front cover of Crow Texts
Crow Texts
Dorothea Kaschube
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1978
This volume presents Crow oral texts covering a wide range of cultural topics as narrated by Elder Henrietta Pretty On Top, collected by Dorothea Kaschube in the 1950s, with word-by-word glosses. This format makes explicit the richness of Crow grammar as it is used in context. These texts will be of interest to anthropologists, linguists specializing in Siouan, typologists, and aficionados of oral narrative, as well as to speakers and learners of Crow and other Siouan languages.
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Coyote Stories II
Martha B. Kendall
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1980
This volume includes 12 stories from languages of the American southwest presented in numbered parallel format. Each of the stories in this collection is accompanied by morphological analyses and grammatical notes. This format makes explicit the structure of the language and illustrates the richness of  grammar as it is used in context. These texts will be of interest to anthropologists, linguists, typologists, and aficionados of oral narrative, as well as to speakers and learners of Native American languages.
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William R. Kerr
University of Chicago Press Journals
The fifteenth volume of Innovation Policy and the Economy is the first to focus on a single theme: high-skilled immigration to the United States. The first paper is the product of a long-term research effort on the impact of immigration to the United States of Russian mathematicians beginning around 1990 as the Soviet Union collapsed. The second paper describes how obtaining a degree from a US undergraduate university can open an important pathway for immigrants to participate in the US labor market in IT occupations. The third paper considers the changing nature of postdoctoral positions in science departments, which are disproportionately held by immigrant researchers. The fourth paper considers the role of US firms in high-skilled immigration. The last paper describes how strong growth in global scientific and technological knowledge production has reduced the share of world scientific activity in the United States, increased the immigrant proportion of scientists and engineers at US universities and firms, and fostered cross-border collaborations for US scientists.
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William R. Kerr
University of Chicago Press Journals
The papers in the sixteenth volume of the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Innovation Policy and the Economy offer insights into the changing landscape of innovation by highlighting recent developments in the financing of innovation and entrepreneurship and in the economics of innovation and intellectual property. The first chapter, by Ramana Nanda and Matthew Rhodes-Kropf, explores the process of experimentation in the context of financing of technology start-ups by venture capitalists. The second, by Yael Hochberg, also analyzes the role of entrepreneurial experimentation by systematically examining the rise of start-up accelerators. The third chapter, by Heidi Williams, studies the relationship between the strength of intellectual property rights and innovation. The fourth paper, by Fiona Scott Morton and Carl Shapiro discusses recent changes to the patent system and whether they align the rewards from intellectual property with the marginal contributions made by innovators and other stakeholders. The final chapter, by Karim Lakhani and Kevin Boudreau, focuses on the potential use of field innovation experiments and contests to inform innovation policy and management. Together, these essays continue to highlight the importance of economic theory and empirical analysis in innovation policy research.
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Jonathan Klick
University of Chicago Press Journals
The Supreme Court Economic Review is a faculty-edited, peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary law and economics series with a particular focus on economic and social science analysis of judicial decision making, institutional analysis of law and legal structures, political economy and public choice issues regarding courts and other decision-makers, and the relationship between legal and political institutions and the institutions of a free society governed by constitutions and the rule of law. Contributors include renowned legal scholars, economists, and policy-makers, and consistently ranks among the most influential journals of law and economics.
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Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Volume 3
Matthew J. Kotchen
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022
This volume presents six new papers on environmental and energy economics and policy in the United States. Rebecca Davis, J. Scott Holladay, and Charles Sims analyze recent trends in and forecasts of coal-fired power plant retirements with and without new climate policy. Severin Borenstein and James Bushnell examine the efficiency of pricing for electricity, natural gas, and gasoline. James Archsmith, Erich Muehlegger, and David Rapson provide a prospective analysis of future pathways for electric vehicle adoption. Kenneth Gillingham considers the consequences of such pathways for the design of fuel vehicle economy standards. Frank Wolak investigates the long-term resource adequacy in wholesale electricity markets with significant intermittent renewables. Finally, Barbara Annicchiarico, Stefano Carattini, Carolyn Fischer, and Garth Heutel review the state of research on the interactions between business cycles and environmental policy.
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front cover of Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Volume 4
Matthew J. Kotchen
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2023
Rigorous, careful, and nonpartisan research with a high policy impact on environmental and energy economics.

Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy focuses on the effective and efficient management of environmental and energy challenges. Research papers offer new evidence on the intended and unintended consequences, the market and nonmarket effects, and the incentive and distributional impacts of policy initiatives and market developments.

