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ISER has an enviable publications record in top academic journals and regularly presents its work at key conferences and policy events in the UK and around the world. It is also frequently commissioned to produce reports and papers for Government Departments, think tanks, charities and businesses and its important work...
Displaying all 11 Publications
Current search: 'Conference Paper' and 'Franco Peracchi'
1. Estimating Income Poverty in the Presence of Measurement Error and Missing Data Problems
Cheti Nicoletti, Franco Peracchi, and Francesca Foliano
2. Estimating Income Poverty in the Presence of Measurement Error and Missing Data Problems
Cheti Nicoletti, Franco Peracchi, and Francesca Foliano
3. The Effects of Income Imputation on Micro Analyses: Evidence from the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
4. The Effects of Income Imputation on Micro Analyses: Evidence from the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
5. Survey Response and Survey Characteristics: micro-level evidence from the European Community Household Panel
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
6. The Effects of Income Imputation on Micro Analyses: Evidence from the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
7. Imputation Procedures and the Quality of Income Information in the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
8. A Cross-Country Comparison of Survey Nonparticipation in the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
9. A Cross-Country Comparison of Survey Nonparticipation in the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
10. Imputation Procedures and the Quality of Income Information in the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
11. A cross-country comparison of survey nonparticipation in the ECHP
Cheti Nicoletti and Franco Peracchi
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Asia Has Three Possible Futures
The competition between the United States and China will decide the continent’s fate—and one of them has a head start.
U.S. President Donald Trump takes part in a welcoming ceremony with China's President Xi Jinping on November 9, 2017 in Beijing, China.
U.S. President Donald Trump takes part in a welcoming ceremony with China's President Xi Jinping on November 9, 2017 in Beijing, China. Thomas Peter-Pool/Getty Images
I spent the last week of August in South Korea, attending a conference on security studies sponsored by the Korea National Defense University and giving lectures at the Chey Institute for Advanced Studies and at Sungkyunkwan University. As you might expect, the trip got me thinking about the evolving strategic environm...
At times like this, it’s useful to step back from today’s headlines and look at the big picture. And for a realist like me, the most important factors to consider are, first, the balance of power between the United States and China and, second, the likely response of other Asian countries to any significant shifts in t...
Looking ahead, one can imagine three main possibilities.
Scenario No. 1: In the first scenario, China continues to rise rapidly while the United States stumbles, due either to misguided domestic policies (such as unwise and poorly conceived tax cuts, underinvestment in education, inadequate financial regulation, political gridlock, etc.) or costly overseas quagmires and dist...
If this outcome were to occur—not immediately, but in the decades ahead—it is hard to imagine that the United States could maintain its present security position in Asia. A larger and increasingly wealthy China could eventually outspend the United States in an arms race, and its ever-improving technological capacities ...
It is possible that China’s Asian neighbors would join forces to balance against Beijing even if U.S. support were no longer available—as simple balance of power theory might predict—but there are reasons to wonder. Unless India had somehow managed to keep pace with China, a balancing coalition confined to Asia would s...
This vision of the future is undoubtedly Beijing’s preferred scenario, and Chinese President Xi Jinping has suggested as much in the past. Pushing the United States out of Asia and getting its immediate neighbors to defer to Chinese preferences would maximize Chinese security while making it easier for Beijing to proje...
Scenario No. 2: The gloomy scenario (from a U.S. perspective) sketched above is not inevitable. In fact, some scholars—most notably Michael Beckley of Tufts University—believe the opposite future is more likely. In this vision, it is China that will stumble while the United States defies the latest forecasts of inevita...
Prophets of U.S. decline were wrong in the 1980s, and they might well be wrong today. China faces a number of serious obstacles (an aging population, environmental degradation, lack of adequate water supplies, geopolitical constraints, restive minorities, financial imbalances, etc.), while the United States retains a n...
Should this future come to pass, the United States would still be ideally positioned to lead a balancing coalition in Asia. It already has good bilateral relations with key Asian countries (Japan, Australia, South Korea, Singapore, etc.), and its ties to India and ASEAN have been improving. The purpose of such a coalit...
In this world, it is pretty clear what most states in Asia will do. The United States will still be the most powerful state in the international system, but China’s proximity to its neighbors would make it more threatening to them. Accordingly, most states in Asia will be “regional balancers” and seek to maintain a clo...
Scenario No. 3: The second scenario might be best from a U.S. perspective, but the third scenario is the most likely. It assumes China continues to grow but the United States keeps pace. The current gap between the two may diminish somewhat, but China does not race past the United States and establish a clear and obvio...
It is not as clear how the rest of Asia would respond should the future unfold in this fashion, but realist theory suggests that most of them would still prefer to balance with the United States. Opting for neutrality will not be easy for any of them, as both the United States and China are likely to press would-be neu...
Which is not to say that this outcome is certain. As I’ve observed before, managing a balancing coalition in Asia is not an easy task, due to the vast distances involved, the unavoidable temptations to pass the buck or free-ride, the economic trade-offs involved, and the delicate relations between some Asian countries ...
And that is why the Trump administration’s performance is so disappointing and so worrisome. Instead of building on former President Barack Obama’s rebalancing effort and pushing the Trans-Pacific Partnership through the Republican-dominated Senate, President Donald Trump tore it up on his third day in office. Instead ...
The situation is far from irretrievable, but rescuing it will require a U.S. foreign-policy team that sees the big picture, knows how to set priorities, is adept at recruiting allied support, and refuses to be distracted by the shiny objects dangled by overvalued client states in less important regions. If present foll...
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
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Real Cowl Tail Tidy & Corbin Seat? - Honda Rebel 300 & 500 Forum
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post #1 of 12 (permalink) Old 05-25-2018, 09:09 PM Thread Starter
Junior Member
Join Date: May 2018
Posts: 2
Real Cowl Tail Tidy & Corbin Seat?
Hello,
I was wondering if anyone has attempted or knows if the Corbin seat fits with the Tail Tidy. I like the Corbin seat because of the small back passenger seat. (Not much but its good for a pinch, which is all I want) and the look. I would prefer the tidy to get ride of the brick, and I also like the look. Please let me k...
Links
Corbin Seat: Corbin Motorcycle Seats & Accessories | Honda Rebel | 800-538-7035
Tail Tidy: Honda Rebel CMX 300 - 500 Real Cowl Tail tidy with Light
Thanks.
Chris Ermel is offline  
post #2 of 12 (permalink) Old 05-25-2018, 09:23 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2018
Location: Long Beach, CA.
Posts: 669
Garage
I don't think so. The Corbin bolts in to the hole that you'd put the Honda passenger seat and that hole is approximately 11.5 inches from the back of the round bar that surrounds the stock seat. I don't believe that the cowl is even that long.
2019 Honda Shadow Aero 750, 2017 Honda Rebel 500 (SOLD), 2018 Kawasaki Vulcan S 650 (SOLD)
longbeachgary is offline