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Institution

Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli

EducationRome, Lazio, Italy
About: Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli is a education organization based out in Rome, Lazio, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Politics & Monetary policy. The organization has 692 authors who have published 2493 publications receiving 36411 citations. The organization is also known as: Libera Universita Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli & Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali "Guido Carli".


Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the relevance of fairness norms in an experimental scenario in which hired and rented hands are co-employed and stochastic influences and multiple reference points for fairness further increase complexity.
Abstract: We study the relevance of fairness norms in an experimental scenario in which hired and rented hands are co-employed and stochastic influences and multiple reference points for fairness further increase complexity. Co-employment of hired and rented hands is an example out of a broader class of situations with multiple fairness standards. Co-employment has high political relevance and topicality in Europe, and especially in Germany, where a new equal payment rule affecting temporary work agencies has become law. To shed new light on the relevance of fairness norms in complex settings, we explore theoretically and experimentally the possible fairness considerations of the participants.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper evaluates the accuracy of two recent methods, the Rosen et al. (Rosen et al.) and the Greiner and Quinn (J R Stat Soc Ser A (Statistics in Society) 172:67–81, 2009), and provides important guidelines regarding the appropriate contexts for employing these models.
Abstract: Ecological inference refers to the study of individuals using aggregate data and it is used in an impressive number of studies; it is well known, however, that the study of individuals using group data suffers from an ecological fallacy problem (Robinson in Am Sociol Rev 15:351–357, 1950). This paper evaluates the accuracy of two recent methods, the Rosen et al. (Stat Neerl 55:134–156, 2001) and the Greiner and Quinn (J R Stat Soc Ser A (Statistics in Society) 172:67–81, 2009) and the long-standing Goodman’s (Am Sociol Rev 18:663–664, 1953; Am J Sociol 64:610–625, 1959) method designed to estimate all cells of R × C tables simultaneously by employing exclusively aggregate data. To conduct these tests we leverage on extensive electoral data for which the true quantities of interest are known. In particular, we focus on examining the extent to which the confidence intervals provided by the three methods contain the true values. The paper also provides important guidelines regarding the appropriate contexts for employing these models.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Jul 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors advocate the understanding of populism as a thin-centered ideology, according to which it is based on two necessary features, namely, an anti-elite(s) mindset and the criticism of representative politics.
Abstract: The word populism has been associated to (very) different meanings in the last years. The “populist” label is still used to describe parties, leaders, movements, attitudes and political regimes, too. Moreover, the adjective “populist” is used in a normative fashion in the public debate to denigrate those movements or parties which contrast the mainstream views. The aim of this paper is twofold: on the one hand, I conduct a non-normative analysis to avoid a biased vision of the concept. On the other hand, I advocate the understanding of populism as a thin-centered ideology, according to which it is based on two necessary features, namely, (a) an anti-elite(s) mindset and (b) the criticism of representative politics.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that suppliers offer trade credit to high-bargaining-power customers to ease competition in downstream markets in which they have a large number of other clients.
Abstract: Using a unique dataset with information on 20 million inter-firm transactions, we provide evidence that suppliers offer trade credit to high-bargaining-power customers to ease competition in downstream markets in which they have a large number of other clients. Differently from price discounts, trade credit targets infra-marginal units and does not lower the marginal cost of high-bargaining-power customers. As a consequence, the latter do not gain market share and the supplier can preserve profitable sales to low-bargaining-power customers. We show that empirically trade credit is not monotonically increasing in past purchases, as is consistent with our conjecture that it targets infra-marginal units. In addition, the supplier grants trade credit to high-bargaining-power-customers only when it fears the cannibalization of sales to other low-bargaining-power clients. Our results are not driven by differences in suppliers' ability to provide trade credit, customer-specific shocks, or endogenous location decisions.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the emergence of successful new parties in Western Europe has been extensively studied, but insufficient attention has been devoted to this topic, while single parties or countries have been extensively investigated.
Abstract: Western Europe has recently experienced the emergence of successful new parties, but while single parties or countries have been extensively studied, insufficient attention has been devoted to this...

11 citations


Authors

Showing all 730 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Saverio Lombardi7337018105
J. Doyne Farmer6825022848
Henry Chesbrough5914044019
Jack D. Farmer5522312419
Cristiano Castelfranchi5429412312
John A. Mathews5317311223
Peter S.H. Leeflang511769153
Werner Güth4858914386
Giuseppe F. Italiano432997319
Dario Rossi402575972
Richard L. Priem408211992
Niels Noorderhaven391357521
Francesco Lippi371165664
John D. Hey371605837
Fabiano Schivardi371296022
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202326
202259
2021262
2020230
2019196
2018182