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marchvidkjaer.bsky.social
PhD student, Harvard Comparative Politics, Political Behavior, Political Economy https://marchvidkjaer.github.io/
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Didn't know it was an anti-fascist folk-song from Italy after WW2 - makes the moment all the more meaningful.
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Great job, Ryan
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Was just reading your edited volume on elite studies from 2018. Congratulations on retirement, and thank you for your work.
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Hvorfor skal man leve der?
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And we continue the stand:
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Closes on anti-semitism, deports revokes 160 Israeli's visa
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maybe controversial (??), but I think a lot has to do with a view of universities as being functionally undergrad focused institutions - as seen in movies or on cable news That’s many universities, yes But Harvard is not that It is a biomedical complex with a small undergrad college attached
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Huge! I'm love the dataset. It is so fascinating. Thank you!
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Well, some users...
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Sandt, så sandt...
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Thanks for the effort put into this article, Nick.
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Or maybe hard to read in bites. Easier with the pdf.
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That is one heavy abstract.
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The main function with management bullshit is political, not functional. That cannot be easily automated.
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cc @jacobnyrup.bsky.social - jeg slog ham fordi han er kodet som uddannet i USA i pathes to power, men jeg kan ikke se, at han faktisk har været omkring de egne.
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I get that these are semantics, and I don't want to waste your time, but it was just hard for me to draw the line w.r.t. "conventional" markets, and how not to think of them as matching markets, as long as an imaginable option to say no exists. Thanks for the lecture!
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Thank you, that makes sense. I was also just trying to make sense of the inverse - is a store or a taxi a matching market, if they have some sort of possibility to say no? A restaurant may say no if you are poorly dressed. And to that: does the presence of discrimination make it a matching market?
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would that make them a matching market? A very banal Q, but genuinely interested.
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A question for @alroth.bsky.social: when does a matching market become a normal market? I was thinking w. uber and airbnb: haven't these effectively just become markets where the price is taken/accepted? A regular cab or hotel could also discriminate against customers, not wanting to serve them;
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all the more interesting
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And interestingly enough, this was sent to me from @jacobedenhofer.bsky.social - once again testimony that one can't follow up with that literature list, when he finds the articles in your country+field before you...
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and that it rather just matters to have a degree. This resonates a lot with me, and also highlighting the unique self-conception of nordic/danish pol.sci (statskundskab) graduates. And for the danish audience, below picture/interview captures the essence: www.euroman.dk/politik/bjar...