2007 Settlement and Default Handling Procedures in Multilateral and Deferred Net Settlement Systems under the PSS Act, 2007 By www.lawyersclubindia.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 12:07:28 GMT Settlement and Default Handling Procedures in Multilateral and Deferred Net Settlement Systems under the PSS Act, 2007 Full Article
2007 Mandriva Linux Security Advisory 2007.226 By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 22:26:07 GMT Mandriva Linux Security Advisory - Some vulnerabilities were discovered and corrected in the Linux 2.6 kernel. The minix filesystem code allows local users to cause a denial of service (hang) via a malformed minix file stream. An integer underflow in the Linux kernel prior to 2.6.23 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash) via a crafted SKB length value in a runt IEEE 802.11 frame when the IEEE80211_STYPE_QOS_DATA flag is set. Full Article
2007 Mandriva Linux Security Advisory 2007.232 By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 01:19:35 GMT Mandriva Linux Security Advisory - Some vulnerabilities were discovered and corrected in the Linux 2.6 kernel. The minix filesystem code allows local users to cause a denial of service (hang) via a malformed minix file stream. An integer underflow in the Linux kernel prior to 2.6.23 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash) via a crafted SKB length value in a runt IEEE 802.11 frame when the IEEE80211_STYPE_QOS_DATA flag is set. Full Article
2007 02062007-raptor_winudf.tgz By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Feb 2007 05:08:50 GMT This is a MySQL backdoor kit for Windows based on the UDFs (User Defined Functions) mechanism. It can be used to spawn a reverse shell (netcat UDF on port 80/tcp) or to execute single OS commands (exec UDF). Tested on MySQL 4.0.18-win32 (running on Windows XP SP2), MySQL 4.1.22-win32 (running on Windows XP SP2), MySQL 5.0.27-win32 (running on Windows XP SP2). Full Article
2007 Technical Cyber Security Alert 2007-163A By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Jun 2007 01:25:48 GMT Technical Cyber Security Alert TA07-163A - Microsoft has released updates that address critical vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows, Windows Secure Channel, Internet Explorer, Win32 API, Windows Mail and Outlook Express. Exploitation of these vulnerabilities could allow a remote, unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code or cause a denial of service on a vulnerable system. Full Article
2007 SYMSA-2007-012.txt By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 18:13:58 GMT Symantec Vulnerability Research SYMSA-2007-012 - Microsoft Windows CE suffers from a IGMP related denial of service vulnerability. Full Article
2007 Lawbite: Tenancy deposit scheme and pre-2007 tenancies By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2015-01-05 Charalambous and another v Ng and another [2014] EWCA Civ 1604 The courts continue to produce surprising decisions in relation to the tenancy deposit scheme introduced by the Housing Act 2004, applying it in certain respects to tenancies granted bef... Full Article
2007 Procurement Briefing Issue 1 2007 - Bidder beware? By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2007-01-17 ... Full Article
2007 Procurement Briefing Issue 2 2007 - Tendering burdens removed in electricity and gas supply markets By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2007-03-15 ... Full Article
2007 Regional Cooperation and Integration Fund, 2007–2019 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-01-24 00:00:00 ONGOING EVALUATION. : This evaluation will assess the performance of the Regional Cooperation and Integration Fund (RCIF) against its establishment objectives and provide recommendations for its future directions. Full Article Evaluation Document
2007 Trends in Outpatient Procedural Sedation: 2007-2018 By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T01:00:46-07:00 BACKGROUND: Pediatric subspecialists routinely provide procedural sedation outside the operating room. No large study has reported trends in outpatient pediatric procedural sedation. Our purpose in this study was to identify significant trends in outpatient procedural sedation using the Pediatric Sedation Research Consortium. METHODS: Prospectively collected data from 2007 to 2018 were used for trending procedural sedation. Patient characteristics, medications, type of providers, serious adverse events, and interventions were reported. The Cochran–Armitage test for trend was used to explore the association between the year and a given characteristic. RESULTS: A total of 432 842 sedation encounters were identified and divided into 3 4-year epochs (2007–2011, 2011–2014, and 2014–2018). There was a significant decrease in infants <3 months of age receiving procedural sedation (odds ratio = 0.97; 95% confidence interval, 0.96–0.98). A large increase was noticed in pediatric hospitalists providing procedural sedation (0.6%–9.5%; P < .001); there was a decreasing trend in sedation by other providers who were not in emergency medicine, critical care, or anesthesiology (13.9%–3.9%; P < .001). There was an increasing trend in the use of dexmedetomidine (6.3%–9.3%; P < .001) and a decreasing trend in the use of chloral hydrate (6.3%–0.01%; P < .001) and pentobarbital (7.3%–0.5%; P < .001). Serious adverse events showed a nonsignificant increase overall (1.35%–1.75%). CONCLUSIONS: We report an increase in pediatric hospitalists providing sedation and a significant decrease in the use of chloral hydrate and pentobarbital by providers. Further studies are required to see if sedation services decrease costs and optimize resource use. Full Article
2007 Advances in exploration geochemistry, 2007 to 2017 and beyond By geea.lyellcollection.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T00:30:32-07:00 Mineral exploration under relatively young, exotic cover still presents a major challenge to discovery. Advances and future developments can be categorized in four key areas, (1) understanding metal mobility and mechanisms, (2) rapid geochemical analyses, (3) data access, integration and interoperability and (4) innovation in laboratory-based methods. Application of ‘regolith-style' surface mapping in covered terrains outside of conventional lateritic terrains is achieving success in terms of reducing background noise and improving geochemical contrasts. However, process models for anomaly generation are still uncertain and require further research. The interaction between the surface environment, microbes, hydrocarbons and chemistry is receiving greater attention. While significant progress has been achieved in understanding the role of vegetation, interaction with the water table and cycling of metals in the near surface environment in Australia, other regions of the world, for example, the till-covered terrains in the northern hemisphere and arid colluvium-covered areas of South America, have seen less progress. In addition to vegetation, the influence of bacteria, fungi and invertebrates is not as well studied with respect to metal mobilization in cover. Field portable XRF has become a standard field technique, though more often used in a camp setting. Apart from a tweaking of analytical quality, instruments have probably reached their peak of analytical development with add-ons, such as cameras, beam-limiters, wireless transmission and GPS as the main differences between instrument suppliers. Their future rests in automated application in unconventional configurations, for example, core scanning and better integration of analytical data with other information such as spectral analyses. Pattern drilling that persists in industry, however, has benefited from innovative application of field-portable tools along with rock and mineral chemistry to provide near real-time results and assist in a shift toward more flexible and targeted drilling in greenfields settings. Innovation in the laboratory continues to progress. More selective geochemical analysis, imaging of fine particle size fractions and resistate mineral phases and isotope analysis are faster and more accessible than ever before. The application of genomics (and data analysis) as mineral exploration tools is on the horizon. A continuing problem in geoscience, the supply to industry of suitably trained geochemists, persists although some needs, particularly at junior level, will be met by recent initiatives at various universities at graduate level. Unfortunately, the current economic climate has had a significant impact on R&D and retention of geochemistry skills by the industry. Whilst the future is positive, significant investment is required to develop the next generation of geochemical exploration tools and concepts. Thematic collection: This article is part of the Exploration 17 collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/exploration-17 Full Article
2007 RPGCast – Episode 346: “RPG Caster 2007 XP JOKER” By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 02 May 2015 20:30:05 +0000 Square Enix decides to just make FFXV a constantly updated demo. NISA decides that you really should play The Witch and the Hundred Knight. Female... Full Article News Podcasts RPG Cast
2007 Nacogdoches, Texas, Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Role in 2007 Murders By www.justice.gov Published On :: Wed, 22 Jun 2011 10:35:15 EDT A Nacogdoches, Texas, man has been sentenced to life in federal prison for his role in a double homicide that took place in Nacogdoches in August 2007, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney John M. Bales for the Eastern District of Texas. Full Article OPA Press Releases
2007 Ship Owners and Operators to Pay $44 Million in Damages and Penalties for 2007 San Francisco - Oakland Bay Bridge Crash and Oil Spill By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 19 Sep 2011 16:57:18 EDT Federal, state and Bay-area officials announced a comprehensive civil settlement with the owners and operators of the M/V Cosco Busan, resolving all natural resource damages, penalties and response costs that resulted from the ship striking the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in 2007, and subsequent oil spill in the San Francisco Bay. Full Article OPA Press Releases
