Miracle

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Miracle

  • economic miracle


  • Selected Abstracts


    THE MIRACLE OF THE CELLS: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF INTERVENTIONS TO INCREASE PAYMENT OF COURT-ORDERED FINANCIAL OBLIGATIONS,

    CRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 1 2008
    DAVID WEISBURD
    Research Summary: In this article, we present findings from an experimental study of an innovative program in fine enforcement developed by the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) of New Jersey, termed Project MUSTER (MUST Earn Restitution). The project was initiated by the New Jersey AOC as a response to concerns among probation personnel that probationers sentenced to monetary penalties often failed to meet their financial obligations. The program sought to increase payment of court-ordered financial obligations among probationers who are seriously delinquent in paying fines, penalties, and restitution, and was designed to "strengthen the effectiveness of restitution and fine sanctions by forcing those offenders who have the ability to make regular payments to do so." Project MUSTER relied on a combination of intensive probation, threats of violation to court and incarceration, and community service. We find that probationers sentenced to Project MUSTER were significantly more likely to pay court-ordered financial obligations than were those who experienced regular probation supervision. However, probationers sentenced to a second treatment group, in which the only intervention was violation of probation (one part of the MUSTER program), had similar outcomes to the MUSTER condition. These findings suggest that the main cause of fine payment was a deterrent threat of possible incarceration, which is often termed the "miracle of the cells." Policy Implications: Our study shows that it is possible to gain greater compliance with court-ordered financial obligations and that such compliance may be gained with a relatively simple and straightforward criminal justice intervention. Threats of violation of probation are an effective tool for gaining compliance with financial obligations. Given the growing interest in monetary penalties as an alternative to incarceration, these findings have particular policy importance. [source]


    SUICIDE, RISK, AND INVESTMENT IN THE HEART OF THE AFRICAN MIRACLE

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
    JULIE LIVINGSTON
    ABSTRACT This essay considers new forms of investment, risk, and self-determination, among Botswana's middle and aspirant classes, as well as the loneliness and rage that are at stake when they fail. In it, I use specific instances and more widespread talk of suicides and murder,suicides contemplated, attempted, and accomplished as a vehicle for pondering the social dimensions of investment, and the perils of secrecy and the loneliness that shadow it. Amid a new regime of risk, investment, and self-determination brought by discontinuities of economic boom and widespread AIDS death over the past decade, Batswana are facing new questions about how to invest in relationships, selves, and futures. The essay concludes with a radically different context, a cancer ward, where Batswana seek to exile suicide and nihilism from the beds, minds, and hearts of patients through processes of socialization and paternalism that deny self-determination, while at the same time questing for and demanding investment in high-tech biomedicine. [source]


    PLACE, PRINT AND MIRACLE: FORLÍ'S MADONNA OF THE FIRE AS FUNCTIONAL SITE

    ART HISTORY, Issue 3 2008
    LISA PON
    The Madonna of the Fire of Forlì is an early woodcut that miraculously survived a fire in 1428, and still resides in the cathedral of Forlì, a city southeast of Bologna. This miracle removed the woodcut from the traffic in images crossing geographic and chronological boundaries in which other early modern prints participated. Since 1428 it has acted instead as a functional site, bound to a single place and able to galvanize disparate local elements into a communal sense of emplacement. This essay explores both that ability to generate a local identity, as well as the Madonna of the Fire's status as a miraculous object. For the transformation of the Madonna of the Fire from quotidian devotional print to miraculous cult icon also activated its ability to work as a functional site by charging overlapping material, geographic and discursive loci with communal significance. [source]


    Does It Take a Miracle?

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
    Communities of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Identities, Negotiating Knowledges
    First page of article [source]


    Age,environment model for breast cancer

    ENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 3 2004
    Nobutane Hanayama
    Abstract In the field of breast cancer study, it has become accepted that crucial exposures to environmental risks might have occurred years before a malignant tumor is evident in human breasts, while age factors such as ages at menstruation have been known as risks for the disease already. To project trends in two such kinds of risks for the disease, the concept of environment effects is introduced for (age, period)-specific breast cancer mortality rates. Also, a new model, named the age,environment (AE) model, which assumes that the logarithm of the expected rate is a linear function of environment effects and age effects, is proposed. It is shown that, although environment effects have different meanings from period effects or cohort effects, in the age,period,cohort (APC) model, the range space of the design matrix for the AE model is included in that for APC model. It is seen, however, that the AE model provides a better fit to the data for females in Japan and the four Nordic countries than does the APC model in terms of AIC. From the results of ML estimation of the parameters in the AE model based on the data obtained in Japan, we see high levels of environment effects associated with the Sino,Japanese war, World War II and the environmental pollution due to the economy in the recovery period from the defeat. Besides, from those based on the data obtained in the four Nordic countries, we see high levels of environment effects associated with the environment becoming worse after the year of Helsinki Olympics and low levels of them associated with the period including the year of ,Miracle of the Winter War' in Finland. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Curing dyslexia and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder by training motor co-ordination: Miracle or myth?

    JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, Issue 10 2007
    Dorothy VM Bishop
    Abstract: Dore Achievement Centres are springing up world-wide with a mission to cure cerebellar developmental delay, thought to be the cause of dyslexia, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, dyspraxia and Asperger's syndrome. Remarkable success is claimed for an exercise-based treatment that is designed to accelerate cerebellar development. Unfortunately, the published studies are seriously flawed. On measures where control data are available, there is no credible evidence of significant gains in literacy associated with this intervention. There are no published studies on efficacy with the clinical groups for whom the programme is advocated. It is important that family practitioners and paediatricians are aware that the claims made for this expensive treatment are misleading. [source]


    Sectoral Sources of the Massachusetts Miracle and Other Turning Points

    JOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2001
    N. Edward Coulson
    Previous analyses of the Massachusetts Miracle and the subsequent evolution of employment in the area have centered in part on sectoral explanations. In this paper these explanations are evaluated with the use of a sectoral-based VAR model of the Boston economy, developed to identify local and national sectoral shocks. The relative importance of these shocks is estimated both for the overall sample and at several turning points in aggregate Boston employment, the latter using historical decompostions. [source]


    Why the Tigers Roared: Capital Accumulation and the East Asian Miracle

    PACIFIC ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 2 2002
    Peter E. Robertson
    Recent growth accounting studies of Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea have found that the Solow residuals in these economies were relatively small. Given the high capital contributions, these results are often interpreted as evidence that factor accumulation, savings and investment were the principal cause of the East Asian miracle. This paper develops an alternative method of analysing these data, combining growth accounting methods with the linearized neoclassical growth model of Mankiw et al. (1992). The method explicitly quantifies the extent to which increases in productivity, as measured by the Solow residual, induced capital accumulation in these economies. It shows that in Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea, productivity growth contributed between half and two-thirds of the growth in GDP per worker over a 20-year period. [source]


    Migration Miracle: Faith, Hope, and Meaning on the Undocumented Journey , By Jacqueline Maria Hagan

    RELIGIOUS STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 2 2009
    John T. Ford
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    The Hanged Man: A Story of Miracle, Memory, and Colonialism in the Middle Ages , By Robert Bartlett

    THE HISTORIAN, Issue 4 2008
    Kathleen Kamerick
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Artificial Heart: A Medical Miracle

    ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 12 2002
    Ph.D., Robert J. White M.D.
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Balancing work and welfare: activation and flexicurity policies in The Netherlands, 1980,2000

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE, Issue 1 2004
    Wim Van Oorschot
    As a result of the flexibilisation of labour and the trend towards the ,activating welfare state', social policies show an increasing interconnection of work and welfare issues. The Netherlands is no exception. It is generally believed that the Dutch welfare state is successfully activating its unemployed labour potential (often referred to as the ,Dutch Miracle'), and that flexible and part-time work is protected by adequate ,flexicurity'. This article critically reviews Dutch activation and flexicurity policies. It concludes that there is still more unemployment than the miracle-story suggests; that important target groups of activation policies have not profited from ,the miracle'; that part-time workers have sufficient social protection but that social security for flex-workers still needs major improvements, despite favourable adjustments of labour law. [source]


    Miracles of love: The use of metaphor in egg donor ads1

    JOURNAL OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS, Issue 1 2007
    Pamela Hobbs
    In recent years, the appearance of egg donor advertisements in American college newspapers, sometimes offering five- and six-figure fees to ,genetically gifted' donors, has given rise to critical comment on both sides of the Atlantic, and has caused some to fear that the use of these procedures will eventually result in the creation of ,designer babies' with preselected genetic qualities. Whether such fears will be realized depends, to a great extent, upon how both the participants themselves and society as a whole come to view and understand these procedures. This article explores emerging images of assisted reproduction through an analysis of the use of metaphor in egg donor ads that appeared in the student newspaper of the University of California, Los Angeles. I argue that the attitudes displayed in these ads result from a mapping of existing cultural stereotypes associated with biological parenthood, including the role of childbearing in marriage and ,coupledom', onto the assisted-reproduction process, and that these metaphors are used precisely because they construct this cultural model and adapt it to the new reality of the assisted-conception experience. [source]


    Governing Spirits: Religion, Miracles, and Spectacles in Cuba and Puerto Rico, 1898,1956 by Reinaldo Román

    AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, Issue 1 2009
    KRISTINA WIRTZ
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Miracles and Extraordinary Experience in Northern Kenya by Bilinda Straight

    AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, Issue 2 2008
    DOROTHY L. HODGSON
    First page of article [source]


    Miracles: God, Science, and Psychology in the Paranormal , Edited by J. Harold Ellens

    RELIGIOUS STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 2 2010
    Nathan Carlin
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    The Healer from Nazareth: Jesus' Miracles in Historical Context.

