Academic literature on the topic 'Gary Stern'

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Journal articles on the topic "Gary Stern"

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Mishkin, Frederic S. "How Big a Problem is Too Big to Fail? A Review of Gary Stern and Ron Feldman's Too Big to Fail: The Hazards of Bank Bailouts." Journal of Economic Literature 44, no. 4 (November 1, 2006): 988–1004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jel.44.4.988.

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This review essay examines whether too-big-to-fail is as serious a problem as Gary Stern and Ron Feldman contend. This essay argues that Stern and Feldman overstate the importance of the too-big-to-fail problem and do not give enough credit to the FDICIA legislation of 1991 for improving bank regulation and supervision. However, this criticism of the Stern and Feldman book does not detract from many of its messages. The policy recommendations in their book have merit even if the too-big-to-fail problem is currently not that serious because these policies make it less likely that a banking crisis will occur even if driven by other factors.
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von Heyking, John. "Ancient and Medieval Concepts of Friendship, written by Suzanne Stern-Gillet and Gary M. Gurtler." Polis, The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought 32, no. 2 (October 1, 2015): 460–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/20512996-12340068.

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Milfont, Taciano L., Keivan Amirbagheri, Elena Hermanns, and José M. Merigó. "Celebrating Half a Century of Environment and Behavior: A Bibliometric Review." Environment and Behavior 51, no. 5 (May 14, 2019): 469–501. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0013916519843126.

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Environment and Behavior is a leading international journal that publishes research examining the relationships between human behavior and the built and natural environments since 1969. Motivated by its half-century anniversary, the present article uses the Web of Science Core Collection database to provide a bibliometric overview of the leading trends that have occurred in the journal during the 1969-2018 period. The impact of the journal has increased over the years, Gary W. Evans is the author with most published papers, articles by Paul C. Stern and Thomas Dietz have made a notable scientific impact, the University of Michigan is the institution with the highest number of publications, and there is a growing trend in the number of women and international contributors to the journal. This bibliographic review provides strong evidence of the scientific impact of the journal, and the wider Environment-and-Behavior community should be proud of its story of success.
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Glennon, Michael J. "The Constitution and the Power to Go to War: Historical and Current Perspectives. Edited by Gary M. Stern and Morton H. Halperin. (Westport CT, London: Greenwood Press, 1994. Pp. vi, 189. Index. $55.)." American Journal of International Law 89, no. 2 (April 1995): 487. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2204228.

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Neville-Shepard, Ryan. "Constrained by Duality: Third-Party Master Narratives in the 2016 Presidential Election." American Behavioral Scientist 61, no. 4 (April 2017): 414–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002764217709042.

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The 2016 presidential election saw the rise and fall of third-party candidates Jill Stein and Gary Johnson. This essay proposes that such third-party candidates are challenged in navigating the dichotomous nature of the myth of the American Dream that serves as the basis of party master narratives. Suggesting that third-party candidates attempt to create alternative narratives through what Rushing and Frentz called dialectical transformation and dialectical synthesis, the essay examines how such strategies were put to use by Stein and Johnson, and how they demonstrate a significant disadvantage for third parties.
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Poccia, Dominic. "Histone Genes: Structure, Organization, and Regulation. Gary S. Stein , Janet L. Stein , William F. Marzluff." Quarterly Review of Biology 60, no. 4 (December 1985): 500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/414602.

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Devine, Christopher J., and Kyle C. Kopko. "Did Gary Johnson and Jill Stein Cost Hillary Clinton the Presidency? A Counterfactual Analysis of Minor Party Voting in the 2016 US Presidential Election." Forum 19, no. 2 (September 1, 2021): 173–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/for-2021-0011.