2007 India Policy Forum 2007/08 - Volume 4: Editors' Summary By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Sun, 01 Jul 2007 15:34:00 -0400 The fourth volume of the India Policy Forum features papers on schooling inequality, the duration of microfinance groups, sub-national fiscal flows, and reform of the power sector, land policies, and higher education. Suman Bery, Barry Bosworth, and Arvind Panagariya edited the volume. The editors' summary appears below, and you can download a PDF version of the volume: Download India Policy Forum 2007-2008 - Volume 4 (PDF) » Download the 2007-2008 India Policy Forum conference agenda » Download individual articles: The Political Economy of the Indian Fiscal Federation Can Schooling Policies Affect Schooling Inequality? An Empirical Evaluation of School Location Policies in India Mortgaging the Future? Indian Higher Education Microfinance Lifespans: A Study of Attrition and Exclusion in Self-Help Groups in India EDITORS' SUMMARY The India Policy Forum held its fourth conference on July 17 and 18 of 2007 in New Delhi. This issue of the journal contains the papers and the discussions presented at the conference. The first paper examines the fiscal relationship between the Central Government and the states of India. The next two papers focus on the Indian educational system, specifically the social implications of government policies governing access to primary and secondary schools, and the challenges facing the country’s system of higher education. The fourth paper evaluates the performance of an important component of India’s microfinance system. Finally, the fifth paper provides an assessment of recent efforts to reform the distribution segment of the electric power industry. In addition to the working sessions of the conference, T.N. Srinivasan of Yale University, a member of the advisory panel, delivered a public lecture on the topic of: “Economic Reforms, External Opening and Growth: China and India.” The Political Economy of the Indian Fiscal Federation Despite massive unfulfilled need and repeated rhetorical commitment to increase public spending, public expenditure in India on education and health has never exceeded more than 3.3 and 1.3 percent of GDP, respectively. Implementing such spending, and to a large degree paying for it, is the responsibility of India’s states. In her paper, Indira Rajaraman argues that an important explanation for this persistently low level of spending lies in the nature of fiscal transfer arrangements in India’s federal structure, particularly the unpredictable and discretionary nature of significant components of these transfers. The assignment of expenditure responsibilities and revenue rights in India gives rise to a vertical fiscal gap at the sub-national (state) level. The closure of this gap is provided for by the appointment, every five years, of a constitutional body called the Finance Commission. The report of each Commission, once accepted by the government, prospectively defines the formula for statutory flows from the national government (the “Center”) for the succeeding quinquennium. Such statutory flows from the Center to the states are predictable in relation to the underlying tax base, are pre-defined both in aggregate and in their distribution between states, and are unconditional. In Rajaraman’s view, these are all desirable properties to permit states to make multi-year expenditure commitments of the kind needed for provision of primary education and health. However, such statutory flows represent only part of the story. In the years before 2005, statutory flows never exceeded 60 percent of the total flow. The remaining Center–state transfers took place under a range of nonstatutory mechanisms, largely under the control of an extra-constitutional body called the Planning Commission, and were unpredictable in aggregate from year to year. While initially entirely discretionary, in 1969–70 the inter-state allocation of a portion of these “Plan” transfers was in turn subjected to a periodically revised formula (commonly referred to as the “Gadgil Formula”). However, this formulaic distribution was accompanied by a shift from a full grant basis to one comprising 70 percent loans and 30 percent grant. This shift to borrowed funds rather than grants implicitly altered incentives away from health and education state-level spending, which were unable to bear the ensuing interest burden. This disincentive, associated with the loan component, led to a gradual reduction in the share of this formulaic component in overall non-statutory flows. Against this policy and institutional background, the paper performs three empirical exercises to determine the year-to-year changes in the share in grants from the Center received by states in aggregate that was not subject to formula and therefore open to bargaining by the states. The first empirical exercise quantifies the non-formulaic bargaining margin within aggregate flows for each year of the period 1951–2007, and estimates it to have varied inversely with an index of political fractionalization in the federation. As fractionalization increased, the formulaic share rose. The system thus fluctuated in response to changes in the political situation. This instability is inappropriate for funding requirements of basic developmental services. The second exercise tests whether the control over aggregate state borrowing from the financial markets (constitutionally vested at the national level, and an important force for macroeconomic stability) represents opportunistic behavior influenced by the national electoral cycle. The difference between the consolidated fiscal imbalance, or deficit (aggregated across national and state levels), and the imbalance for the Central Government alone, provides a proxy measure for measuring the extent of sub-national borrowing from financial markets. The consolidated fiscal imbalance is shown to have risen in years preceding Parliamentary elections. This is in contrast to the fiscal imbalance at the Center, which was not dictated by the electoral cycle. Taken together, the two sets of specifications strongly suggest that aggregate Central limits on state borrowing from financial markets were raised in pre-election years. This inter-temporal variability, together with the spatial distortions implicit in the opaque system for allocating borrowing entitlements across the states in all years, further adds to the fiscal uncertainty faced by states, and inhibits orderly and sustained planning. The third empirical exercise deals with a major initiative that commenced in 2005 to reduce the accumulated debt burden of the states. The proposal to reduce this debt originated from the Finance Commission, and addressed debt owed by the states to the Center arising from the loan component of Plan transfers mentioned earlier. The debt relief was to be granted in exchange for promises of fiscal adjustment. The Finance Commission took the view, later endorsed by Parliament, that the differences in initial conditions across states should be taken into account in setting such conditionality. However the conditionality actually imposed by executive action at the Center envisaged a common terminal year deficit level for all states, implying a difference in the magnitude of adjustment that varies by as much as 10 percent of state GDP, with presumed adverse consequences, once again, for the stable provision of essential state level developmental services. Starting in 2005–06, there has been a regime change with the replacement of direct Central lending to states for Plan expenditure, with a more inflexible system of caps on state borrowing as part of the conditionality for the above-mentioned debt concessions. Thus, the kinds of uncertainties and patterns in aggregate borrowing limits on states will not be visible for a while longer. Rajaraman further notes that there has been a fall over the last ten years in the share of state expenditure in overall public spending on health and education because of the huge new Central expenditures on primary education and mid-day meals in schools, which are not routed through states. Thus, the policy response has been to alter the pattern of functional responsibility, rather than restoration to the states of their constitutionally assigned functions, with correction of the adverse incentives that became embedded in the de facto structure of sub-national funding. Finally, Rajaraman also uses the empirical exercises to draw implications for the nature of dialogue between the Center and the states regarding fiscal matters. She notes the absence of a dispute-resolution forum where the de facto functioning of fiscal arrangements can be subjected to continual examination and monitoring by all partners to the federation. Within such a forum, major issues spanning Central transfers, revenue rights, expenditure externalities, and unfunded mandates, could be resolved in a participatory framework. Its need is likely to become even more urgent as India moves to an integrated nation-wide goods and services tax (GST), where the direct role of the states in revenue collection would be even more restricted, and the need for a broad review of fiscal federal arrangements even more urgent. Can Schooling Policies Affect Schooling Inequality? An Empirical Evaluation of School Location Policies in India Over the past several decades, a primary tool used by the Government of India to improve school enrollments, particularly those of the Scheduled Castes (SCs), has been the expansion of access to schools. To this end, the government has long embraced the objective of providing a school within easy walking distance from each rural household. In her paper, Anjini Kochar argues that in implementing this