge of that policy and their expectations of the
effects of that policy. This means that there are very complicated
feedback relationships existing between policy and the behaviour of
economic agents, and these relationships pose very difficult
problems in econometrics when one tries to exploit the rational
expectations insight in formal economic modelling. This volume
consists of work by two rational expectations pioneers dealing with
the "nuts and bolts" problems of modelling the complications
introduced by rational expectations. Each paper deals with aspects
of the problem of making inferences about parameters of a dynamic
economic model on the basis of time series observations. Each
exploits restrictions on an econometric model imposed by the
hypothesis that agents within the model have rational expectations.
This book presents theoretical discussions and practical examples
of Action Research from Scandinavia, Latin America and Africa,
primarily dealing with how to combine nature conservation and
management with local democratic community development, seeing the
renewal of Commons as a way to transcend the present dichotomy
between these two dimensions.
This is the second of three volumes containing edited versions of papers and commentaries presented in invited symposium sessions of the Eighth World Congress of the Econometric Society. The papers summarize and interpret recent key developments and discuss future directions in a wide range of topics in economics and econometrics. The papers cover both theory and applications. Written by leading specialists in their fields these volumes provide a unique survey of progress in the discipline.
This is the third of three volumes containing edited versions of papers and commentaries presented in invited symposium sessions of the Eighth World Congress of the Econometric Society. The papers summarize and interpret recent key developments and discuss future directions in a wide range of topics in economics and econometrics. The papers cover both theory and applications. Written by leading specialists in their fields these volumes provide a unique survey of progress in the discipline.
Contemporary society encounters profound economical,
socio-ecological and political crises challenging the democratic
foundation of our societies. This book addresses the potentials and
challenges for Action Research supporting democratic alternatives.
It offers a broad spectrum of examples from Scandinavian Action
Research showing different openings towards democratic development.
The book's first part contributes with a wide range of examples
such as Action Research in relation to the Triple Helix/Mode II
contexts, to design as a democratic process, to renewal of welfare
work and public institutions, to innovation policies combining
Action Research with gender science. In the second part of the book
epistemological and ontological dimensions of Action Research are
discussed addressing questions of validity criteria related to
Action Research, the transformation of knowledge institutions and
the specific character of creativity in Action Research. The book
offers a basis for theoretical as well as practical oriented
discussions and critical reflections within the field of Action
Research and related research orientations, involving a wide range
of actors.
Reading is a unique human ability that has become very pivotal for
functioning in our world today. As modern societies rely
extensively on literacy skills, and as reading disabilities have
profound personal, economic and social consequences, it is
surprising that we have a very underdeveloped scientific
understanding of the neural basis of reading and visual word
recognition in the normal brain. A better understanding of normal
reading processes could help individuals with developmental
dyslexia and other reading disabilities, and also inform our
strategies for improving early learning and carrying out effective
interventions. Neuroimaging offers a unique window on reading
through which we have achieved profound insights into its neural
correlates in both health and disease, and has also raised
important questions that have generated much scientific debate.
This book addresses some of the fundamental questions in reading
research. Piers Cornelissen, Peter Hansen, Morten Kringelbach, and
Ken Pugh have brought together some of the leading scientists to
provide comprehensive articles that shed light on the neural basis
of reading. Its broad-yet-integrative treatment is divided into
three parts: 1) behavioural data and modelling (with direct
implications for neuroimaging), 2) neuroimaging, and 3) impaired
reading. The book will be a useful resource for everyone interested
in the reading brain, particularly those in neuroimaging, cognition
and attention, sensation and perception, language, development and
aging, education, and computational modelling.
This collection of original articles 8 years in the making
shines a bright light on recent advances in financial econometrics.
From a survey of mathematical and statistical tools for
understanding nonlinear Markov processes to an exploration of the
time-series evolution of the risk-return tradeoff for stock market
investment, noted scholars Yacine Ait-Sahalia and Lars Peter Hansen
benchmark the current state of knowledge while contributors build a
framework for its growth. Whether in the presence of statistical
uncertainty or the proven advantages and limitations of value at
risk models, readers will discover that they can set few
constraints on the value of this long-awaited volume.
Presents a broad survey of current research-from local
characterizations of the Markov process dynamics to financial
market trading activityContributors include Nobel Laureate Robert
Engle and leading econometriciansOffers a clarity of method and
explanation unavailable in other financial econometrics
collections"
A common set of mathematical tools underlies dynamic
optimization, dynamic estimation, and filtering. In "Recursive
Models of Dynamic Linear Economies," Lars Peter Hansen and Thomas
Sargent use these tools to create a class of econometrically
tractable models of prices and quantities. They present examples
from microeconomics, macroeconomics, and asset pricing. The models
are cast in terms of a representative consumer. While Hansen and
Sargent demonstrate the analytical benefits acquired when an
analysis with a representative consumer is possible, they also
characterize the restrictiveness of assumptions under which a
representative household justifies a purely aggregative
analysis.
Based on the 2012 Gorman lectures, the authors unite economic
theory with a workable econometrics while going beyond and beneath
demand and supply curves for dynamic economies. They construct and
apply competitive equilibria for a class of
linear-quadratic-Gaussian dynamic economies with complete markets.
Their book stresses heterogeneity, aggregation, and how a common
structure unites what superficially appear to be diverse
applications. An appendix describes MATLAB(r) programs that apply
to the book's calculations.
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Morgan Hill
U. R Sharma
Paperback
R605
R504
Discovery Miles 5 040
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