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Abstract Hillary Clinton won the national popular vote for president in 2016, but lost to Donald Trump in the Electoral College. Trump’s margin of victory in several decisive battleground states was smaller than the combined vote for the two leading minor party candidates: Gary Johnson, of the Libertarian Party, and Jill Stein, of the Green Party. The perception that Johnson and Stein “stole” the 2016 presidential election from Clinton is widespread, and potentially consequential for future minor party candidacies, but it has not yet been rigorously tested. In this article, we extend the analysis of minor party voting in the 1992 election from Lacy, D., and B. C. Burden. 1999. “The Vote-Stealing and Turnout Effects of Ross Perot in the 1992 U.S. Presidential Election.” American Journal of Political Science 43 (1): 233–55, by using data from the 2016 Cooperative Congressional Election Study to estimate a multinomial probit model of voting behavior—including outcomes for vote choice and abstention—and calculate the predicted probabilities that Johnson and Stein voters would have voted for another candidate or abstained from voting, had one or both of these candidates been excluded from the ballot. We then reallocate Johnson’s and Stein’s votes accordingly, to estimate Clinton’s and Trump’s counterfactual vote shares nationally and within key battleground states. Our analysis indicates that Johnson and Stein did not deprive Clinton of an Electoral College majority, nor Trump the legitimacy of winning the national popular vote. We estimate that most Johnson and Stein voters would have abstained from voting if denied the choice to vote for their preferred candidate, and that most of Johnson’s remaining voters would have supported Trump.
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Bohleke, Karin J. "The Sterb-Spiegel: A Fashionable Eighteenth-Century Dance of Death." Costume 52, no. 2 (September 2018): 188–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cost.2018.0068.

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In 1704, Abraham Gugger of Augsburg published a ‘Dance of Death’, whose lengthy German title is best abbreviated as Sterb-Spiegel. Only five acknowledged copies exist. Originally the work of brothers Rudolph Theodor and Conrad Meyer of Zürich, the first iteration of the Sterb-Spiegel had appeared in 1650. The posthumous 1704 version, re-engraved by an unknown artist, differs in one essential regard: the clothing of Death's victims has been modernized to represent the fashions of the beginning of the eighteenth century. The illustrations show that death comes to everyone, represented by the different victims at work, home and play in appropriate settings. The Sterb-Spiegel thus depicts the clothing in context and in ‘action’, and further represents all levels of early eighteenth-century society, divided into the ‘Ruling Class’, and the ‘General Home and Worldly Positions’. All are appropriately attired, and the Sterb-Spiegel accurately portrays non-elite garb and accessories. The Mercure Galant had ceased issuing regular fashion plates in the 1680s, and the Mercure de France resumed consistent publication of current styles only in the 1720s; the Sterb-Spiegel, even though it was not the original intention, provides contemporary insights into early eighteenth-century fashions when documentation is relatively sparse.
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Chiles, Thomas C. "The Molecular Basis of Cell Cycle and Growth Control. Gary S. Stein , Renato Baserga , Antonio Giordano , David T. Denhardt." Quarterly Review of Biology 74, no. 3 (September 1999): 344–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/393196.

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Edwards, Ldeborah. "Trichotillomania. Dan J Stein, Gary A Christenson and Eric Hollander (eds)American Psychiatric Press, Inc, Washington 1999, 344 pages ISBN: 0-80048-759-3." Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 6, no. 6 (December 1999): 493–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2850.1999.0250b.x.

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Books on the topic "Gary Stern"

1

Allan Stein: A novel. New York: Grove Press, 1999.

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Day, Walter. Twin Galaxies' Official Video Game & Pinball Book Of World Records; Second Edition, Arcade Volume. Edited by Walter Day and Mr Kelly R. Flewin. Fairfield, IA: 1st World Publishing, 2007.

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Stadler, Matthew. Allan Stein. Grove Press, 1999.

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Stadler, Matthew. Allan Stein. Fourth Estate, 1999.

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Allan Stein. Grove Press, 1999.

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Stadler, Matthew. Allan Stein. Debate, 2001.

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Bozza, Julie. Definitive Albert J. Sterne. LIBRAtiger, 2019.

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Bozza, Julie. Definitive Albert J. Sterne. LIBRAtiger, 2019.

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So famous and so gay: The fabulous potency of Truman Capote and Gertrude Stein. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.

