5785 Results for “monedas fut 26 Visité Buyfc26coins.com. La rapidez del servicio me dejó impresionado..ELWX”
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Person
Fred Ledley
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Person
Ambassador Gautam Bambawale
Former Ambassador, India to China, Pakistan, and Bhutan Distinguished Professor, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Symbiosis International University, Pune -
Person
Henrik Enderlein
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Person
Julia K. Steinberger
Professor of Societal Aspects of Climate Change, Institute of Geography and Sustainability, Faculty of Geosciences and Environment, University of Lausanne -
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Richard Nelson
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Video
What Money Can't Buy
May 23, 2018
What Money Can’t Buy is a six part series exploring the role of money and morals in today’s world.
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Podcasts
The Unfathomable Willingness to Destroy the World
Dec 15, 2020
Whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg continues the conversation about his book, The Doomsday Machine, talking about the changes in military strategy that allowed the targeting of civilians and how the arms industry pushed military expansion, which he goes on to relate to climate change. Part 2 of 3
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Podcasts
A History of the Nuclear Danger that the Military Industrial Complex Engineered
Dec 14, 2020
Famous whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg discusses his book, The Doomsday Machine, which chronicles the tremendous threat to humanity that US nuclear war planners deliberately considered and whose plans he was going to leak instead of the Pentagon Papers, had it not been for the Vietnam War. Part 1 of 3.
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Article
The Panama Papers: A Tropical Tip of the Hidden Wealth Iceberg
Apr 5, 2016
When billionaires pay less, we all pay more.
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News
INET’s Rob Johnson on CNBC: “Inequality has been there a long time and growing rapidly”
Sep 16, 2012
Monday marked the one-year anniversary of the start of the Occupy movement, and INET Executive Director Rob Johnson went on CNBC to discuss the significance of the milestone.
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News
Joe Stiglitz on the 1%'s Problem and the Price of Inequality
Jun 3, 2012
Inequality isn’t just a problem for the 99%.
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News
INET funded research by William Lazonick is cited in the Wall Street Journal
Dec 7, 2020
“Critics led by William Lazonick, economics professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, say buybacks starve companies of cash for innovation and worker pay, and favor executives aiming to jack up the stock prices because their compensation is increasingly stock-based. The buyback trend has become controversial since a 2014 article by Prof. Lazonick in the Harvard Business Review, “Profits Without Prosperity.” The S&P 500 companies that had been publicly listed from 2003 through 2012, he found, had spent amounts equal to 54% of their earnings for buybacks and 37% for dividends, leaving “very little for investments in productive capabilities or higher incomes for employees.” — Randall Smith
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Podcasts
Michael Hirsh: Multinationals Exploited the Community of Nations and Both Parties Enabled Them
Dec 30, 2020
Foreign Policy editor Michael Hirsh talks about how both Republicans and democrats allowed multinational corporations to exploit international trade while allowing local communities to be devastated, which brought about Trump
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Video
Why We Need a Federal Jobs Guarantee
Jul 11, 2018
13 million people looking for living wage work is not a “full employment” economy
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Grant
Years granted: 2012, 2013, 2014Replication in Empirical Economics
This research project replicates a large number of studies by teaching replication to students, with the results included in a wiki project about the replicability of research.