policy, scant attention was paid to the fact that targeting access to schools as a primary objective may constrain the government in addressing other critical aspects of schools, particularly those related to school quality. This is because decisions regarding the location of schools determine more than just access to schools; they combine with the residential structure of a society to define the school community, and hence school characteristics known to affect schooling attainment. According to Kochar, it is the nature of residential communities in rural India that makes this trade-off between access and quality likely. Rural India resides in habitations—distinct residential settlements within a village— which vary in size but are, on average, fairly small. Because habitations are generally organized along caste lines, the rural economy is thus characterized by a considerable degree of caste-based segregation. The stated policy objective of providing a school within easy walking distance of each household, in conjunction with the geographic distance across habitations, requires the government to adopt a policy that provides schools to relatively small habitations and frequently results in multiple schools within a village. Therefore, the paper argues that the current school location policy does not permit an optimal allocation of schools based upon enrollment or size. Because school enrollment determines the availability of inputs such as the number of teachers, there is a corresponding variation in the number of teachers per school. To the extent that this attribute of schools affects schooling attainment, Kochar argues that the policy generates schooling inequality across regions, with schools in smaller habitations being of generally lower quality than those in larger habitations. School location policies also affect the caste composition of the student population. When schools are provided in SC habitations as well as in the other habitations of a village, the residential segregation that characterizes the village gets translated into a corresponding system of de facto schooling segregation. The corresponding difference in the caste composition of students across village schools is also likely to affect schooling attainment. The paper explores these hypotheses empirically, examining the relationship between school enrollments and availability of schools within habitations, as well as the effect of the number of teachers and the prevalence of schooling segregation. To identify the effect of these school attributes, Kochar uses the policy rules that determine whether a school can be placed in a habitation and the number of teachers assigned to a school. These rules are specified at the district level, and are implemented by the government based on district level data on habitations collected in the All India Education Surveys (AIES). The paper uses this same data that guides policy decisions, and relates it to household data from the Government of India’s National Sample Surveys. The use of policy rules specific to the attributes in question, and the availability of the data that guides current policy decisions, provides a compelling source of identification. To assess the effects of school segregation, Kochar uses the insight that schooling segregation exists only when schools are provided in the SCs/STs (Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes) habitations. Because the AIES data also provide information on the size distribution of SC/ST habitations, it is possible to identify the probability of schools being located in SC/ST habitations (a proxy for schooling segregation) separately from the overall effect of school availability. The paper has two principal findings. First, based on the size distribution of habitations within a district, the author finds that the current policy rules do affect access, but they also affect teacher numbers and schooling segregation. The regression analysis shows that schools with two or fewer teachers experience reduced enrollments. The results on teacher availability suggest that the decision to provide schools even to relatively small habitations generates a source of schooling inequality: children who reside in small habitations with schools attend schools of poorer quality than those who reside in larger habitations. Second, the author finds that school location policies also perpetuate caste-based inequalities. Since the SC habitations are generally smaller than others, this means that SC schools are of lower quality, as measured in terms of the availability of teachers. The empirical results show an asymmetric effect of schooling segregation by caste: children of upper castes benefit significantly while segregation has little effect on the SCs. The benefits of living in districts with widespread access to schools therefore vary by caste. The results of the paper suggest that improvements in school quality cannot be affected without re-considering the government’s school location policies. Kochar admits, however, that improving school quality along the dimensions considered in the paper is no easy task. She suggests an alternative policy that consolidates habitation schools to provide one school in each village, which would enable an optimal number of teachers in each school and thereby improve schooling attainment. While the greater distance to school implied by such a consolidation, particularly for children from the SC/ST habitations, may reduce access, the paper argues that the savings generated by the consolidation could be used to implement a system of cash transfers to children from the SC and the ST conditional on their school attendance records. The positive effects from increased teachers and economies of scale are enough to provide cause for a reconsideration of school location policy in India. Mortgaging the Future? Indian Higher Education The higher education system in India also faces troubling distortions and suboptimal outcomes. In their paper, Kapur and Mehta argue that the vast majority of institutions of higher learning are incapable of producing students with skills and knowledge. Attendance does not serve as a screening system for the vast bulk of students, nor does it prepare students to be productive and responsible citizens. The current system is highly centralized, politicized, and militates against the production of general intellectual virtues. It may come as no surprise then, that the last few years have witnessed a rapid rise in skill premiums in India despite the country’s huge population. Kapur and Mehta maintain that the poor state of the sector and the recent rise in skill premiums can be largely explained by the regulatory bottlenecks facing Indian higher education. Despite impressive reforms elsewhere, Indian higher education remains one the last bastions of the “license control raj”—with troubling implications for India’s future. The paper argues that the result is a state of crisis in Indian higher education notwithstanding the success of a few professional schools. The fact that the system produces a noticeable number of high-quality students is largely the result of Darwinian selection mechanisms and very little because of pedagogic achievements. According to the authors, the most acute weakness plaguing India’s higher education system is a crisis of governance, both of system and of individual institutions. Because the prevailing political ideological climate views elite institutions as anti-democratic, there is a natural response in political circles to influence admissions policies, internal organization, and the structure of courses and funding. The paper provides data to show that there has been a massive increase in both private higher education and the flight of elites to foreign educational institutions. However, the private sector also suffers from regulatory obstacles and governance weaknesses, raising doubts as to its ability to address the huge latent demand for quality higher education in the country. From the perspective of the three key suppliers of Indian higher education—markets, the state, and civil society (philanthropy)—the authors elaborate on six significant distortions. First, the process of regulatory approvals diminishes the capacity of private investment to respond to market needs. Second, the regulatory process produces an adverse selection in the kind of entrepreneurs that invest since the success of a project depends less upon the pedagogic design of the project and more on the ability to manipulate the regulatory system. Third, there are significant market failures in acquiring physical assets that are necessary for educational institutions, especially land. Fourth, regulatory approvals are extremely rigid with regard to infrastructure requirements (irrespective of costs or location) and academic conformity to centrally mandated course outlines, degree structures, and admissions policies. Fifth, a key element of a well-functioning market — competition—is distorted by restricting foreign universities from setting up campuses in India, which limits benchmarking to global standards. Sixth, another central element of a well-functioning market, informational transparency, is woefully inadequate. The university system in India is the collateral damage of Indian politics. As the paper demonstrates, the dismal educational outcomes are not the result of limited resources. For politicians, the benefits of the license-control raj extend beyond old-fashioned rent seeking by manipulating contracts, appointments, admissions, and grades in government-run colleges and universities to the use of higher education for vote-banks, partisan politics, and as a source of new entrepreneurial activities. The authors identify three key variables that help to clarify the political economy of India’s higher education: the structure of inequality in India, the principal cleavages in Indian politics, and the nature of the Indian state. India is an outlier in the extreme degree of educational inequality, which has led to a