culture, and sports (seeArt and Culture, Economics ofandSports, Economics of) to housing and agriculture (seeHousing EconomicsandAgriculture, Economics of). As such, these analyses often abstract from other analyses that may be relevant in principle, but are thought to be irrelevant in practice....
sports activities, etc. For group activities, there are common decisions to be taken by the group: how often to eat out and how expensive a restaurant to go to, whether to drive to a nearby ski slope or fly to more exotic distant resort, etc. There is often a price-quality “menu”...
Contained consumption correlates to direct consumption. Every site has a hierarchy. If you are a newspaper, for example, you are going to have your different sites/sections such as news, politics, sports, local, etc. Within each of those sections is going to be further subsections that “tri...
Nudge theory is a flexible and modern change-management concept for the understanding how people think, make decisions, and behave; helping people improve their thinking and decisions; managing change of all sorts and; identifying and modifying existing unhelpful influences on people. Nudge theory was...
This paper aims to provide an overview of surveillance theories and concepts that can help to understand and debate surveillance in its many forms. As scho
If he wants explanation, he’ll ask for it. 5. The theory of completed staff work doesn’t preclude a rough draft, but it must not be half-baked. Except for final touches, it must be complete. It need not be neat. But don’t use a rough draft to shift the b...
Such a stance results in a conceptionof epochs that, due to its own presuppositions, is subject to systemic coercion,thereby falling short of the essential factor: the adequacy of the explanationgiven.The tacit, and thus far uncontested, adoption of the above premise in thisdebate in particular...
That being said, Sargent included himself in the “Berkeley” view, together with the Romers and De Long, for emphasizing the importance of the changes in beliefs as an explanation of the Great Inflation. Cogley and Sargent (2005) responded to Romer and Romer (2002) by incorporating model ...
However, given that the effect of exercise on cognitive function is not necessarily an indication of embodied choices but might be the result of greater attention capacity or some other explanation, I focus next on movements thatdochange how people solve problem-solving tasks. Karsten Werner, a ...
If you are a newspaper, for example, you are going to have your different sites/sections such as news, politics, sports, local, etc. Within each of those sections is going to be further subsections that “trickle down” for that particular site/section....