scholarly journals The Myth of Immigrant Women as Secondary Workers: Evidence from Canada

2014 ◽  
Vol 104 (5) ◽  
pp. 360-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alícia Adserà ◽  
Ana M. Ferrer

We use the confidential files of the Canadian Census 1991-2006, combined with information from O*NET on the skill requirements of jobs, to show that the labor market patterns of female immigrants do not fit the profile of secondary workers, but rather conform to the recent experience of married native women with rising participation (and wage assimilation). At best, only relatively uneducated immigrant women in unskilled occupations may fit the profile of secondary workers. Educated immigrant women experience skill assimilation over time: a reduction in physical strength and a gradual increase in analytical skills required in their jobs relative to natives.

Author(s):  
Daniel Carneiro ◽  
Andrew Rathbone

Walking of long pipelines with multiple buckles is usually self-limiting. The buckles break the ‘long’ pipeline into multiple ‘short’ ones that are prone to walk. However, as temperature decays over the length of the pipeline, the ‘short’ sections further downstream might become cyclically constrained and eventually anchor the full pipeline length. Walking of the hot end would then slow down and cease. This tapering down can take a large number of cycles, and not seem obvious when after a fair number of cycles, a small value of accumulated axial displacement per cycle is still observed in FEA. Often, designers would stop the analyses at some stage and assume the small rate will continue indefinitely. This can be overconservative, as a limit will often exist — which is demonstrated using first principles in the paper. On the other hand, extrapolating without full understanding of the underlying processes can be dangerous. For some particular conditions, the trend can suddenly change after continuing unaltered for many cycles. This paper illustrates such change in behavior with the example of a fictitious pipeline seeing a gentle, gradual increase in operational temperature over time. The exercise shows that, after the trend has apparently settled, at a given point the rate of walking can increase again. The conditions that trigger it are shown to be predictable.


2020 ◽  
pp. 239-254
Author(s):  
David W. Dorsey

With the rise of the internet and the related explosion in the amount of data that are available, the field of data science has expanded rapidly, and analytic techniques designed for use in “big data” contexts have become popular. These include techniques for analyzing both structured and unstructured data. This chapter explores the application of these techniques to the development and evaluation of career pathways. For example, data scientists can analyze online job listings and resumes to examine changes in skill requirements and careers over time and to examine job progressions across an enormous number of people. Similarly, analysts can evaluate whether information on career pathways accurately captures realistic job progressions. Within organizations, the increasing amount of data make it possible to pinpoint the specific skills, behaviors, and attributes that maximize performance in specific roles. The chapter concludes with ideas for the future application of big data to career pathways.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-68
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. Hartman

The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), originally passed in 1994, was successfully reauthorized in 2000, 2005, and 2013. Over time, VAWA altered the environment for many victims who had previously suffered in silence. This article focuses on how VAWA impacted American Indian (AI) and Alaska Native (AN) victims of dating and domestic violence. AI and AN women experience these crimes at a rate higher than the national average, yet they are often denied justice due to the interplay of federal and state laws and tribal sovereignty. VAWA affirmed tribes’ sovereign authority to exercise criminal jurisdiction over non-Indians who commit crimes against AI and AN victims on tribal lands. This article also discusses future steps to enhance justice reforms.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (7) ◽  
pp. 1154-1171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Beine

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to cover the literature on the role migrants networks in explaining aggregate migration flows between countries. The author emphasizes the specific role of family immigration policies. To that purpose, the author covers briefly the recent experience of seven receiving countries to highlight the importance of these policies in explaining part of the observed network elasticities. Design/methodology/approach The author first provides a small review of the literature and the issues at stake. The author then provides an update of the estimates of the network elasticities using the data set on migration stocks and flows from Ozden et al. (2011). Using micro-founded gravity models, the author estimates the network elasticities and discusses the key driving mechanisms explaining their size as well the variation in the amplitude across categories of destination and over time. The author accounts for the issue of multilateral resistance to migration. Findings The author obtains estimates that are in line with the ones documented previously in the literature. The author finds that the role of networks in attracting migrants has increased after the 1970s. The author emphasizes the specific role of family immigration policies. To that purpose, the author covers briefly the recent experience of a set of receiving countries to highlight the importance of these policies in explaining part of the observed network elasticities. Originality/value This paper covers the literature on the role migrants networks in explaining aggregate migration flows between countries and obtain new estimates of network elasticities that vary over time and across types of destination countries.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (10) ◽  
pp. 150221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eiluned Pearce ◽  
Jacques Launay ◽  
Robin I. M. Dunbar

It has been proposed that singing evolved to facilitate social cohesion. However, it remains unclear whether bonding arises out of properties intrinsic to singing or whether any social engagement can have a similar effect. Furthermore, previous research has used one-off singing sessions without exploring the emergence of social bonding over time. In this semi-naturalistic study, we followed newly formed singing and non-singing (crafts or creative writing) adult education classes over seven months. Participants rated their closeness to their group and their affect, and were given a proxy measure of endorphin release, before and after their class, at three timepoints (months 1, 3 and 7). We show that although singers and non-singers felt equally connected by timepoint 3, singers experienced much faster bonding: singers demonstrated a significantly greater increase in closeness at timepoint 1, but the more gradual increase shown by non-singers caught up over time. This represents the first evidence for an ‘ice-breaker effect’ of singing in promoting fast cohesion between unfamiliar individuals, which bypasses the need for personal knowledge of group members gained through prolonged interaction. We argue that singing may have evolved to quickly bond large human groups of relative strangers, potentially through encouraging willingness to coordinate by enhancing positive affect.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Ken-ichi Watanabe ◽  
Katsunori Fujii ◽  
Keiko Abe ◽  
Yuki Kani ◽  
Kan-ichi Mimura

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-54
Author(s):  
V.I. Trykhlib ◽  
T.I. Lysenko ◽  
A.O. Yeroshenko ◽  
О.S. Martynchuk ◽  
K.P. Bieliaieva ◽  
...  