populist redistributive backlash. However, the specific redistributive mechanisms are conditioned by the principal cleavages in Indian politics and the nature of the Indian state. The growth of identity politics has sharply enhanced political mobilization around two key cleavages in Indian society: caste and religion. Consequently, redistributive measures follow these two cleavages rather than other possibilities such as income, region (urban–rural), or gender. Thus, the focus on redistribution helps explain why Indian politicians have obsessed over reservations (that is, quota-based affirmative action) in elite institutions of higher education rather than improvements in the quality of primary and secondary schooling, and the thousands of colleges of abysmal quality. The consequences of the preceding political economy are onerous. One, a diminished signaling effect of higher education; two, an ideological entrapment between what the authors call half-baked socialism and halfbaked capitalism, with the benefits of neither; and three, a pathology of statism wherein higher education policy is being driven foremost by the state’s own interest (or perhaps its own ideological whims). Much of what goes in the name of education policy is a product of the one overriding commitment of the education bureaucracy—namely state control in as many ways as possible. The paper also highlights the role of the Indian judiciary in higher education reforms, arguing that it has done as much to confuse as to clarify the existing regulatory framework. Although there has been a distinct shift in the Supreme Court’s stance in the past decade, its primary response does not always center on what will enable the education system to adequately respond to demands. Rather, it has uneasily and often confusingly attempted to reconcile disparate principles, be it the dichotomy between education being a charitable or commercial enterprise, or the inherent tension between institutional autonomy and equitable access in higher education. Kapur and Mehta conclude with a few options for change moving forward. Market failure in higher education means that substantial public investment will continue to be critical in this sector. However, since there are few clear analytical criteria to address the central question of what is “good” higher education, the paper argues that a regulatory system that emphasizes diversity, flexibility, and experimentation is in the long run most likely to succeed. Such a system will also need a different conception of accountability than the one currently prevailing in the Indian system, where resource allocation decisions are centralized to an extreme degree in the Planning Commission, the Ministry of Human Resource Development, and the University Grants Commission. Its quality depends entirely upon the informational resources of a very small group of decision makers and presumes an omniscience that few decision makers can have. Instead India needs to move to a regulatory system with increased horizontal accountability that empowers students to make better informed decisions. Finally, Indian policy makers need to recognize that the competition for talent is now global and that only a combination of a flexible and supple state system that enlists the energies of the market as well as a committed non-profit sector will be able to meet the challenges and the vast scale of demand for higher education in India. The expansion of rural credit through the “formal” financial system has been a major goal of Indian policy since independence. While a number of initiatives (including nationalization of the country’s major commercial banks) have been taken over the years, success of these initiatives has been only partial. In 1992, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), India’s central bank and banking regulator, issued guidelines to the public sector commercial banks (which still dominate Indian banking) encouraging them to lend to small preformed groups called “self-help groups” (SHGs). These groups are almost always composed of rural women, and are often assisted by non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in their formation and their subsequent growth and development. While the scheme, sometimes called the “commercial bank–SHG linkage scheme”, was in part inspired by the success of Bangladesh’s Grameen Bank in sustainably widening access to financial services in that country, the Indian SHG scheme differs in several respects from the Bangladesh model, and therefore needs to be assessed in its own right. One such difference is the provision of subsidized refinancing to the commercial bank by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) (a publicly-owned affiliate of the RBI). The RBI reports that over 2.5 million of such groups have borrowed from commercial banks since 1992, and loan disbursements by commercial banks to SHGs were 29 percent of all direct bank credit to small farmers in 2004–05. Microfinance Lifespans: A Study of Attrition and Exclusion in Self-Help Groups in India However, in spite of the growing importance of SHGs as a source of credit to the poor, there is little systematic evidence on their internal functioning. The paper by Baland and Somanathan attempts to fill this informational gap by using survey data on SHGs created during the period 1998–2006. It does so by describing the survival of groups and members within groups, documenting group activities, and estimating the determinants of group and member duration using an econometric survival model. The data comes from a survey of 1,102 rural SHGs and the 16,800 women who were members of these groups at some point during the period 1998– 2006. It considers all groups formed by PRADAN (an NGO that has actively promoted SHGs since the start of the NABARD program) in the districts of Keonjhar and Mayurbhanj in northern Orissa, and the Raigarh district in the newly formed state of Chhattisgarh in central India. Although the group members are engaged in a variety of collective activities, saving and credit do seem the most important. Almost all groups surveyed had made small loans to their members and 68 percent of them had received at least one loan from a commercial bank. For those members who do borrow from the group the average size of the loan, provided from internal group funds, is Rs. 2,200 per year. For groups with at least one bank linkage, 83 percent of members in the group received some part of this loan, and the average amount received by these members is Rs. 2,189 per year. Although loan sizes provided by some specialized microfinance institutions are often larger, these SHG loans are sizable as a fraction of local earnings and, for women who received both group loans and bank loans, it corresponds to roughly two months of labor earnings at the minimum wage in these areas. The group members in many SHGs appear to be collectively involved in activities not directly related to credit. About 10 percent of the surveyed groups are involved in the preparation of school meals, 3 percent administer state programs that distribute subsidized foodgrains, and about half of them get involved in family or village conflicts or help members during periods of personal distress. These groups therefore seem to play a role in promoting solidarity networks in the community. The paper then estimates models of both group and member duration. It finds that factors behind group survival are quite different from those affecting member longevity. With respect to group survival, the highest attained level of education in the group is important for its survival, perhaps because some educated members are needed to facilitate transactions and ensure that group accounts are accurate. The presence of other SHGs in the area also has a positive effect on group duration. It may be that a dense cluster of groups allows for the sharing of costs, provides each group with ideas for successful activities, or simply instills in members the desire to survive, compete, and be part of a larger network. Drawing upon on a large literature pointing to the importance of social heterogeneity in collective action, the paper then explores whether such heterogeneity matters for the average duration of groups and the members within groups. For each member surveyed, the paper records both their individual caste group (or jati) and the “official” caste category to which they belong—ST, SC, Other Backward Castes (OBC), and a residual category often termed General Castes that we refer to as Forward Castes (FC). The particular question explored is whether heterogeneity matters for group functioning when members belong to different jatis in the same official caste category. The paper finds that commonly used measures of fractionalization and social heterogeneity based on these classifications do not have systematic effects on group survival, but that they do help explain the departure of individuals from groups. Even within broad caste categories, heterogeneity matters. This suggests that the “official” classifications fail fully to capture the relevant social hierarchy. The members from traditionally disadvantaged groups, especially from the ST, are more vulnerable to group heterogeneity. In addition to group heterogeneity, lower levels of education, lower landholdings, and fewer relatives within the SHG are also associated with higher rates of member exit. The paper also finds that the bulk of the difference in the duration of membership in a SHG observed between Chhattisgarh and Orissa can be attributed to characteristics of groups in these areas; the authors find that state-level variations in performance are negligible once these characteristics are incorporated in their model. The results suggest that it is problematic to evaluate the success of microfinance interventions based on conventionally reported coverage figures because they do not account for attrition. The authors’ concern is not with overall attrition rates but with the selectivity they exhibit. It is predominantly the