    THE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 6 2009
    By Eric Eve
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Contemporary Muslim Understanding of the Miracles of Jesus

    THE MUSLIM WORLD, Issue 1-2 2000
    Kate Zebiri
    First page of article [source]


    Anatomy of employment growth

    ECONOMIC POLICY, Issue 34 2002
    Pietro Garibaldi
    Summary This paper studies net employment growth across 21 OECD economies since 1980, focusing on the wide range of experiences within the European Union. The initial composition of employment across sectors is relevant in a few countries, but can only partially account for cross-country differences in net employment growth. Institutions play a more important role. A policy package including low dismissal costs and low taxation is significantly associated with high net employment growth and can account for a substantial share of cross-country differences. While the Netherlands' employment miracle is largely accounted for by an increase in part-time jobs for women aged 25,49 in the services sector, we find that in the whole sample part-time jobs largely replace full-time jobs, and temporary jobs replace permanent jobs, with small net effects on hours worked. Continental Europe did not increase employment as much as other OECD countries until the mid-1990s, but later appears to be staging a resurgence of employment growth. We argue that this resurgence is not merely cyclical, is likely related to reforms, and may well be there to stay. [source]


    A Fatal German Marriage: The National Subtext of Fassbinder's Die Ehe Der Maria Braun

    GERMAN LIFE AND LETTERS, Issue 1 2001
    Matthias Uecker
    The article explores the connections between the development of Maria Braun's marriage and the political and economic conditions which made the economic miracle of the 1950s possible. Whereas Fassbinder scholarship has tended to seek parallels only between the character of Maria Braun and general developments in German society, it is argued here that both her marriage and her love affairs need to be included in such an interpretation. The analysis of non-realistic, theatrical or extra-diegetical elements in the film's style discovers a subtext which revolves around symbols of national identity and sovereignty and which is directly linked to the development of Maria Braun's marriage. Within this framework, the symbolic function of Maria Braun's lovers and of her husband are re-examined. [source]


    Innovative Governance and Development in the New Ireland: Social Partnership and the Integrated Approach

    GOVERNANCE, Issue 1 2004
    J. D. House
    Since the mid-1980s, the economy of the Republic of Ireland has displayed a remarkable turnaround. Its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has grown at a faster rate than any developed country in the world. The government's deficit has been cut severely and the debt-to-GDP ration sharply reduced. Average incomes have risen significantly, and the unemployment rate reduced dramatically. This article documents these changes. Its main purpose, however, is to provide a plausible explanation for the "Irish miracle." While many factors have been important,support for the Economic Union's regional development programs, a favorable tax structure, locational and language advantages for attracting multinational corporations, strong education and training programs,these factors in themselves do not explain the emergence of the "Celtic tiger." They were in place before the mid-1980s when Ireland was suffering from a fiscal, economic, and political crisis. Instead, the article argues, it was the creative and innovative response of Irish leaders in government, industry, and labor movement and community organizations to the crisis, and the subsequent institutionalization of this response in a new form of governance, that has been the catalyst for the Irish success story. Based on the thorough background research of the Economic and Social Research Council, a farsighted group of leaders developed a strategic plan in 1987 that provided a blueprint for constructive economic and social change. This was then formally instituted for wage restraint on the part of labor in return for income tax and social supposed provisions by government. Irish social Partnership is modeled to some extent on Northern European corporatism. The article reviews corporatism as an early form of innovative governance, using classical corporatism in Sweden and competitive corporatism in the Netherlands to illustrate how this approach has evolved over the years. Dutch economic success in recent years is due in part to its new form of corporatism that has helped it become globally competitive. It is argued, however, that Irish social partnership goes beyond continental corporatism in several important ways. It is more inclusive, covering a large array of social interests; it is more strategic, with a well-articulated integrated approach to social and economic development that is self-corrective and articulated in a new national agreement every three years; and it is more firmly institutionalized in both government and nongovernment agencies in the country. Social partnership and the integrated approach have become part of the culture of the new Ireland. This innovative form of governance underlies the Irish turnaround and augurs well for the future. It can also serve as a model, with appropriate modification tailor-made to each case, for other jurisdictions hoping to emulate Ireland's success. [source]


