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- The conditions of E-learning during confinement due to COVID19: Case of higher education in Morocco.
description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Hantem, Aziz;Hantem, Aziz;All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=od_______212::65fd7fe4ae2b7f14d4509d098e630053&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Lagrange, Hugues;Lagrange, Hugues;On both sides of the Atlantic, in Anglo-Saxon countries, the issue of excess mortality due to Covid-19 among members of minorities has emerged as a central social justice issue. Outside the Anglo-Saxon countries, where race and ethnicity are generally recorded, it is difficult to address this issue. However, in France, data for the period up to the end of confinement, mentioning country of birth and place of death, from "état-civil" files, allow comparisons to be made on the determinants of the severity of Covid-19 integrating ethnicity. Regression analyses based on the difference in death counts between the spring of 2020 and the same period of previous years, show that the interweaving of health status, household size and ethnicity accurately reflects the disparities between departmental mortality rates due to Covid-19. People born in Black Africa clearly appear to be in a worse position than those born in the Maghreb, in Asian and European countries, not to mention the natives, in terms of risk of death.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Alemanno, Alberto;Alemanno, Alberto;The COVID-19 outbreak offers a rich case study of government’s emergency response. As such, it is a test bed for risk research and regulatory theories in a world increasingly shaped by transboundary, uncertain manufactured and natural risks.This introductory essay to the special issue of the European Journal of Risk Regulation attempts at providing an initial analysis of the surprisingly uncoordinated, at times unscientific, response to an essentially foreseeable event like a novel coronavirus (nCoV) in a geopolitically shattered world.It warns that COVID-19 may go down in history as yet another major disaster occurrence with no learnings attached. Yet, as new transboundary disasters – from bioterrorism to climate change – loom on the horizon, neither the world nor risk regulation, as a discipline and practice of government, can hardly afford to let another crisis go wasted.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Sinapin, Marie Noeline;Sinapin, Marie Noeline;Cahiers Risques et Résilience; International audience; Cet article s’intéresse au construit théorique de l’agilité, perçu comme un moyen pour répondre aux difficultés du management, dans le but de permettre aux entreprises de faire face à un univers incertain, non prédictible, en rupture et instable. Un outil qui offre aux organisations l’opportunité d’accompagner le processus transformationnel et organisationnel vers un nouveau cycle de croissance, ce paradigme prend en compte la dimension humaine au service du changement dans les années 90. Depuis, le construit connaît un véritable engouement au sein de la communauté scientifique notamment sur ses pratiques et attributs. Si les entreprises ont pris conscience qu’il faut changer de modèle de management et d’organisation, très peu d’entre elles savent comment y arriver. À partir d’une étude qualitative menée auprès des entreprises à dimension européenne, ce papier présente et discute les résultats des entretiens exploratoires pour savoir comment les organisations se saisissent de cet outil et les pratiques et attributs qu’elles utilisent pour s’inscrire dans une nouvelle approche organisationnelle dans des situations inédites et urgentes.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2021 France EnglishHAL CCSD ANR | AMSE (EUR)Authors: Gallic, Ewen; Lubrano, Michel; Michel, Pierre;Gallic, Ewen; Lubrano, Michel; Michel, Pierre;Uprising in China, the global COVID-19 epidemic soon started to spread out in Europe. As no medical treatment was available, it became urgent to design optimal non-pharmaceutical policies. With the help of a SIR model, we contrast two policies, one based on herd immunity (adopted by Sweden and the Netherlands), the other based on ICU capacity shortage. Both policies led to the danger of a second wave. Policy efficiency corresponds to the absence or limitation of a second wave. The aim of the paper is to measure the efficiency of these policies using statistical models and data. As a measure of efficiency, we propose the ratio of the size of two observed waves using a double sigmoid model coming from the biological growth literature. The Oxford data set provides a policy severity index together with observed number of cases and deaths. This