poorer and socially marginalized communities that leave the SHG network and this makes it unlikely that women moving out of SHGs enter individual contracts with lending institutions. It also means that some of those in desperate need of credit cannot obtain it from within this sector. To arrive at concrete policy prescriptions for this sector, more information is needed about the financial opportunities available to members once they leave this sector and the extent to which SHG lending crowds out other types of lending to the poor. Although the duration of membership is only one, admittedly crude, measure of the performance of the microfinance sector, the study suggests that survey data which follows members and groups in this sector is critical to an assessment of Indian microfinance. The Power Sector in India: An Inquiry into the Efficacy of the Reform Process Electricity supply constitutes the most important infrastructure constraint on overall economic growth in India. While the telecommunications sector has gone through a revolution of increased service and lower prices, and signs of progress are visible in virtually all areas of transportation, progress in improving the performance of the electricity sector has been painfully slow. The paper by Saugata Bhattacharya and Urjit R. Patel examines the sources of the inefficiencies and undertakes an evaluation of the efforts to reform the industry’s distribution segment, which is dominated by state governments. The electricity sector can be divided into three segments: the generation of electricity using a variety of fuels; the transmission of electricity from generating plants over high voltage towers and lines to the major distribution points; and the distribution of electricity from distribution points to consumers whether industrial or residential. While both the Central Government and the states have the constitutional right to legislate in areas of generation and transmission, distribution is entirely under the jurisdiction of the states. Reform in the electricity sector is made far more difficult than in the telecommunications sector because it requires active participation from the states, which often lack the necessary technical, legal, and administrative talent as well as motivation. By the early 1960s, the electricity sector had become a vertically integrated monopoly in each state with generation, transmission, and distribution coming under a single umbrella known as the State Electricity Boards (SEBs). Recent reforms have resulted in the unbundling of these segments in many but not all states, and distribution has been delegated to autonomous distribution companies (discoms). With rare exceptions, the latter remain in the public sector. A key problem facing the electricity sector is the large magnitude of aggregate technical and commercial (ATC) losses. In effect, ATC losses reflect that fraction of power generation for which there is no remuneration. Nationally, they amounted to 37.2 percent of electricity generated in 2001–02. Electricity shortages could be considerably alleviated if these losses could be brought down to normal international levels. Bhattacharya and Patel analyze the success achieved in this area through a variety of reform efforts beginning in the early 2000s. They emphasize the state-by-state variation in performance as a means of identifying the most successful reform measures. The authors identify three specific reforms. First, SEBs, which buy electricity from central public sector generation companies, have traditionally accumulated large arrears with the latter. The Central Government offered them a one-time settlement (OTS) scheme provided they undertook a set of efficiency-enhancing steps. Second, the Central Government followed up the OTS with the Accelerated Power Development and Reform Program (APDRP) under which incentives were offered to undertake a variety of reforms. Finally, the government introduced the landmark Electricity Act of 2003 to bring about nation-wide systemic reforms in the sector. The authors study revenues and cash flows of discoms and SEBs to explain the connection between the reform initiatives and financial performance across states. They also devise a composite index of commercial orientation, which they call the Index of Revenue Orientation (IRO), and rank utilities according to it. The authors explore data over several years from a consistent group of SEBs/discoms on outcomes, and the concomitant key economic and financial parameters that indicate the effect of reform steps associated with SEBs/discoms. The analysis yields a number of provisional findings. First, at an aggregate level, the deterioration in the power sector has been arrested. The financial situation of the sector has eased and state government subsidies as a ratio to GDP have declined. The sector, nevertheless, is still far from financial viability. The key performance indicators, after having improved significantly in the immediate aftermath of the reform measures, seem to have stagnated after 2003–04. The ATC losses, while having dipped slightly from the 2000–01 crisis levels, remain very high. The basic problem is that although the sector is expected to have made a small cash profit at an all- India level in 2005–06, there are simply not enough resources in the state government-owned system to add capacity (and/or buy excess capacity from other systems) on any appreciable scale, let alone that which is required to power India’s economic growth. Second, there are significant differences across states and utilities in performance and related indicators (including average revenue realization, collection efficiency, composition of demand, power units input, cost of supply, and physical losses). Also, the variability in performance among states and among utilities has increased between 2001–02 and 2004–05. The outcomes and many of the underlying explanatory variables have exhibited even greater unevenness after the reform measures than in 2001–02. Some states have improved significantly and some have deteriorated sharply. Five utilities account for 80 percent of the total cash losses and another five utilities contribute 78 percent of the cash profits. Finally, using their IRO, authors note that the spread of performance between utilities increased in 2004–05, compared to the situation in 2001–02. While the average index value increased from 1.14 in 2001–02 to 1.3 in 2004–05, the associated standard deviation rose from 0.9 to 1.2. In other words, utilities had a more homogenous ordering of revenue orientation in 2001–02 than in 2004–05. The authors also show that the strongest influence on the extreme ends of the rankings in the IRO was the relative amount of power supplied to the subsidizing (industry) segment versus the subsidized (agriculture and residential) segment. What implications do these findings have for policy? Various utilities have placed emphasis on different strategies for enhancing revenues. The fragmented information indicates that there is significant progress in many of the basic inputs of utilities. These, however, do not seem to be rapidly translating into higher revenues and cash flows. The unevenness in performance among discoms suggests that there would be large gains to tariff setting at the level of discoms rather than states, or, even at the level of distribution circle and city. This would attract reliable suppliers to discoms or circles who are paying their bills and lead to lower tariffs in an area with low ATC losses. The variation of improvements in different states is also a warning sign of the increasing disparities in the ability of states to attract investments and foster growth. Authors Suman BeryBarry P. BosworthArvind Panagariya Publication: The Brookings Institution and National Council of Applied Economic Research Full Article
2007 2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Development's Changing Face - New Players, Old Challenges, Fresh Opportunities By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 01 Aug 2007 00:00:00 -0400 Event Information August 1-3, 2007 Register for the EventFrom a bureaucratic backwater in the waning days of the Cold War, the fight against global poverty has become one of the hottest tickets on the global agenda. The cozy, all-of-a-kind club of rich country officials who for decades dominated the development agenda has given way to a profusion of mega philanthropists, new bilaterals such as China, "celanthropists" and super-charged advocacy networks vying to solve the world's toughest problems. While philanthropic foundations and celebrity goodwill ambassadors have been part of the charitable landscape for many years, the explosion in the givers' wealth, the messaging leverage associated with new media and social networking, and the new flows of assistance from developing country donors and diasporas together herald a new era of global action on poverty. The new scale and dynamism of these entrants offer hopeful prospects for this continuing fight, even as the new entrants confront some of the same conundrums that official aid donors have grappled with in the past. On August 1-3, 2007, the Brookings Blum Roundtable gathered representatives reflective of this dynamic landscape to discuss these trends. Through robust discussion and continuing cross-sector partnerships, the conference hopes to foster lasting and widespread improvements in this new field of development. 