The article provides a review of the literature on the effectiveness of glucocorticoids in viral infections, including the new coronavirus infection COVID-19. The results of our research of the dynamics of laboratory parameters in patients who recovered and those who died are presented. The average age of patients who received 8 mg of dexamethasone and recovered was less than that of the deceased. The average day on which the patients were hospitalized in the ICU and who received 8 mg of dexamethasone in both groups was the same (on average on day 7). It is noteworthy that in patients who recovered, the febrile temperature was more often recorded before hospitalization, while in those who died it was more often subfebrile. The temperature during hospitalization in all categories of patients was on average at subfebrile numbers. The respiratory rate on admission in all categories of patients did not differ significantly and on average was about 19/min (up to 20/min was in 50 % of patients who recovered and 58.3 % of those who died). Those who recovered were more likely to have a normal heart rate on admission, but tachycardia was less common than within those who died. In patients who subsequently died, lower saturation levels were more often recorded upon admission. In the first 3 days after hospitalization, in patients who recovered and received 8 mg of dexamethasone, leukocytosis and granulocytosis were recorded more often; there was an increased number of stab neutrophils and the number of patients with it. The patients who subsequently died more often developed leukopenia, more pronounced lymphopenia with an increased quantity of patients with it; they presented more pronounced thrombocytopenia (the number of patients with it did not differ from those who recovered), higher erythrocyte sedation rate. In patients who subsequently died, during the observation period, there was a gradual increase in the number of leukocytes, but a gradual decrease in the number of lymphocytes, the creatine phosphokinase level increased from the 7th–9th days of hospitalization; on days 4–6 of hospitalization, the lactate dehydrogenase level significantly increased with its subsequent decline to a level that was greater than this in patients who recovered. Initially. The patients who recovered had an increase in leukocytes with their subsequent gradual decrease, a gradual increase in the level of lymphocytes, a decrease in the level of creatine phosphokinase, lactate dehydrogenase. In all categories of patients, a gradual decrease in the number of stab neutrophils was observed over time, a gradual increase in the number of platelets was also observed over time, but in those who recovered their level was slightly higher; in both groups, an increase in the urea level was observed over time, but in those who died its level from day 7 and later was significantly higher than in those who recovered; in patients in both groups, an increase in the level of creatinine was observed over time, but in those who died, its level from day 7 and later was significantly higher than in those who recovered; both groups showed a decrease in C-reactive protein over time, but those who died from the very beginning of their hospital stay and during all follow-up periods had higher levels than those who recovered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sehar Ezdi ◽  
Sabrina Pastorelli

This paper investigates gender preferences for offspring within the native French population and among immigrants from North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Turkey and Vietnam-Cambodia-Laos in France by combining the Family and Housing Survey (2011) and the Trajectories and Origins Survey (2008). In so doing, it is the first paper to examine the persistence (or lack thereof) of gender preferences among immigrants in France. This allows the findings of the paper to serve as a tool for monitoring the immigrant integration process in the country. Using (multilevel) logistic regressions to examine transitions to second and third child births contingent upon gender of existing children and by migration status provides two main results. First, regarding evidence of gender preferences, the results show: mixed gender preferences and weak daughter preference among native French women when transitioning to the third parity; mixed gender preferences among second-generation Turkish immigrant women when transitioning to the third parity; and a daughter preference for second-generation North African, Sub-Saharan African and Vietnamese-Laos-Cambodian immigrant women when transitioning to the third parity. Second, for the immigrant sample, these preferences emerge in the face of declining fertility, across subsequent generations of immigrants, and on average as a deviation from their country of origin gender preferences. This not only points to the malleability of gender preferences for offspring but also lends credence to both the selection and adaptation hypotheses in explaining immigrant integration in France.  


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-96
Author(s):  
Saideh Saidi

This article explores how Afghan (Hazara) women negotiate and sift their religious understandings and identities over time after migrating to Germany. Migration experiences and exposure to German society has impacted their self-narration and conceptualisation of cultural change in their own identity. This ethnographic research illustrates the notion of acceptance or rejection to change among Hazara immigrant women in their lived religion in diaspora. Based on my fieldwork, three different trajectories along religious lines occur in the Afghan diaspora: a group of immigrants, enhancing Islamic values, whose relationship to and involvement in religion intensified and increased; the second group largely consider themselves secular Muslims trying to fully indulge into the new society; the third group has an elastic religious identity, blending Islamic values with Western-inspired lifestyles.


1996 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 179-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald D. Neufeld ◽  
James T. Cobb ◽  
J. Pritts ◽  
V. Clifford ◽  
C. Bender ◽  
...  

Clean coal technology by-products, collected from commercial operations under steady state conditions, are reacted at bench-scale with metal-laden hazardous wastes. Reaction conditions involve mixing calibrated weight ratios of by-product to hazardous waste with attention to minimizing added moisture. Of the 15 heavy metals monitored, lead appeared to be the element of greatest concern both from a leaching and a regulatory point of view. While leaching information is focused on lead stabilization, similar information exists for other metals as well. Stabilized solid products of reactions are sampled for TCLP evaluations. For samples showing evidence of metal stabilization, further experimentation was conducted evaluating optimum moisture content and development of physical strength (measured as compressive strength) over time of curing. Results show that certain hazardous wastes are highly amenable to chemical stabilization, while others are not; certain by-products provided superior stabilization, but did not allow for strength generation over time.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document