severity index is used to illustrate the key features of national policies for ten European countries and to help for statistical inference. We estimate basic reproduction numbers, identify key moments of the epidemic and provide an instrument for comparing the two reported waves between January and October 2020. We reached the following conclusions. With a soft but long lasting policy, Sweden managed to master the first wave for cases thanks to a low R 0 , but at the cost of a large number of deaths compared to other Nordic countries and Denmark is taken as an example. We predict the failure of herd immunity policy for the Netherlands. We could not identify a clear sanitary policy for large European countries. What we observed was a lack of control for observed cases, but not for deaths.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Pollmann, Christopher;Pollmann, Christopher;En trois mois, le nouveau coronavirus SRAS-CoV-2 et la coronavirus disease CoViD-19 ont fait le tour du globe et déclenché une crise planétaire sans précédent dans l’histoire de l’humanité. Cet ébranlement anthropologique requiert un effort de la pensée pour y faire face et créer du sens. Rarement un épisode dramatique n’aura d’ailleurs généré autant de solidarités, d’interrogations et de propositions pour améliorer la société ! À côté de nombreuses autres voix, les lignes qui suivent proposent quelques hypothèses bien sûr fort provisoires pour nourrir la réflexion et le débat…
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Eisl, Andreas; Tomay, Mattia;Eisl, Andreas; Tomay, Mattia;handle: 2441/5iiovebe7u8fbaf4dmj5i5llpf
1st lines: In the upcoming European Council on July 17 and 18, EU member states will fight for a compromise on the European Commission’s main project to tackle the economic fallout of the Covid-19 crisis across Europe: a new 7-year EU budget propped up with a temporary Recovery Instrument (Next Generation EU) amounting to EUR 750 bn of jointly issued debt and to be passed on to EU countries as grants and loans. It is one of the most ambitious in a long line of proposals for European debt mutualisation.While joint borrowing can carry a lot of advantages, debt mutualisation has always been very controversial. Confrontations between those countries supposedly benefiting and losing from mutualising debt have repeatedly centered on the legitimate balance of solidarity and responsibility that such debt implies. Democratic legitimacy in solidarity-responsibility arrangements can be achieved when they can deliver in terms of output legitimacy (being effective in economic terms), input legitimacy (ensuring sufficient room for domestic politics in deciding national policy trajectories) and throughput legitimacy (being run in a transparent and accountable manner).
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Alemanno, Alberto;Alemanno, Alberto;The European response to COVID-19 has revealed an inconvenient truth. Despite having integrated public health concerns across all its policies – be it agriculture, consumer protection, or security –, the Union cannot directly act to save people’s lives. Only member states can do so. Yet when they adopted unilateral measures to counter the spread of the virus, those proved not only ineffective but also disruptive on vital supply chains, by ultimately preventing the flow of essential goods and people across the Union. These fragmented efforts in tackling cross-border health threats have almost immediately prompted political calls for the urgent creation of a European Health Union. Yet this call raises more questions than answers. With the aim to offer a rigorous and timely blueprint to decision-makers and the public at large, this Special Issue of the European Journal of Risk Regulation contextualizes such a new political project within the broader constitutional and institutional framework of EU public health law and policy. By introducing the Special, this paper argues that unless the envisaged Health Union will tackle the root causes of what prevented the Union from effectively responding to COVID19 – the divergent health capacity across the Union –, it might fall short of its declared objective of strengthening the EU’resilience for cross-border health threats.