2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable: Related Materials Read the roundtable report - Making Poverty History? How Activists, Philanthropists, and the Public Are Changing Global Development » Download the participant list » (PDF) Download the scene setter » (PDF) 2007 Brookings Blum Roundtable Agenda: Fighting Global Poverty: Who'll Be Relevant In 2020? Matthew Bishop, The Economist, "Fighting Global Poverty: Who'll Be Relevant In 2020?" Homi Kharas, The Brookings Institution, "The New Reality Of Aid" Jane Nelson, Harvard University, "New Development Players And Models" Angelina, Bono, And Me: New Vehicles To Engage The Public Darrell M. West, Brown University, "Angelina, Mia, And Bono: Celebrities And International Development" Joshua Busby, University of Texas, Austin, "Is There A Constituency For Global Poverty? Jubilee 2000 And The Future Of Development Advocacy" Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, The Brookings Institution, "Nigeria's Fight For Debt Relief: Tracing The Path" Leveraging Knowledge For Development Ashok Khosla, Development Alternatives Group, "Leveraging Knowledge To End Poverty" Eric Brewer, University of California, Berkeley, "Development And Engineering" Social Enterprise And Private Enterprise Chaired by: Mary Robinson, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative J. Gregory Dees, Duke University, "Philanthropy And Enterprise: Harnessing The Power Of Business And Entrepreneurship For Social Change" Africa's Economic Successes: What's Worked And What's Next Moderated by: Paul Martin, former Prime Minister of Canada Panelists Donald Kaberuka, African Development Bank Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, The Brookings Institution Effecting Change Through Accountable Channels Jane Nelson, Harvard University, "Effecting Change Through Accountable Channels" Simon Zadek, AccountAbility, "Accountability Compacts: Collaborative Governance For The 21stCentury" Global Impact: Philanthropy Changing Development Mark R. Kramer, FSG Social Impact Advisors, "Philanthropy, Aid, And Investment: Creating A Common Language" Joseph O'Keefe, The Brookings Institution, "Aid - From Consensus To Competition?" Keynote Address Former Vice President Al Gore, Generation Investment Management Full Article
2007 2007 CUSE Annual Conference: French Elections, Afghanistan and European Demographics By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Mon, 30 Apr 2007 00:00:00 -0400 Event Information Falk AuditoriumThe Brookings Institution1775 Massachusetts Ave., NWWashington, DC Register for the EventOn April 30, 2007, the Brookings Center on the United States and Europe held its fourth annual conference. As in previous years, the annual conference brought together scholars, officials, and policymakers from both sides of the Atlantic to examine the evolving roles of the United States and Europe in the global arena. Panel discussions covered some critical issues about Europe and the U.S.-Europe relationship: "The French Elections", "NATO and Afghanistan" and "Islam in Europe". Panelists included, among others, Lt. General Karl Eikenberry, Deputy Chairman of the NATO Military Committee; Ashraf Ghani, former Finance Minister of Afghanistan; Tufyal Choudhury of Durham University; Philip Gordon of the Brookings Institution; and Corine Lesnes from Le Monde. 8:30 a.m. Continental breakfast available 8:50 a.m. Welcome and Introduction Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution 9:00 - 10:30 a.m. "The French Elections"Chair: Jim Hoagland, The Washington PostPanelists: Laurent Cohen-Tanugi, Skadden Arps; Notre EuropeCorine Lesnes, Le MondePhilip Gordon, The Brookings Institution 10:30 - 10:45 p.m. Break 10:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. "NATO in Afghanistan" Chair: Carlos Pascual, The Brookings InstitutionPanelists:Lt. General Karl Eikenberry, Deputy Chairman of the NATO Military Committee Ashraf Ghani, former Finance Minister of AfghanistanMarvin Weinbaum, Middle East Institute 12:15 - 1:30 p.m. Buffet Lunch (Saul/Zilkha) 1:30 - 3:00 p.m. "Islam in Europe"Chair: Jeremy Shapiro, The Brookings InstitutionPanelists:Daniel Benjamin, The Brookings InstitutionTufyal Choudhury, Durham UniversityJonathan Laurence, Boston CollegeThe Center on the United States and Europe Annual Conference is made possible by the generous support of the German Marshall Fund of the United States Transcript Transcript (.pdf) Event Materials 20070430 Full Article
2007 Brookings Trade Forum 2007 By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Tentative contents include: • China and FDI John Whalley (University of Western Ontario) and Xian Xin (China Agricultural University) • Productivity and Taxes as Drivers of FDI Assaf Razin (Tel Aviv University and Cornell University) and Efraim Sadka (Tel Aviv University) • How to Investigate the Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on Development and Use… Full Article
2007 Income growth has been negligible but (surprise!) inequality has narrowed since 2007 By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Fri, 22 Jul 2016 11:55:00 -0400 Alert voters everywhere realize the economy is neither as strong as claimed by the party in power nor the disaster described by the opposition. The election season will bring many passionate but dubious claims about economic trends. People running for office know that voters rank the economy near the top of their concerns. Of course, perceptions of the economy differ from one voter to the next. A few of us are soaring, more are treading water, and too many are struggling just to stay afloat. Since reaching a low point in 2009, total U.S. output—as measured by real GDP—has climbed 15 percent, or about 2.1 percent a year. The recovery has been long-lived and steady, a tribute to the stewardship of the Administration and Federal Reserve. The economic rebound has also been disappointingly slow in view of the depth of the recession. GOP office seekers will mention this fact a number of times before November. Compared with the worst months of the Great Recession, the unemployment rate has dropped by half. It now stands at a respectable 4.9 percent, almost 3 points lower than the rate when President Obama took office and far below the rate in fall 2009 when it reached 10 percent. Payroll employment has increased for 77 consecutive months. Since hitting a low in January 2010, the number of workers on employer payrolls has surged 14.6 million, or about 190,000 a month. While the job gains are encouraging, they have not been fast enough to bring the employment-to-population ratio back to its pre-recession level. June’s job numbers showed that slightly less than 80 percent of adults between 25 and 54 were employed. That’s almost 2 percentage points below the employment-to-population rate on the eve of the Great Recession. One of the most disappointing numbers from the recovery has been the growth rate of wages. In the first 5 years of the recovery, hourly wages edged up just 2 percent a year. After factoring in the effect of consumer price inflation, this translates into a gain of exactly 0 percent. The pace of wage gain has recently improved. Workers saw their real hourly pay climb 1.7 percent a year in the two years ending in June. The economic bottom line for most of us is the rate of improvement in our family income after accounting for changes in consumer prices. No matter how household income is measured, income gains have been slower since 2007 than they were in earlier decades. The main reason is that incomes produced in the market—in the form of wages, self-employment income, interest, dividends, rental income, and realized capital gains—fell sharply in the Great Recession and have recovered very slowly since then. That a steep recession would cause a big drop in income is hardly a surprise. Employment, company profits, interest rates, and rents plunged in 2008 and 2009, pushing down the incomes Americans earn in the market. The bigger surprise has been the slow recovery of market income once the recession was behind us. Some critics of the recovery argue that the income gains in the recovery have been highly skewed, with a disproportionate share obtained by Americans at the top of the income ladder. Economist Emmanuel Saez tabulates U.S. income tax statistics to track market income gains at the top of the distribution. His latest estimates show that between 2009 and 2015 income recipients in the top 1 percent enjoyed real income gains of 24 percent. Among Americans in the bottom nine-tenths of the income distribution, average market incomes climbed only 4 percent. Source: Emmanuel Saez tabulations of U.S. income tax return data (including capital gains), URL = http://eml.berkeley.edu/~saez/TabFig2015prel.xls. However, Saez’s estimates also show that top income recipients experienced much bigger income losses in the Great Recession. Between 2007 and 2009 they saw their inflation-adjusted incomes drop 36 percent (see Chart 1). In comparison, the average market income of Americans in the bottom nine-tenths of the distribution fell just 12 percent. These numbers mean that top income recipients have not yet recovered the income losses they suffered in the Great Recession. In 2015 their average market income was still 13 percent below its pre-recession level. For families in the bottom nine-tenths of the distribution, market income was “only” 8 percent below its level in 2007. Only about half of households rely solely on market income to support themselves. The other half receives income from government transfers. What is more, this fraction tends to increase in bad times. Many retirees rely mainly on Social Security to pay their bills; they depend on Medicare or Medicaid to pay for health care. Low-income Americans often have little income from the market, and they may rely heavily on public assistance, food stamps, or government-provided health insurance. When joblessness soars the percentage of families receiving government benefits rises, largely because of increases in the number of workers who collect unemployment insurance. Government benefits, which are not counted in Saez’s calculations, replace part of the market income losses families experience in a weak economy. As a result, the net income losses of most families are much smaller than their market income losses. