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Academic Calendar

April 29, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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Readings / Sherman Act of 1890

April 29, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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Standards & Patents

April 29, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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Showcase: A database for standards and patents

Rudi Bekkers

School of Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology

Christian Catalini

Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto

Arianna Martinelli

Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Toscana

Tim Simcoe

School of Management, Boston University

 

ABSTRACT: Disclosure of essential patents at standard-setting organizations provides a rich source of information that can be used for various research questions related to standards and innovation. Yet this data also has some limitations and its compilation and preparation create challenges. This paper summarizes a number of recent studies using this type of data and discusses recent efforts to create an open database.

CLICK HERE to order complete paper

H.R. 1046 Broadband Availability Data

April 25, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com

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117th Congress Swearing In Floor Proceedings – January 3, 2021, House Chamber

A BILL:

To require the Federal Communications Commission to provide broadband availability data to the Department of the Interior.

Readings / The New Worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus

April 25, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com

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The New Worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus is a sweeping global and intellectual history that radically recasts our understanding of Malthus’s Essay on the Principle of Population, the most famous book on population ever written or ever likely to be. Malthus’s Essay is also persistently misunderstood. First published anonymously in 1798, the Essay systematically argues that population growth tends to outpace its means of subsistence unless kept in check by factors such as disease, famine, or war, or else by lowering the birth rate through such means as sexual abstinence.

Challenging the widely held notion that Malthus’s Essay was a product of the British and European context in which it was written, Alison Bashford and Joyce Chaplin demonstrate that it was the new world, as well as the old, that fundamentally shaped Malthus’s ideas. They explore what the Atlantic and Pacific new worlds—from the Americas and the Caribbean to New Zealand and Tahiti—meant to Malthus, and how he treated them in his Essay. Bashford and Chaplin reveal how Malthus, long vilified as the scourge of the English poor, drew from his principle of population to conclude that the extermination of native populations by European settlers was unjust.

Elegantly written and forcefully argued, The New Worlds of Thomas Robert Malthus relocates Malthus’s Essay from the British economic and social context that has dominated its reputation to the colonial and global history that inspired its genesis.

 

 

S. 839 College Transparency Act

April 22, 2021
mike@standardsmichigan.com
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117th Congress Swearing In Floor Proceedings – January 3, 2021, House Chamber

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