Articles 2026
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Criminalizing Science
Forbes, October 16, 2005
At a business conference this summer in Toronto Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class, told the Canadians again and again how wonderful they are--how open to new ideas, how tolerant, how diverse and therefore how potentially creative. Unlike the U.S., which is afflicted by divisiveness and the religious right, Canada is a model country. That was his story, at any rate.
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When Disasters Act as Accelerators of Change
The New York Times, "Economic Scene", October 06, 2005
Speaking after Hurricane Katrina, President Bush promised that "we will do what it takes, we will stay as long as it takes, to help citizens rebuild their communities and their lives" on the Gulf Coast.
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Controlling Quality: The Hard Road to Building a Brand
The New York Times, September 17, 2005
When Craig and Randy Rubin started Hi-Tex Inc. in November 1993, they never intended to open a factory. ''Our charter was no bricks and mortar,'' said Ms. Rubin. The business, in West Bloomfield, Mich., was set up, she added, to be a branding and a technology company.
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In Times of Stress, Can Religion Serve as Insurance?
The New York Times, "Economic Scene", September 08, 2005
From layoffs to bad health to killer hurricanes, economic well-being is subject to all sorts of nasty shocks. To protect themselves, people accumulate savings and buy insurance.
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How Modernism Got Its Curves
A look at the extraordinary career of designer Eva Zeisel. A slideshow essay
Slate, August 31, 2005
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Adding Social Norms to the Usual Methodology Mix
The New York Times, "Economic Scene", August 11, 2005
A restaurant on Honolulu's main drag is soliciting new workers. "Looking for Aloha Spirited People," says the help-wanted sign in the window.
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That Long Drive Out to the Airport
The Wright Amendment, whose existence rarely fails to shock out-of-towners, highlights the least attractive aspect of Dallas-area politics and economics: the prevalence of crony capitalism.
D Magazine, August 2005
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Market Share
Economists have long used their tools to analyze social phenomena. Now sociologists are learning to stop worrying and love -- or at least study -- the market.
The Boston Globe, July 22, 2005
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Research Changes Ideas About Children and Work
The New York Times, "Economic Scene", July 14, 2005
When Americans think about child labor in poor countries, they rarely picture girls fetching water or boys tending livestock. Yet most of the 211 million children, ages 5 to 14, who work worldwide are not in factories. They are working in agriculture -- from 92 percent in Vietnam to 63 percent in Guatemala -- and most are not paid directly.
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One Possible Cure for the Common Criminal
The New York Times, "Economic Scene", June 16, 2005
When Jonathan M. Klick worked in Washington, he noticed a striking effect every time the terrorism alert level went from its usual yellow ("elevated") to the more urgent orange ("high").