Results 141 to 150 of about 7,743,986 (309)
Beyond administrative burden: Activation and administrative harm
Abstract Within recent public policy and administration scholarship, there has been a growing focus on the concept of “administrative burden” to describe the learning, compliance and psychological costs incurred by citizens when trying to access services and exercise social and political rights. Specifically, in the context of activation and welfare‐to‐
Michael McGann, Sarah Ball
wiley +1 more source
Exposure effects are not automatically useful for policymaking [PDF]
We thank Savje (2023) for a thought-provoking article and appreciate the opportunity to share our perspective as social scientists. In his article, Savje recommends misspecified exposure effects as a way to avoid strong assumptions about interference when analyzing the results of an experiment.
arxiv
Abstract Aboriginal culture is both a strength and a protective factor for Aboriginal children; yet, we continue to see disparities in education, health and well‐being outcomes. To improve outcomes for Aboriginal children and families, local cultural ways of knowing, being and doing need to be incorporated into policy and practice.
Michelle Jones+5 more
wiley +1 more source
Invited Review Article: Physics and Monte Carlo techniques as relevant to cryogenic, phonon, and ionization readout of Cryogenic Dark Matter Search radiation detectors [PDF]
S. W. Leman
openalex +1 more source
ABSTRACT There is significant local and international evidence to show that young people transitioning from care have children by age 21 at far higher rates than the general youth population. Intergenerational child protection involvement is also far higher for this group.
Jade Purtell, Sarah Morris
wiley +1 more source
Integrity Versus Ideology in Automated Assessment: The Jobseeker Snapshot
ABSTRACT This article analyses the entanglement of political ideology and digitalisation in the Australian approach to online assessment of claims for income security, with a focus on job seeker classification. In the Australian social security system, the Job Seeker Classification Instrument (JSCI) has been used to screen and ‘score’ income security ...
Angelika Papadopoulos
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Development of cultural identity is understood to be central to well‐being; however, it is not always prioritised for children in out‐of‐home care (OOHC). This paper examines current policy and practice designed to support the cultural identity and connection of non‐Indigenous culturally and linguistically diverse children (CALD) in OOHC, who ...
Rebekah Grace+8 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Embedded in the framework of intergenerational solidarity, this paper explores the interactions between older immigrants' participation in volunteering activities and intergenerational family relationships in the Chinese community in Sydney, Australia. The study investigates the effects of volunteering on the lives of older Chinese immigrants.
Bingqin Li+5 more
wiley +1 more source
Likelihood for random-effect models (invited article)
Per a la inferència en models amb efectes aleatoris Lee i Nelder (1996) proposaren utilitzar la versemblança jeràrquica (h-versemblanc¸a). Aquesta permet la inferència en models que presenten a la vegada paràmetres fixos i aleatoris. Per la presència de variables aleatòries no observables, la h-versemblança no és una versemblança en el sentit Fisherià.
Lee, Youngjo, Nelder, J. A.
openaire +4 more sources