Educação matemática pela arte
Gusmão, Lucimar Donizete
2013-08-28
Search results
14,882 records were found.
The appropriate role of the economic expert in antitrust litigation is to seek the truth, whereas the role for the attorneys is to seek the best possible outcome possible for the client. Yet the attorneys hire the economic experts, and the experts often work closely in many aspects of researching and developing the client's case. Can an expert economist provide an independent, professionally respectable opinion in this setting fraught with advocacy? We discuss the inducements to advocacy faced by economists who testify in antitrust proceedings, and ways in which a practicing economic expert might counter these inducements. We discuss two cases in which we have been involved to illustrate some of the important issues.
An earlier version of Service Architecture and Content Provision, as presented at the Telecom Policy Research Conference 1995. There are some additional mathematical examples, and a short section on the effects of architecture on content creation that we did not include in the published version.
This review essay introduces the 15 selected papers from the 25th Annual TPRC. We mention major telecoms policy highlights of 1997, then offer a light interpretative essay with summaries of the papers. We organize the discussion into five general sections: "Historical," "Telephony," "The Internet," "The Media," and "Comparative Studies in Telephone and Satellite Policy." Readers will notice repeated themes and cross-connections between the chapters in these sections.
An interview with Simon Maroko, a survivor of the Nazi Holocaust of the Jews, by Sid Bolkosky.
NOTE: "Economía y mortalidad en las ciencias sociales," formerly available as part of this item, is now at http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/56219


