Results 151 to 160 of about 111,065 (344)
Measuring education inequality - Gini coefficients of education [PDF]
The authors use a Gini index to measure inequality in educational attainment. They present two methods (direct and indirect) for calculating an education Gini index, and generate a quinquennial data set on education Gini indexes for the over-15 ...
Fan, Xibo, Thomas, Vinod, Wang, Yan
core
Sustainability as Justice: Making the “Leave No One Behind” Work
ABSTRACT This paper critically engages with the LNOB principle of the 2030 Agenda, highlighting its conceptual, methodological, and structural limitations. Building on Amartya Sen's social choice theory and Rawlsian justice, it reconceptualizes “sustainability as justice,” emphasizing real‐world comparative assessments grounded in intersectionality. It
Rallou Taratori, Flavio Comim
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Climate change research, like much of social science, is biased toward WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) populations, limiting its global relevance. Even cross‐national studies often suffer from methodological inconsistencies due to cultural and geographic interdependencies.
Danila Valko, Kristin Thompson
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Certain attributes of large‐scale complex systems are often expressed through sets of indicators. For example, the sustainability of an entity, be it a nation, a city, an energy system, a corporation etc., can be effectively represented by indicators and corresponding data series.
Vassilis S. Kouikoglou +1 more
wiley +1 more source
This research has aims to learn the contribution of Repong Damar to regional economic and income distribution. The data for research consists of primary and secondary data.
Nurheni Wijayanto
doaj
From Gini index as a Lyapunov functional to convergence in Wasserstein distance [PDF]
Fei Cao
openalex +3 more sources
Analysis of Seasonal Data Using the Lorenz Curve and the Associated Gini Index [PDF]
Wen‐Chung Lee
openalex +1 more source
ABSTRACT This paper investigates how income inequality and financial globalization shape sustainable industrialization across 87 countries over 2000–2022, using the SDG 9 composite index as the outcome and the Method of Moments Quantile Regression (MMQR) to capture heterogeneous effects.
Özge Kozal, Daniel Balsalobre‐Lorente
wiley +1 more source

