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"The creation of economic institutions that can function well under substantial uncertainties -- Black Swans -- is analogous to the dilemmas confronting our hunter-gatherer forefathers in the face of large-scale ecological unpredictability. The ultimate solution was not the development of a...
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Steep socioeconomic hierarchy in post-industrial Western society threatens public health because of the physiological consequences of material and psychosocial insecurities and deprivations. Following on from their previous books, the authors continue their exploration of the geography of early...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013180307
Generalized Darwinian evolutionary theory has emerged as central to the description of economic process (e.g., Aldrich et al., J Evol Econ 18:577–596, <CitationRef CitationID="CR3">2008</CitationRef>). Just as Darwinian principles provide necessary, but not sufficient, conditions for understanding the dynamics of social entities, so too...</citationref>
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011001840
Previous work on the asymptotic spread of HIV infection along a low dimensional 'sociogeographic' network--a social network characteristically embedded within a limited geographic area--is extended to explore threshold conditions under which the infection extends widely beyond an initial set of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008593138
The March, 1978 issue of Management Science carried a paper by Jan M. Chaiken titled "Transfer of Emergency Service Deployment Models to Operating Agencies" which purported to describe the successful implementation of, among other things, fire service management models developed by the Rand...
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Census data on migration within and between the 25 largest U.S. metropolitan areas--containing more than 113 million people--permit construction of a probability-of-contact matrix corre-sponding to a particular Markov process dominated by the nation's largest cities, a hierarchical structure....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008523269