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) recently published statistics on market income and before-tax and after-tax income that shed light on the size and distribution of household income losses in the Great Recession and ensuing recovery. The tabulations show that, except for households at the top of the distribution, net income losses were far smaller than the losses indicated in Saez’s income tax data. Source: Congressional Budget Office (2016) household income data (including capital gains), URL = https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/114th-congress-2015-2016/reports/51361-SupplementalData-2.xlsx. For example, among households in the middle fifth of the before-tax income distribution, average market income fell more than 10 percent in the Great Recession (see Chart 2). If we include government transfers in the income definition, average income fell 4.4 percent. If we account for the federal taxes families pay, average net income fell just 1 percent. In contrast, among households in the top 1 percent of the distribution, average market income fell 36 percent, average income including government transfers fell 36 percent, and average income net of federal taxes fell 37 percent. Government transfers provided little if any protection to top-income households. The CBO income statistics end in 2013, so they do not tell us how net income gains have been distributed in the last couple of years. Nonetheless, based on Saez’s income tax tabulations it is very unlikely top income recipients have recovered the net income losses they experienced in the Great Recession. All the available statistics show household income gains since 2007 have been negligible or small, and this is true across the income distribution. It is popular to say slow income gains in the middle and at the bottom of the distribution are due to outsize income gains among families at the top. While this story is at least partly true for the three decades ending in 2007, it does not fit the facts for the years since 2007. CBO’s latest net income tabulations show that inequality was almost 5 percent lower in 2013 than it was in 2007. The Great Recession hurt the incomes of Americans up and down the income distribution, but the biggest proportional income losses were at the very top. To be sure, income gains in the recovery after 2009 have been concentrated among top income recipients. Even so, their income losses over the recession and recovery have been proportionately bigger than the losses suffered by middle- and low-income families. Editor's note: This piece originally appeared in Real Clear Markets. Authors Gary Burtless Publication: Real Clear Markets Full Article
2007 Eco Wine Review: Unti Vineyard's 2007 Benchland Syrah By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 09:30:30 -0400 UNTI 2007 Syrah Benchland is dark, somewhat brooding like a radio-friendly Cure song. Within your glass you'll find flavors of grilled plum, anise and cocoa. The wine is unfined which means it is vegan. Full Article Living
2007 Best of 2007: Greenwashers of the Year By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 28 Dec 2007 14:53:27 -0500 1)The ultimate in greenwashing chutzpah for the year goes to the Fur Council of Canada for their Full Article Business
2007 2007 TED Prize Winners Announced By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Nov 2006 19:22:18 -0500 The 2007 TED prize announcement was made the evening of Oct 30, 2006 in San Francisco, CA. In Ft Mason's Golden Gate Room, a small but quickening crowd assembled to honor next year's TED recipients. The space had been transformed from an otherwise Full Article Living
2007 Final words from Be The Change 2007 By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Nov 2007 06:00:59 -0500 The Be The Change conference last week was chock-a-block full of fascinating speakers, enlightening information and inspiring actions. So far we've shared George Monbiot and Richard Reed's presentations and Drew Dellinger's poetry. We're just sorry we Full Article Living
2007 This Month in Wallpaper*: Design Directory 2007 By www.treehugger.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Aug 2007 10:28:00 -0400 This month's issue of Wallpaper* magazine is dominated by the 2007 Design Directory, their hand-picked favorite architects and designers from the past year. Always the epitome of cool, the mag's slick picks Full Article Design
2007 2007 Club World Cup Final: Boca Juniors 2-4 AC Milan By www.fifa.com Published On :: Sat, 08 Dec 2012 02:03:00 GMT In the final of the FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2007, Italian giants AC Milan got two goals from 'Pippo' Inzaghi and one each from Kaka and Alessandro Nesta to become the world's top team. Full Article Area=Tournament Section=Competition Kind=Video Tournament=FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2007
2007 Felt disappointed after I wasn't picked for 2007-08 Australia tour: Parthiv Patel By www.mid-day.com Published On :: 22 Apr 2020 07:01:51 GMT Wicket-keeper batsman Parthiv Patel on Tuesday revealed that he got really disappointed when he was not picked in the Indian squad for the 2007-08 Australia tour. Patel also said that he knew he was fighting for the second wicket-keeper slot, but was disappointed after not being picked in the squad. The wicket-keeper batsman was doing an Instagram Live session with former pacer RP Singh. "It is important to be at the right place at the right time. When the team got selected for Australia tour in 2008, I was competing for the second wicket-keeper slot as Dhoni had cemented his place as first choice pick. I was disaapointed when I did not get picked in the squad," Parthiv told RP Singh during the session. "Dilip Vengsarkar was the chairman of selectors, he called me and said you have been performing well, keep at it and then he told me that I was not selected for the Australia series," he added. In the 2007-08 series, Australia defeated India 2-1, but the four-match contest was marked with controverseies. The second Test of the tour at the Sydney Cricket Ground is commonly known as the 'MonkeyGate Test' as it saw a fiery on-field contest between Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds. In the Instagram Live session, Parthiv also said that all wicket-keepers in the country knew that they cannot be selected as first choice keepers as MS Dhoni had made the place is own. "We all were competing for the second-wicket keeper slot. At that time, I used to think of giving my best in every match I play, you knew the reality thaat the skipper of the side is wicket-keeper, so you cannot be selected in the squad as first choice," Patel said. Parthiv has played 25 Tests, 38 ODIs for India. He had made his debut in 2002 against England at Trent Bridge and he created the record for being the youngest wicket-keeper to play the game of cricket. He was just 17 years and 153 days old at that time and had eclipsed the previous record of being the youngest wicketkeeper, previously held by Pakistan's Hanif Mohammed (17 years and 300 days). Catch up on all the latest sports news and updates here. Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates. Mid-Day is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@middayinfomedialtd) and stay updated with the latest news This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever Full Article
2007 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2007 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has today decided to award The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Full Article
2007 Sovereign borrowing outlook for OECD countries, 2007 to 2017 By www.oecd.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Feb 2017 12:46:00 GMT Sovereign gross borrowing needs in the OECD area have continued to decline from the peaks attained in 2012. They are expected to be USD 9.5 trillion in 2017, approximately the same level as 2016. Full Article
2007 Sovereign borrowing outlook for OECD countries, 2007 to 2019 By www.oecd.org Published On :: Fri, 08 Feb 2019 10:01:00 GMT 8/2/2019 - Gross borrowings of OECD governments from the markets are set to reach a new record level in 2019 by exceeding USD 11 trillion. While government funding needs in the wake of the financial crisis increased in most OECD countries, the recent further increase is confined to a few countries, particularly the United States. Full Article
2007 Man arrested over brutal cold case murder of Melbourne mother in 2007 By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 17 Jul 2019 08:55:31 GMT A 55-year-old man has been arrested following the unsolved 2007 murder of Melbourne mother of-three Cindy Crossthwaite. Full Article
2007 On This Day in 2007: West Ham opt not to appeal against... By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 05:04:37 GMT The Hammers signed Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano from Brazilian club Corinthians. Full Article
2007 U.S. gave up a chance to kill Soleimani in 2007 By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 23 Jan 2020 21:19:18 GMT American soldiers were using drones armed with missiles to monitor the streets of Sadr City in Baghdad in late 2007 when they noticed large crowds taking to the streets to welcome a VIP. Full Article
2007 Keira Knightley reveals her favourite sex scene was in 2007's Atonement with James McAvoy By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 15 Mar 2019 12:22:37 GMT Keira Knightley has revealed that her favourite sex scene was in 2007's Atonement alongside James McAvoy. Full Article
2007 Chelsea players were 'crying on the floor' when Jose Mourinho left in 2007, reveals Steve Sidwell By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 11:16:10 GMT On September 20, 2007, Mourinho and Chelsea went separate ways and Steve Sidwell has revealed how players such as Lampard and Terry were left 'crying on the floor' at the news. Full Article
2007 Brazil 3-1 Peru: Maracana erupts in celebration at first Copa America win since 2007 By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 08 Jul 2019 11:25:05 GMT TOM SANDERSON AT THE MARACANA: In front of 70,000 revellers at the Maracana, Brazil prolonged their record of having won the Copa America each time they have hosted. Full Article
