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Do ESG Endeavors Assist Firms in Achieving Superior Financial Performance? A Case of 100 Best Corporate Citizens
(Sage Open;volume 11, issue 2, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2021-06-11)Increasing interest in sustainability performance (environmental, social, and governance pillar performance [ESGP]) and corporate financial performance (CFP) is noteworthy. However, we do not find any all-inclusive study ... -
Do Food Quality Schemes and Net Price Premiums Go Together?
(Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization;Volume 19, Issue 2, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020-12-03)This article addresses the issue of the profitability of Food Quality Scheme (FQS) products as compared to reference products, which are defined as analogous products without quality label. We approach this question by ... -
Do health professionals’ attitudes towards alcohol use matter for alcohol prevention efforts? Results from the WIRUS-OHS study
(BMC Health Services Research;22, Article number: 1004 (2022), Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022-08-06)Background: Use of alcohol is a major public health issue, representing the 7th largest burden of disease in the world. Workplaces offer a unique arena for health initiatives addressing alcohol use, where occupational ... -
Do Immigrants’ Preferences for Neighbourhood Qualities Contribute to Segregation? The Case of Oslo
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015)Ethnic residential segregation is often explained with the claim that ‘immigrants don’t want to integrate—they prefer to stick together with co-ethnics’. By contrast, mixed neighbourhoods are seen as crucial for achieving ... -
Do Increased Tax Base and Reductions in the Underground Economy Compensate for Lost Tax Revenue Following a Tax Reduction Policy? Evidence from Italy 1982 to 2006
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)We here examine the frequent claim that an increase in the tax base and a decrease in tax evasion will compensate for a loss in tax revenues caused by a lower tax level. Using a unique data set for the estimated underground ... -
Do investors penalize the firms disclosing higher environmental performance? A cross cultural evidence
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Climate change discourse integrates 3Ps – people, planet, and profit. However, we do not find any empirical study that integrates 3Ps. Therefore, using a large global panel dataset from 46 countries, this study intends to ... -
Do joint land titles induce Peruvian women to take part in decision-making?
(NIBR-notat 2012:104, Notat, 2012)Last ned gratis Peru enforced joint titles between spouses and cohabitants in their land formalization process in 57 percent of the 1.5 million titles issued to date. We find a significant empowerment effect in a survey ... -
Do knowledge gains from public information campaigns persist over time? Results from a survey experiment on the Norwegian pension reform
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015-05-21)Government authorities use resources on information campaigns in order to inform citizens about relevant policy changes. The motivation is usually that individuals sometimes are ill- informed about the public policies ... -
Do large employers discriminate less? An exploration of company size variation in disability discrimination based on data from two field experiments
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022) -
Do learners share the same perceived learning outcomes in MOOCs? Identifying the role of motivation, perceived learning support, learning engagement, and self-regulated learning strategies.
(The Internet and higher education;Volume 56, January 2023, 100880, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023-09-01)The aim of this study was to examine how motivation, perceived learning support, learning engagement, and self-regulated learning strategies relate to learners’ perceived learning outcomes of massive open online courses ... -
Do libraries matter? Public libraries and the creation of social capital
(Journal of Documentation;64(6), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2008)Purpose – Librarians and the library profession keep repeating that libraries contribute greatly to generating social capital by “building community”. However, little evidence of this has been presented. This paper aims ... -
Do More Recent Born Generations of Older Adults Have Stronger Grip? A Comparison of Three Cohorts of 66- to 84-Year-Olds in the Tromsø Study
(The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences;, Journal article; Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018-10-11)Background: Evidence pertaining to whether more recent born generations of adults reaching old age have better physical capability than previous generations is scarce and inconclusive. We aimed to investigate birth cohort ... -
Do Norwegian academics who publish more earn higher salaries?
(Scientometrics;Volume 115, Issue 1, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018-01-21)Based on a sense of justice one may expect that productive academics with high publication outputs earn higher salaries than less productive academics. However, there is little evidence to support or reject such a belief. ... -
Do Norwegian Textbooks for Compulsory Education Promote Geological System Thinking?
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018)Geology is one of many topics in the Norwegian curricula for Natural Science and Geography in compulsory education. System thinking is a strategy to promote conceptual development. The purpose of this study is to investigate ... -
Do nurses rate diseases according to prestige? A survey study
(Journal of Advanced Nursing;Volume 76, Issue 7, July 2020, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-04-20)Aims: To see whether nurses rate diseases according to prestige and, if so, how their ratings compare to the disease prestige hierarchy previously uncovered among physicians. Design: Cross-sectional survey. Methods: In ... -
Do psychological job demands, decision control and social support predict return to work three months after a return-to-work(RTW) programme? The rapid-RTW cohort study
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2015-12-15)BACKGROUND: Long-term sickness absence is a considerable health and economic problem in the industrialised world. Factors that might predict return to work (RTW) are therefore of interest. OBJECTIVE: To examine the ... -
Do public health nurses in Norway promote information on oral health?
(BMC Oral Health;11 (23), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2011-09-18)Background (i) to describe oral health counselling in Norway to parents with infants and toddlers, ii) to assess existing collaboration and routines in oral health matters between nurses and personnel in the PDS, iii) to ... -
Do sociodemographic factors play a role in the relation between COVID-19 infection and obesity? Findings from a cross-sectional study in eastern Oslo
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2024)Aim This study aims to assess the odds of having COVID-19 according to an individual’s weight status and to identify the sociodemographic factors associated with having COVID-19 in a sample of individuals residing in the ... -
Do spouses coordinate their work exits? A combined survey and register analysis From Norway
(Research on Aging;36(5), Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2014)Research on spouses’ joint work exits is scarce, although household factors such as spouses’ work status, marital quality, and caregiving burdens are likely to affect seniors’ work engagement. We therefore examine whether ... -
Do sustainability commitments by companies actually lead to more sustainable practices? An exploratory analysis of the effects on chemical releases from joining the United Nations Global Compact
(Master thesis, 2023)The aim of this master thesis is to examine whether joining the United Nations Global Compact has a significant effect on the release levels of toxic chemicals. The UN Global Compact is a global corporate sustainability ...