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Day, Walter. TWIN GALAXIES' OFFICIAL VIDEO GAME & PINBALLBOOK OF WORLD RECORDS; Arcade Volume, Second Edition. 2nd ed. 1st World Publishing, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Gary Stern"

1

Solomon, Jeff. "Broadly Queer and Specifically Gay: The Celebrity and Career of Gertrude Stein." In Literary Careers in the Modern Era, 77–95. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137478504_5.

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Gurr, Jens Martin. "Worshipping Cloacina in the Eighteenth Century: Functions of Scatology in Swift, Pope, Gay, and Sterne." In Taboo and Transgression in British Literature from the Renaissance to the Present, 117–34. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230105997_6.

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Rudolph, Pia. "Johann Wonnecke von Kaub. Gart der Gesundheit." In Stein, 247–52. De Gruyter, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110688702-027.

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Thomson, Peter. "The Great Circle." In Sacred Sea. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195170511.003.0019.

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The Port of San Francisco, once one of the world’s most celebrated ports of call, has been reduced to this: a quarter-mile of bare, worn asphalt between a chain link fence and the bay, a couple dozen oblong cargo containers stacked like a set of playroom blocks, and one huge gray cargo crane that looms over the water like the skeleton of some Stanford student’s monstrous robotic dog. A few miles to the north, the Embarcadero and its ripsaw ridge of angled piers, once the pulsing heart of the city’s commercial port, is today a palm-tree-lined recreational waterfront of restaurants, bars, condos, and t-shirt vendors, while here to the south of downtown, huge swaths of abandoned waterfront lie fallow, awaiting the next wave of redevelopment. The San Francisco Bay itself remains a major Pacific port, but virtually all of its cargo traffic now moves through the modern container terminals of Oakland, across the bay. In the city of San Francisco itself, there remains only a single active cargo pier, and this is it. Pier 80. Lashed to the far side of the sea of asphalt is a ship, of modest size by contemporary standards but its sheer bulk impressive nonetheless—a hulking mass of emerald green steel looming three stories above the tarmac, a pale yellow superstructure rising eight stories above that in the stern, and a wall of red and blue containers stacked six high above the forward decks. The ship looks awkward and ungainly. It looks like it may well challenge the principles of buoyancy and displacement. It looks like nothing that neither James nor I have ever trusted his life to before. Our hallucinatory float down the Copper River is ten days behind us. We’ve reentered civilization in Anchorage, visited friends in Seattle, finally met Gary Cook of Baikal Watch and our Russia-specialist travel agent Debbie, and made other last-minute arrangements here in San Francisco, and now we’re riding across the acres of asphalt in the back of a battered yellow van and our friend Eleanor, who drove us down here, is repeating, as if a mantra, Oh my god, I can’t believe you’re getting on this thing. . . . Oh my god, I can’t believe . . .
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Dickens, Charles. "Chapter IX In Which the Wooden Midshipman Gets into Trouble." In Dombey and Son. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199536283.003.0010.

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That spice of romance and love of the marvellous, of which there was a pretty strong infusion in the nature of young Walter Gay, and which the guardianship of his uncle, old Solomon Gills, had not very much weakened by the waters of stern...
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Foley, Edward B. "The Jeffersonian Electoral College in the Twenty-First Century." In Presidential Elections and Majority Rule, 110–18. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190060152.003.0006.

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The 2016 election is, at a minimum, problematic from a Jeffersonian perspective, like 1992, and may have been another systemic malfunction, like 2000. Donald Trump received 107 of his 304 electoral votes in states where he won less than 50 percent of the popular vote—failing to achieve the kind of compound majority-of-majorities consistent with the Jeffersonian vision of how the system should work. 2016 illustrates the system’s inability to handle third-party and independent candidates, like Gary Johnson and Jill Stein, an inability caused by the addition of plurality winner-take-all in the Jacksonian era. It is unknowable whether Trump or Hillary Clinton would have won runoffs in the three pivotal Rust Belt states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. But if Clinton had won runoffs there (and in the states where she was only a plurality winner), then she would have won the Electoral College with an appropriately Jeffersonian majority-of-majorities.
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