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France English EC | CORESMAAuthors: Vanella, Patrizio; Basellini, Ugofilippo; Lange, Berit;Vanella, Patrizio; Basellini, Ugofilippo; Lange, Berit;The current outbreak of COVID-19 has called renewed attention to the need for sound statistical analysis for monitoring mortality patterns and trends over time. Excess mortality has been suggested as the most appropriate indicator to measure the overall burden of the pandemic on mortality. As such, excess mortality has received considerable interest during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous approaches to estimate excess mortality are somewhat limited, as they do not include sufficiently long-term trends, correlations among different demographic and geographic groups, and the autocorrelations in the mortality time series. This might lead to biased estimates of excess mortality, as random mortality fluctuations may be misinterpreted as excess mortality. We present a blend of classical epidemiological approaches to estimating excess mortality during extraordinary events with an established demographic approach in mortality forecasting, namely a Lee-Carter type model, which covers the named limitations and draws a more realistic picture of the excess mortality. We illustrate our approach using weekly age- and sex-specific mortality data for 19 countries and the current COVID-19 pandemic as a case study. Our proposed model provides a general framework that can be applied to future pandemics as well as to monitor excess mortality from specific causes of deaths.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Aloui, Donia; Goutte, Stéphane; Guesmi, Khaled; Hchaichi, Rafla;Aloui, Donia; Goutte, Stéphane; Guesmi, Khaled; Hchaichi, Rafla;On 12 March 2020, the sharp fell of U.S. crude oil price to 30 dollars was explained by the outspreads of coronavirus pandemic and the OPEC's inability to reach a production quota agreement. We employ the structural VAR model with time-varying coefficients and stochastic volatility (TVP-SVAR model) developed by Primiceri (2005) to asses the impact of COVID-19 shocks on the energy futures markets, particularly on crude oil and natural gas S&P GS Indexes. The findings confirm that energy commodities S&P GS Indexes respond to COVID-19 shock that varying over time due to fundamentals factors as well as behavioral and psychological factors.
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- The conditions of E-learning during confinement due to COVID19: Case of higher education in Morocco.
description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Hantem, Aziz;Hantem, Aziz;All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=od_______212::65fd7fe4ae2b7f14d4509d098e630053&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Lagrange, Hugues;Lagrange, Hugues;On both sides of the Atlantic, in Anglo-Saxon countries, the issue of excess mortality due to Covid-19 among members of minorities has emerged as a central social justice issue. Outside the Anglo-Saxon countries, where race and ethnicity are generally recorded, it is difficult to address this issue. However, in France, data for the period up to the end of confinement, mentioning country of birth and place of death, from "état-civil" files, allow comparisons to be made on the determinants of the severity of Covid-19 integrating ethnicity. Regression analyses based on the difference in death counts between the spring of 2020 and the same period of previous years, show that the interweaving of health status, household size and ethnicity accurately reflects the disparities between departmental mortality rates due to Covid-19. People born in Black Africa clearly appear to be in a worse position than those born in the Maghreb, in Asian and European countries, not to mention the natives, in terms of risk of death.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Alemanno, Alberto;Alemanno, Alberto;The COVID-19 outbreak offers a rich case study of government’s emergency response. As such, it is a test bed for risk research and regulatory theories in a world increasingly shaped by transboundary, uncertain manufactured and natural risks.This introductory essay to the special issue of the European Journal of Risk Regulation attempts at providing an initial analysis of the surprisingly uncoordinated, at times unscientific, response to an essentially foreseeable event like a novel coronavirus (nCoV) in a geopolitically shattered world.It warns that COVID-19 may go down in history as yet another major disaster occurrence with no learnings attached. Yet, as new transboundary disasters – from bioterrorism to climate change – loom on the horizon, neither the world nor risk regulation, as a discipline and practice of government, can hardly afford to let another crisis go wasted.