This volume presents six new papers on environmental and energy economics and policy. Gilbert Metcalf examines the distributional impacts of substituting a vehicle miles-traveled tax for the existing federal excise tax in the United States. David Weisbach, Samuel Kortum, Michael Wang, and Yujia Yao consider solutions to the leakage problem of climate policy with differential tax policies on the supply and demand for fossil fuels and on domestic production and consumption. Danae Hernandez-Cortes, Kyle Meng, and Paige Weber quantify and decompose recent trends in air pollution disparities in the US electricity sector. Severin Borenstein and Ryan Kellogg provide a comparative analysis of different incentive-based mechanisms to reduce emissions in the electricity sector on a path to zero emissions. Sarah Anderson, Andrew Plantinga, and Matthew Wibbenmeyer document distributional differences in the allocation of  US wildfire prevention projects. Finally, Mark Curtis and Ioana Marinescu provide new evidence on the quality and quantity of emerging “green” jobs in the United States.
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Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Volume 1
Matthew J. Kotchen
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2020
This volume presents six new papers on environmental/energy economics and policy. Robert Stavins evaluates carbon taxes versus a cap-and-trade mechanism for reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, arguing that specific design features of either instrument can be more consequential than the choice of instrument itself. Lucas Davis and James Sallee show that the exemption of electric vehicles from the gasoline tax is likely to be efficient as long as gasoline prices remain below social marginal costs, even though it results in lower tax revenue. Caroline Flammer analyzes the rapidly growing market for green bonds and highlights the importance of third-party certification to  the financial and environmental performance of publically traded companies. Antonio Bento, Mark Jacobsen, Christopher Knittel, and Arthur van Benthem develop a general framework for evaluating the costs and benefits of fuel economy standards and use it to account for the differences between several recent studies of changes in these standards.  Nicholas Muller estimates a measure of output in the U.S. economy over the last 60 years that accounts for air pollution damages, and shows  that pollution effects are sizable, affect growth rates, and have diminished appreciably over time. Finally, Marc Hafstead and Roberton Williams illustrate methods of accounting for  employment effects  when evaluating the costs and benefits of environmental regulations.   
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front cover of Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Environmental and Energy Policy and the Economy
Volume 2
Matthew J. Kotchen
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2020
This volume presents six new papers on environmental and energy economics and related policy issues. Robert Pindyck provides a systematic overview of what is known, and remains unknown, about climate change, along with the implications of uncertainty for climate policy. Shaikh Eskander, Sam Fankhauser, and Joana Setzer offer insights from a comprehensive data set on climate change legislation and litigation across all countries of the world over the past thirty years. Adele Morris, Noah Kaufman, and Siddhi Doshi shine a light on how expected trends in the coal industry will create significant challenges for the local public finance of coal-reliant communities. Joseph Aldy and his collaborators analyze the treatment of co-benefits in benefit-cost analyses of federal clean air regulations. Tatyana Deryugina and her co-authors report on the geographic and socioeconomic heterogeneity in the benefits of reducing particulate matter air pollution. Finally, Oliver Browne, Ludovica Gazze, and Michael Greenstone use detailed data on residential water consumption to evaluate the relative impacts of conservation policies based on prices, restrictions, and public persuasion.
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front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1960
The Supreme Court Review, 1960
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1960

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1961
The Supreme Court Review, 1961
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1961

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1962
The Supreme Court Review, 1962
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1962

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1963
The Supreme Court Review, 1963
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1963

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1966
The Supreme Court Review, 1966
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1966

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1967
The Supreme Court Review, 1967
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1967

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1968
The Supreme Court Review, 1968
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1968

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1969
The Supreme Court Review, 1969
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1969

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1970
The Supreme Court Review, 1970
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1970

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1971
The Supreme Court Review, 1971
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1971

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1973
The Supreme Court Review, 1973
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1974

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1974
The Supreme Court Review, 1974
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1975

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1975
The Supreme Court Review, 1975
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1976

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1976
The Supreme Court Review, 1976
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1977

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1977
The Supreme Court Review, 1977
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1978

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1979
The Supreme Court Review, 1979
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1980

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1981
The Supreme Court Review, 1981
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1982

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1982
The Supreme Court Review, 1982
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1983

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1983
The Supreme Court Review, 1983
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1984

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1985
The Supreme Court Review, 1985
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1986

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1986
The Supreme Court Review, 1986
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1987

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1987
The Supreme Court Review, 1987
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1988

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1988
The Supreme Court Review, 1988
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1989

front cover of The Supreme Court Review, 1989
The Supreme Court Review, 1989
Philip B. Kurland
University of Chicago Press Journals, 1990


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