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Shadow (psychology)

About: Shadow (psychology) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8396 publications have been published within this topic receiving 117158 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article used data on victimization from a national sample of college students to test the "shadow of sexual assault" thesis and explore factors that heightened women's age-specific fear of rape.
Abstract: Using data on victimization from a national sample of college students, we replicated, refined, and extended Ferraro's models to test the “shadow of sexual assault” thesis and to explore factors that heightened women's age-specific fear of rape. We took into account temporal dimensions of crime-specific fear (during the day and at night) and used a domain-specific model. Overall, fear of rape among college women “shadowed” their fear of other personal crimes. Our age-specific results concerning college women's fear of rape largely mirrored Ferraro's results for women more generally. Policy implications and directions for future research are discussed.

303 citations

Book
22 Apr 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, the Forests of Nostalgia is described as "first the forests 2. Shadows of Law 3. Enlightenment 4. Forests Of Nostalgia 5. Dwelling
Abstract: 1. First the Forests 2. Shadows of Law 3. Enlightenment 4. Forests of Nostalgia 5. Dwelling

298 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how Vietnam's firms use ongoing relationships to maintain agreements and find that these relationships serve to reduce the transaction costs of the market: the costs of locating trading partners, of negotiating and monitoring contracts, and of enforcing agreements and settling disputes.
Abstract: Vietnam's firms contract without the shadow of the law and only partly in the shadow of the future. Although contracting rests in part on the threat of loss of future business, firms often are willing to renegotiate following a breach, so the retaliation is not as forceful as in the standard repeated-game story and not as effective a sanction. To ensure agreements are kept, firms rely on other devices to supplement repeated-game incentives. Firms scrutinize their trading partners. Community sanctions are occasionally invoked. Transactions with greater risk of reneging are supported by more elaborate governance structures. Ongoing relationships among firms serve to reduce the transaction costs of the market: the costs of locating trading partners, of negotiating and monitoring contracts, and of enforcing agreements and settling disputes. In an economy in the midst of deep reform, transaction costs are especially severe because the normal market-supporting institutions are still being built. We examine in this article how Vietnam's firms use ongoing relationships to maintain agreements. For a snapshot of an economy in the process of building institutions, we use a 1995-1997 survey of privately owned manufacturing firms in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. The new ways of doing business in Vietnam have been devised at ground level. The bottom-up reform process has relied on de facto decentralization of economic activity, while leaving in place the formal institutions of central planning. Although Vietnam's government has introduced few policies to foster the private sector, "the owners of private business have worked out their own ad hoc strategy for economic development which is popular, oral rather than in the

292 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple model that captures the relationship between institutional quality, the shadow economy and corruption was proposed, and the predictions of the model were empirically tested by means of Structural Equation Modelling.
Abstract: This paper analyzes a simple model that captures the relationship between institutional quality, the shadow economy and corruption. It shows that an improvement in institutional quality reduces the shadow economy and affects the corruption market. The exact relationship between corruption and institutional quality is, however, ambiguous and depends on the relative effectiveness of the institutional quality in the shadow and corruption markets. The predictions of the model are empirically tested - by means of Structural Equation Modelling that treats the shadow economy and the corruption market as latent variables - using data from OECD countries. The results show that an improvement in institutional quality reduces the shadow economy directly and corruption both directly and indirectly (through its effect on the shadow market).

285 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
20231,102
20222,472
2021374
2020435
2019429