2007 Carragher recalls Rooney and United celebrating Liverpool beating Chelsea to reach the 2007 CL final By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 18:05:12 GMT United and Liverpool have one of the biggest rivalries in football but the Red Devils were happy for their enemies to defeat Jose Mourinho's side. Full Article
2007 Cesc Fabregas praises 'proper passion' between Chelsea and Arsenal during 2007 Carling Cup final By www.dailymail.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 19:37:56 GMT Tempers flared in the Blues' 2-1 victory over the Gunners in the League Cup. Jose Mourinho's side had the advantage before Arsenal defender Kolo Toure collided with Jon Mikel Obi. Full Article
2007 CMS Vatavaran 2007 By indiatogether.org Published On :: Sat, 01 Sep 2007 00:00:00 +0000 India's only environment and widlife film festival will be held this year from 12 to 16 September in the capital. This year, the theme is 'climate change', focusing on the impacts on water, agriculture, health and other areas due to our changing climate. Full Article
2007 India 2007: High growth, low development By indiatogether.org Published On :: Wed, 26 Dec 2007 00:00:00 +0000 Even nations that are far below us in the Human Development Index rankings - and which have nothing like our growth numbers - have done much better than us on many counts, writes P Sainath. Full Article
2007 Over 16,600 farmer suicides in 2007 By indiatogether.org Published On :: Sun, 21 Dec 2008 00:00:00 +0000 The broad trends of the past decade seem unshaken. Farmer suicides in the country since 1997 now total 182,936, but the real causes behind this devastation remain unaddressed, reports P Sainath. Full Article
2007 Parents and Senior Citizens Bill, 2007 By indiatogether.org Published On :: Fri, 06 Jul 2007 00:00:00 +0000 A draft bill in Parliament attempts to mandate the care of elderly citizens in law, and envisions the establishment of tribunals to ensure its functioning. But its definitions and methods leave many questions unanswered. Priya Narayan Parker presents a legislative brief. Full Article
2007 2007 में टी20 वर्ल्ड कप में हुआ था कुछ ऐसा जिसे देखकर हैरान रह गए थे रोहित By hindi.news18.com Published On :: Thursday, May 07, 2020 03:19 PM रोहित शर्मा (Rohit Sharma) साल 2007 की टी20 वर्ल्ड कप (T20 World Cup) चैंपियन टीम का हिस्सा थे Full Article
2007 Book Excerpt: When Rajnath Singh Refused To Give a Ticket to His Son for 2007 UP Polls By www.news18.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Aug 2019 01:51:17 +0530 Rajneeti: A Biography of Rajnath Singh written by Gautam Chintamani chronicles the fifty-year long political journey of Singh from a Swayamsevak in the RSS to the defence minister of India. Full Article
2007 2007 में लगाए छह छक्कों पर युवराज बोले- स्टुअर्ट ब्रॉड के पिता ने मुझसे कहा था, तुमने मेरे बेटे का कैरियर खत्म कर दिया By Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:56:31 GMT 2007 टी20 वर्ल्ड कप के दौरान एक ओवर में छह छक्के लगाने वाले युवराज सिंह ने इस रिकॉर्ड के बारेमें एक नया खुलासा किया। युवी ने इंग्लैंड के स्टार तेज गेंदबाज स्टुअर्ट ब्रॉड की गेंदों पर छह छक्के लगाए थे। युवी के मुताबिक- इस घटना के अगले दिन स्टुअर्ट के पिता क्रिस उनके पास आए। क्रिस ने युवी से कहा कि तुमने मेरे बेटे का कैरियर खत्म दिया। बहरहाल, ऐसा नहीं हुआ। स्टुअर्ट आज भी इंग्लैंड टीम के नियमित सदस्य हैं।फ्रेडी तो फ्रेडी हैं- युवराज2007 में पहला टी20 वर्ल्ड कप खेला गया था। टीम इंडिया विजेता बनी थी। इसके एक मुकाबले में भारत के सामने इंग्लैंड की मजबूत टीम थी। युवराज क्रीज पर थे। ब्रॉड के ओवर शुरू करने से पहले एंड्रू फ्लिंटॉफ ने युवी से कुछ कहा। युवी ने गुस्से में इसका जवाब दिया। आगे जो हुआ, वो विश्व क्रिकेट के इतिहास में सुनहरे अक्षरों में लिखा गया। युवी ने फ्रेडी (फ्लिंटॉफ) का गुस्सा ब्रॉड पर निकाला। एक ही ओवर में छह छक्के लगा दिए। बीबीसी के पॉडकास्ट में युवी ने कहा- फ्रेडी तो फ्रेडी हैं। उनके बारे में क्या कहा जाए। कुछ उन्होंने कहा। मैंने भी जवाब दिया। भारत ने यह मैच पांच विकेट से जीता था।'मैस्करहैनेस ने पांच छक्के लगाए थे'युवी के मुताबिक, इस मैच के कुछ हफ्ते पहले इंग्लैंड के ही दिमित्री मैस्करहैनेस ने मेरे एक ओवर में पांच छक्के लगाए थे। संन्यास ले चुके बाएं हाथ के इस बल्लेबाज ने कहा, “छह छक्के लगाने के बाद मैंने पहले फ्लिंटॉफ और फिर दिमित्री को देखा। दिमित्री मुस्करा रहे थे।”'वो भावुक पल'युवी ने एक अहम और भावुक पल का भी जिक्र किया। उन्हीं के शब्दों में, “मैच के अगले दिन स्टुअर्ट के पिता क्रिस मेरे पास आए। वो आईसीसी मैच रेफरी भी हैं। उन्होंने मुझसे कहा- तुमने तो मेरे बेटे का कैरियर लगभग खत्म ही कर दिया। उसके लिए एक टी-शर्ट पर साइन तो करो। मैंने स्टुअर्ट को टीम इंडिया की जर्सी दी। उस पर लिखा- मेरी गेंदों पर पांच छक्के लगे थे। मैं जानता हूं कि कैसा महसूस होता है। आप इंग्लैंड क्रिकेट का फ्यूचर हैं।- शुभकामनाएं। आज वो दुनिया के सबसे अच्छे तेज गेंदबाजों में से एक हैं। मुझे नहीं लगता कि भारत का कोई गेंदबाज छह छक्के खाने के बाद इतना शानदार कैरियर बना सकता है।” Download Dainik Bhaskar App to read Latest Hindi News Today यह तस्वीर 2007 के उस मैच के बाद की है जिसमें युवी ने ब्रॉड पर छह छक्के लगाए थे। कुछ दिन पहले इसे स्टुअर्ट ब्रॉड ने इंस्टाग्राम पर कैप्शन के साथ शेयर किया था। Full Article
2007 मिर्धा अपहरण कांड के अभियुक्त आतंकी हरनेक सिंह को हाईकोर्ट से मिली 28 दिन की विशेष पैरोल, 2007 से जयपुर जेल में बंद है By Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 13:36:00 GMT (संजीव शर्मा)। कोर्ट ने राजेन्द्र मिर्धा अपहरण केस में जयपुर जेल में उम्रकैद की सजा काट रहे आतंकी अभियुक्त हरनेक सिंह को सशर्त 28 दिन की विशेष पैरोल पर रिहा करने का निर्देश दिया है। वहीं राज्य सरकार के 17 अप्रैल 2020 के उस आदेश को रद्द कर दिया जिमें अभियुक्त को 13 अप्रैल को दी गई विशेष पैरोल पर रिहा करने का आदेश निरस्त कर दिया था।सीजे इन्द्रजीत महान्ति व जस्टिस एसके शर्मा की खंडपीठ ने यह आदेश शुक्रवार को हरनेक सिंह की आपराधिक याचिका पर दिया। अदालत ने कहा कि अभियुक्त 13 साल से ज्यादा की सजा काट चुका है और पूर्व में मिली पैरोल के तय समय में वापस आ गया था। उसे भी 13 अप्रैल के आदेश से 147 अन्य कैदियों के साथ राज्य स्तरीय पैरोल कमेटी की सिफारिश पर विशेष पैरोल मिली थी, लेकिन उसे पैरोल पर नहीं छोड़ा और बाद में 17 अप्रैल को पैरोल आदेश रद्द कर दिया। इस दौरान न तो परिस्थतियों में कोई बदलाव हुआ और न ही पैरोल रद्द करने का कोई उचित कारण दिया है। ऐसी स्थिति में प्रार्थी अभियुक्त को पैरोल मंजूर करने व राज्य सरकार का 17 अप्रैल का आदेश रद्द किया जाता है।प्रार्थी के अधिवक्ता विश्राम प्रजापति ने कोर्ट को बताया कि राज्य सरकार ने केवल इस आधार पर हरनेक की मंजूर की गई विशेष पैरोल को रद्द कर दिया था कि वह बाहरी राज्य का है और राजेन्द्र मिर्धा अपहरण कांड का अभियुक्त है। कानूनी रूप से दी गई पैरोल रद्द करने के लिए यह कोई आधार नहीं है। इसलिए प्रार्थी अभियुक्त को विशेष पैरोल पर रिहा किया जाए। हरनेक सिंह फरवरी 2007 से ही जयपुर जेल में बंद है।यह है मामलाप्रदेश में चर्चित रहे इस मामले में कांग्रेस के तत्कालीन वरिष्ठ नेता और पूर्व केन्द्रीय मंत्री रामनिवास मिर्धा के बेटे राजेन्द्र मिर्धा का 17 फरवरी, 1995 को सी-स्कीम स्थित घर से अपहरण हुआ था। आतंकियों ने मिर्धा का अपहरण खालिस्तान लिबरेशन फ्रंट के मुखिया देवेन्द्रपाल सिंह भुल्लर को रिहा करने के लिए किया था। पुलिस ने कार्रवाई करते हुए जयपुर के मॉडल टाउन कॉलोनी में मकान नंबर बी-117 पर छापा मारा और गोलीबारी की।पुलिस कार्रवाई में आतंकी नवनीत सिंह कांदिया मारा गया जबकि दयासिंह लाहौरिया व उसकी पत्नी सुमन सूद और हरनेक सिंह फरार हो गए थे। बाद में लाहौरिया व सुमन सूद अमेरिका भाग गए थे। इन दोनों को तीन फरवरी, 1997 को प्रत्यर्पित करके भारत लाया गया।कोर्ट ने लाहौरिया को उम्रकैद व सुमन को पांच साल कैद की सजा दी। इस दौरान पंजाब पुलिस ने हरनेक सिंह को 2004 में गिरफ्तार किया और 26 फरवरी 2007 को राजस्थान पुलिस के सुपुर्द किया। मिर्धा अपहरण कांड में महानगर की एडीजे कोर्ट ने 7 अक्टूबर 2017 को हरनेक सिंह को उम्रकैद की सजा दी। Download Dainik Bhaskar App to read Latest Hindi News Today Rajendra Mirdha kidnapping case accused harnek singh gets 8 days parole Full Article
2007 Technical proceedings of the 2007 CleanTech conference and trade show By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 06:23:26 EDT Online Resource Full Article
2007 Renewable energy for sustainable development in the Asia Pacific region : Fremantle, Western Australia, 4-8 February 2007 / editors, Philip Jennings ... [et al.] By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Full Article
2007 JAMA: 2007-01-03, Vol. 297, No. 1, Author in the Room Audio Interview By dx.doi.org Published On :: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 18:00:00 +0000 Interview with David Ganz, MD, MPH, author of The Rational Clinical Exam: Will My Patient Fall? Summary Points: 1. Screening for falls is as simple as asking the patient if she's fallen in the past year. For patients who have not fallen, ask about gait or balance problems (e.g. "Do you have a walking or balance problem?"). 2. Most older patients who have a history of falls in the past year, or a gait/balance problem, have at least a 50% chance of falling in the coming year. You may want to do a more thorough evaluation on these patients. 3. To make screening easy for new patients, add into your pre-visit questionnaire questions that ask about a history of falls and/or gait/balance problems. Or, have your office staff ask these questions routinely when patients are being checked in. Full Article
2007 JAMA: 2007-02-14, Vol. 297, No. 6, Author in the Room Audio Interview By dx.doi.org Published On :: Fri, 13 Apr 2007 17:30:00 +0000 Interview with Paul M. Ridker, MD, MPH, author of Development and Validation of Improved Algorithms for the Assessment of Global Cardiovascular Risk in Women: The Reynolds Risk Score. Summary Points: 1. Half of all heart attacks and strokes occur among those with normal cholesterol levels and 15-20% occur among those with no major risk factors at all. 2. The major breakthroughs in understanding cardiovascular disease over the past decade include insights about inflammation and genetics. Each of these can easily be ascertained with either a simple blood test (hsCRP for inflammation) or a simple question about parental history of myocardial infarction. 3. By incorporating these 2 new measures into how we think about risk, a new risk tool was derived known as the "Reynolds Risk Score." 4. This is a win-win for everyone as it allows us to better target therapies, avoid toxicity, and improve overall prevention strategies for heart disease. Full Article