Papers
in sentence
606 examples of Papers in a sentence
Among his policy papers, the most famous is a 1994 paper that predicted Mexico's peso crisis, one of many
papers
on Latin America's economic problems.
The problem is not that the Washington Post and
papers
like it hire people who are unintelligent or lazy.
Sometimes errors are not discovered until later, when they are working papers, as with Reinhart and Rogoff, or after publication, as with Nobel laureate Ken Arrow, who had to correct a mistake in the proof of his famous impossibility theorem.
If you are on the road and see a black man or a man with Arabic features, you say to yourself, ‘He doesn’t look French,’ and then you might stop him to see if he has papers.”
A young Spanish man who is a member of an ethnic minority group put it this way: “I worry when I go on the street that the police will stop me and ask me for my
papers
because of the color of my skin, by my tone of skin, by my way of walking.”
Of the 99
papers
reviewed for the health consultation, 15 came from organizations promoting sexual and reproductive health and rights, while only five were from NCD-focused groups (six if a paper from a group supported by the alcohol industry is included).
Two recent
papers
raise further doubts.
Long before the arrival of Muslim guest workers in the 1960’s and 1970’s Dutch society was in a sense ‘multicultural’ in that it was already organised into Protestant, Catholic, liberal and socialist “pillars,” each with its own schools, hospitals, TV stations,
papers
and political parties.
It is said that NBER working
papers
are even more prestigious than publication in refereed journals.
The parliamentary polls, originally scheduled for April 2 but postponed a week after the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) failed to print adequate ballot
papers
and other election materials, took place in an atmosphere of fear, violence, and uncertainty.
The resulting research
papers
offer the first-ever comprehensive attempt at cost-benefit analysis of AIDS priorities.
But her adoption of a boy from Malawi whose mother had died and whose farmer father could not feed him has filled opinion pages in serious
papers
everywhere.
More appealing, however, was the possibility of tracking the scholarly influence of oneself and others over time and across fields, and identifying the most highly cited scientists, papers, journals, and institutions.
H-index accounting is straightforward: if a researcher publishes 20
papers
that have each been cited at least 20 times, she has an h-index of 20.
If she publishes 34 papers, each cited at least 34 times, she earns an h-index of 34.
Last year, five MPs in the upper house of India’s parliament were suspended for charging up to the presiding officer’s desk, wrenching his microphone and tearing up his
papers.
But in Britain, Conservative politicians and right-wing
papers
like the Daily Telegraph are now in high dudgeon about the alleged anti-Semitism of some Labour MPs.
Based on published research papers, the country accounts for 64% of all research undertaken in Africa.
In fact, a lethal dose of nicotine is a lot higher than the 30-60 milligrams that many scientific
papers
claim.
The Reinhart/Rogoff papers’ basic finding continues to hold up: growth tends to be lower on average among countries with debt/GDP ratios above 90%.
Alesina’s influential
papers
with Roberto Perotti in 1995 and 1997, and with Silvia Ardagna in 1998 and 2010 suggested that fiscal contraction is not contractionary, and that it may even be expansionary.
As with Reinhart and Rogoff, the Alesina
papers
themselves are much more measured in their conclusions than one would think from the claims of some conservative politicians that such academic research finds fiscal austerity to be expansionary in general.
Perotti, his co-author on two articles, has now recanted, owing to methodological problems (which also affect Alesina’s later
papers
with Ardagna).
Today, scientists are rewarded for how many
papers
they publish, and in which journals.
But the discoveries and published
papers
rarely benefit the people who enable this research by donating their blood and other tissue samples.
As Michael Nielsen discusses in his recent book Reinventing Discovery, the “publish or perish” mentality that dominates the field means that many substandard or incomplete
papers
are published, while those people who are supposed to benefit from the research are often little more than an afterthought.
With two seminal papers, Coase changed the way economists view institutions’ impact on an economy.
In her articles for one of the few remaining independent
papers
in Moscow, Novaya Gazeta, and in her books “Putin's Russia: Life in a Failing Democracy” and “A Dirty War: A Russian Reporter in Chechnya,” Politkovskaya wrote of the vanishing freedoms that are the signature characteristic of Putin’s presidency.
One of these
papers
concerned the special theory of relativity, which describes how space and time, or mass and energy, are mixed at high speeds.
As a result, undergraduate students struggle to understand even the abstracts of
papers
on the complex representations of microeconomic reality that fill research journals.
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