Third-party uncurated documents
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This collection aims to curate documents that are not otherwise curated, and at risk of being lost to the scientific community. Selection criteria are
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Item Statistical Disclosure in Publication HierarchiesCox, Lawrence (American Statistical Association, Statistical Computing Section, 1976)None provided.Item Towards a methodology for statistical disclosure controlDalenius, Tore (Statistics Sweden, 1977)Item Original Sources and Research Concerning Census Bureau Efforts to Support Japanese InternmentJones, Christa D. (2017-05-22)With each decennial census for the last 40-50 years, the question of whether the Census Bureau provided confidential data to facilitate the evacuation and relocation of the Japanese Americans during World War II (i.e., the “Japanese internment”) rematerializes, seemingly never resolved. The question is important because it speaks to the Census Bureau’s integrity. The attached spreadsheet is a catalog of documents and materials from the National Archives and various research papers. I gathered these materials starting in the mid-2000s through 2017 for the purpose of examining the question of whether the Census Bureau provided confidential data during the critical planning and implementation phase of the Japanese Relocation Program, otherwise known as the Japanese internment.Item Executive Compensation: Six Questions That Need AnsweringAbowd, John M.; Kaplan, David (Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1999)This article address six questions concerning executive compensation, drawing on recent advances in the study of executive compensation, including the role of stock and option holdings: How much does executive compensation cost the firm? How much is executive compensation worth to the recipient? How well does executive compensation work? What are the effects of executive compensation? How much executive compensation is enough? Could executive compensation be improved? Our discussion will focus on the role of agency theory, which predicts that stock-based compensation will align executive and shareholder interests by linking the executive's compensation directly to increases in the market value of the company.Item 2008 Research Report: Center for Economic Studies and Research Data Centers(2009-05)The Center for Economic Studies partners with stakeholders within and outside the U.S. Census Bureau to improve measures of the economy and people of the United States through research and innovative data products.Item 2009 Research Report: Center for Economic Studies and Research Data Centers(2010-11)The Center for Economic Studies partners with stakeholders within and outside the U.S. Census Bureau to improve measures of the economy and people of the United States through research and innovative data products.
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