    3. HISTORIOGRAPHY WITHOUT GOD: A REPLY TO GREGORY,

    HISTORY AND THEORY, Issue 4 2008
    TOR EGIL FØRLAND
    ABSTRACT This reply aims both to respond to Gregory and to move forward the debate about God's place in historiography. The first section is devoted to the nature of science and God. Whereas Gregory thinks science is based on metaphysical naturalism with a methodological corollary of critical-realist empiricism, I see critical, empiricist methodology as basic, and naturalism as a consequence. Gregory's exposition of his apophatic theology, in which univocity is eschewed, illustrates the fissure between religious and scientific worldviews,no matter which basic scientific theory one subscribes to. The second section is allotted to miracles. As I do, Gregory thinks no miracle occurred on Fox Lakes in 1652, but he restricts himself to understanding the actors and explaining change over time, and refuses to explain past or contemporary actions and events. Marc Bloch, in his book The Royal Touch: Sacred Monarchy and Scrofula in England and France, is willing to go much further than Gregory. Using his superior medical knowledge to substitute his own explanation of the phenomenon for that of the actors, Bloch dismisses the actors' beliefs that they or others had been miraculously cured, and explains that they believed they saw miraculous healing because they were expecting to see it. In the third section, on historical explanation, I rephrase the question whether historians can accommodate both believers in God and naturalist scientists, asking whether God, acting miraculously or not, can be part of the ideal explanatory text. I reply in the negative, and explicate how the concept of a plural subject suggests how scientists can also be believers. This approach may be compatible with two options presented by Peter Lipton for resolving the tension between religion and science. The first is to see the truth claims of religious texts as untranslatable into scientific language (and vice versa); the other is to immerse oneself in religious texts by accepting them as a guide but not believing in their truth claims when these contradict science. [source]


    From Sacred Mystery to Divine Deception: Robert Holkot, John Wyclif and the Transformation of Fourteenth-Century Eucharistic Discourse

    JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, Issue 2 2005
    DALLAS G. DENERY II
    In his extremely popular preaching handbook the Summa praedicantium, in a chapter devoted to the Eucharist, the fourteenth-century Dominican John Bromyard relates an exemplum about a certain holy man. This man's "faith towards the sacrament was so great," Bromyard writes, that it was often said that were Christ himself to enter "the church during the elevation of the host, the man would not go to look at him, and in so doing lose sight of the host.", While it lacks the spectacular firepower that characterizes so many Eucharistic miracle stories, that characterize so many of Bromyard's own stories , like the one about the bees who construct a honeycomb tabernacle and buzz chants to honour a hive-hidden host , in many ways it does more than most to move us to the very centre of the medieval Eucharistic experience.§ It is, when all is said and done, a story about belief and about the miracle of the Eucharist. This unnamed holy man does not need to get up, does not need to hurry over to greet Christ at the door. He does not need to do any of these things because he already sees Christ right there in the upraised hands of the priest, in the consecrated host. [source]


    Communing with Disaster: What We Can Learn from the Jusen and the Savings and Loan Crises

    LAW & POLICY, Issue 3-4 2000
    Edward Rubin
    Now that the Japanese economic miracle has soured into the Japanese economic meltdown, scholars are confronted with a new challenge: instead of trying to penetrate the secret of Japan's successes, they must try to unravel the enigma of its misfortunes. Professors Curtis Milhaupt and Geoffrey Miller (1997) have performed a great service in documenting one of the most dramatic of those misfortunes , the collapse of the jusen companies. Professor Shinsaku Iwahara (1997) has also performed an equally valuable service by placing this event in the larger context of Japanese politics and society. But despite its record setting scale, the jusen problem was not unprecedented; Japan merely followed in the footsteps of its economic mentor, the United States, which experienced a very similar financial meltdown about a decade earlier. This commentary briefly describes that event , the U.S. savings and loan crisis , and then draws some tentative conclusions on the basis of a comparison of the two events. [source]


    Developmental State and Corporate Governance in China

    MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION REVIEW, Issue 1 2007
    Victor Nee
    abstract China's state-guided economic miracle has revitalized a long-standing and unsettled debate about the role of government in transformative economic development. In a firm-level study of corporate governance we examine whether direct state involvement actually makes a positive contribution to the economic performance of newly incorporated firms in China's urban economy. We show that direct intervention into the governance of firms is likely to yield negative economic effects at the firm level. We infer from our findings that it must be other types of government intervention external to the firm that explain the success of China's developmental state in promoting rapid economic growth. [source]


