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Karen Maguire

Researcher at Oklahoma State University–Stillwater

Publications -  24
Citations -  227

Karen Maguire is an academic researcher from Oklahoma State University–Stillwater. The author has contributed to research in topics: Feed-in tariff & Petroleum industry. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 24 publications receiving 189 citations. Previous affiliations of Karen Maguire include University of Colorado Boulder & United States Department of Agriculture.

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Financial acumen, women speculators, and the Royal African company during the South Sea bubble

TL;DR: This paper examined the financial acumen of those women who traded senior and engrafted stock across 1720 and found that depending on the pricing regime, these women at worst broke even on their activities or had positive speculative gains.
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‘A knavish people…’: London Jewry and the stock market during the South Sea Bubble

TL;DR: The authors examined the role of Jewish brokers in the market for Bank of England stock at a time when their status as recent immigrants, subject to constraints due to religion and ethnicity, made them unlikely intermediaries beyond their own communities.
Posted Content

Energy Boom and Gloom? Local Effects of Oil and Natural Gas Drilling on Subjective Well-Being

TL;DR: The authors examined the effects of conventional and horizontal oil and natural gas drilling in Texas on subjective assessments of life-satisfaction and bad mental health days for nearby residents and found that horizontal drilling has statistically significant deleterious effects on well-being.
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The Disparate Influence of State Renewable Portfolio Standards on Renewable Electricity Generation Capacity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use the synthetic control method to conduct individual case studies of the early adopter states and find Texas to be unique among these early adopters in that the RPS policy in Texas has led to increased renewable capacity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy Boom and Gloom? Local Effects of Oil and Natural Gas Drilling on Subjective Well-Being

TL;DR: This paper examined the effects of conventional and horizontal oil and natural gas drilling in Texas on subjective assessments of life-satisfaction and bad mental health days for nearby residents and found that horizontal drilling has statistically significant deleterious effects on well-being.