    The Sociopolitical Status of U.S. Naturopathy at the Dawn of the 21st Century

    MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY, Issue 3 2001
    Hans A. Baer
    Naturopathic medicine in the United States had its inception around the turn of the 20th century. Subsequently, it underwent a process of relatively rapid growth until around the 1930s, followed by a period of gradual decline almost to the point of extinction due to biomedical opposition and the advent of "miracle drugs." Because its therapeutic eclecticism had preadapted it to fit into the holistic health movement that emerged in the 1970s, it was able to undergo a process of organizational rejuvenation during the last two decades of the century. Nevertheless, U.S. naturopathy as a professionalized heterodox medical system faces several dilemmas as it enters the new millennium. These include (1) the fact that it has succeeded in obtaining licensure in only two sections of the country, namely, the Far West and New England; (2) increasing competition from partially professionalized and lay naturopaths, many of whom are graduates of correspondence schools; and (3) the danger of cooptation as many biomedical practitioners adopt natural therapies, [naturopathy, alternative medicine, medical pluralism] [source]


    Why the Tigers Roared: Capital Accumulation and the East Asian Miracle

    PACIFIC ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 2 2002
    Peter E. Robertson
    Recent growth accounting studies of Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea have found that the Solow residuals in these economies were relatively small. Given the high capital contributions, these results are often interpreted as evidence that factor accumulation, savings and investment were the principal cause of the East Asian miracle. This paper develops an alternative method of analysing these data, combining growth accounting methods with the linearized neoclassical growth model of Mankiw et al. (1992). The method explicitly quantifies the extent to which increases in productivity, as measured by the Solow residual, induced capital accumulation in these economies. It shows that in Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea, productivity growth contributed between half and two-thirds of the growth in GDP per worker over a 20-year period. [source]


    Automated technologies and novel techniques to accelerate protein crystallography for structural genomics

    PROTEINS: STRUCTURE, FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS, Issue 4 2008
    Babu A. Manjasetty Dr.
    Abstract The sequence infrastructure that has arisen through large-scale genomic projects dedicated to protein analysis, has provided a wealth of information and brought together scientists and institutions from all over the world. As a consequence, the development of novel technologies and methodologies in proteomics research is helping to unravel the biochemical and physiological mechanisms of complex multivariate diseases at both a functional and molecular level. In the late sixties, when X-ray crystallography had just been established, the idea of determining protein structure on an almost universal basis was akin to an impossible dream or a miracle. Yet only forty years after, automated protein structure determination platforms have been established. The widespread use of robotics in protein crystallography has had a huge impact at every stage of the pipeline from protein cloning, over-expression, purification, crystallization, data collection, structure solution, refinement, validation and data management- all of which have become more or less automated with minimal human intervention necessary. Here, recent advances in protein crystal structure analysis in the context of structural genomics will be discussed. In addition, this review aims to give an overview of recent developments in high throughput instrumentation, and technologies and strategies to accelerate protein structure/function analysis. [source]


    Asset Bubbles, Leverage and ,Lifeboats': Elements of the East Asian Crisis

    THE ECONOMIC JOURNAL, Issue 460 2000
    H. J. Edison
    Collapsing credit markets have been blamed for the depth and persistence of the Great Depression in the United States. Could similar mechanisms have played a role in ending the East Asian economic miracle , and in creating fragility in global financial markets? After a brief account of the nature of the East Asian crises of 1997/8, we use the framework of highly-leveraged, fully-collaterised firms due to Kiyotaki and Moore (1997) to explore the impact of a credit crunch. The paper emphasises the fragility of equilibrium and how rapidly boom can turn to bust. [source]


    PLACE, PRINT AND MIRACLE: FORLÍ'S MADONNA OF THE FIRE AS FUNCTIONAL SITE

    ART HISTORY, Issue 3 2008
    LISA PON
    The Madonna of the Fire of Forlì is an early woodcut that miraculously survived a fire in 1428, and still resides in the cathedral of Forlì, a city southeast of Bologna. This miracle removed the woodcut from the traffic in images crossing geographic and chronological boundaries in which other early modern prints participated. Since 1428 it has acted instead as a functional site, bound to a single place and able to galvanize disparate local elements into a communal sense of emplacement. This essay explores both that ability to generate a local identity, as well as the Madonna of the Fire's status as a miraculous object. For the transformation of the Madonna of the Fire from quotidian devotional print to miraculous cult icon also activated its ability to work as a functional site by charging overlapping material, geographic and discursive loci with communal significance. [source]