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Sinapin, Marie Noeline;Sinapin, Marie Noeline;Cahiers Risques et Résilience; International audience; Cet article s’intéresse au construit théorique de l’agilité, perçu comme un moyen pour répondre aux difficultés du management, dans le but de permettre aux entreprises de faire face à un univers incertain, non prédictible, en rupture et instable. Un outil qui offre aux organisations l’opportunité d’accompagner le processus transformationnel et organisationnel vers un nouveau cycle de croissance, ce paradigme prend en compte la dimension humaine au service du changement dans les années 90. Depuis, le construit connaît un véritable engouement au sein de la communauté scientifique notamment sur ses pratiques et attributs. Si les entreprises ont pris conscience qu’il faut changer de modèle de management et d’organisation, très peu d’entre elles savent comment y arriver. À partir d’une étude qualitative menée auprès des entreprises à dimension européenne, ce papier présente et discute les résultats des entretiens exploratoires pour savoir comment les organisations se saisissent de cet outil et les pratiques et attributs qu’elles utilisent pour s’inscrire dans une nouvelle approche organisationnelle dans des situations inédites et urgentes.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2021 France EnglishHAL CCSD ANR | AMSE (EUR)Authors: Gallic, Ewen; Lubrano, Michel; Michel, Pierre;Gallic, Ewen; Lubrano, Michel; Michel, Pierre;Uprising in China, the global COVID-19 epidemic soon started to spread out in Europe. As no medical treatment was available, it became urgent to design optimal non-pharmaceutical policies. With the help of a SIR model, we contrast two policies, one based on herd immunity (adopted by Sweden and the Netherlands), the other based on ICU capacity shortage. Both policies led to the danger of a second wave. Policy efficiency corresponds to the absence or limitation of a second wave. The aim of the paper is to measure the efficiency of these policies using statistical models and data. As a measure of efficiency, we propose the ratio of the size of two observed waves using a double sigmoid model coming from the biological growth literature. The Oxford data set provides a policy severity index together with observed number of cases and deaths. This severity index is used to illustrate the key features of national policies for ten European countries and to help for statistical inference. We estimate basic reproduction numbers, identify key moments of the epidemic and provide an instrument for comparing the two reported waves between January and October 2020. We reached the following conclusions. With a soft but long lasting policy, Sweden managed to master the first wave for cases thanks to a low R 0 , but at the cost of a large number of deaths compared to other Nordic countries and Denmark is taken as an example. We predict the failure of herd immunity policy for the Netherlands. We could not identify a clear sanitary policy for large European countries. What we observed was a lack of control for observed cases, but not for deaths.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France FrenchHAL CCSD Authors: Pollmann, Christopher;Pollmann, Christopher;En trois mois, le nouveau coronavirus SRAS-CoV-2 et la coronavirus disease CoViD-19 ont fait le tour du globe et déclenché une crise planétaire sans précédent dans l’histoire de l’humanité. Cet ébranlement anthropologique requiert un effort de la pensée pour y faire face et créer du sens. Rarement un épisode dramatique n’aura d’ailleurs généré autant de solidarités, d’interrogations et de propositions pour améliorer la société ! À côté de nombreuses autres voix, les lignes qui suivent proposent quelques hypothèses bien sûr fort provisoires pour nourrir la réflexion et le débat…
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Eisl, Andreas; Tomay, Mattia;Eisl, Andreas; Tomay, Mattia;handle: 2441/5iiovebe7u8fbaf4dmj5i5llpf
1st lines: In the upcoming European Council on July 17 and 18, EU member states will fight for a compromise on the European Commission’s main project to tackle the economic fallout of the Covid-19 crisis across Europe: a new 7-year EU budget propped up with a temporary Recovery Instrument (Next Generation EU) amounting to EUR 750 bn of jointly issued debt and to be passed on to EU countries as grants and loans. It is one of the most ambitious in a long line of proposals for European debt mutualisation.While joint borrowing can carry a lot of advantages, debt mutualisation has always been very controversial. Confrontations between those countries supposedly benefiting and losing from mutualising debt have repeatedly centered on the legitimate balance of solidarity and responsibility that such debt implies. Democratic legitimacy in solidarity-responsibility arrangements can be achieved when they can deliver in terms of output legitimacy (being effective in economic terms), input legitimacy (ensuring sufficient room for domestic politics in deciding national policy trajectories) and throughput legitimacy (being run in a transparent and accountable manner).
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Alemanno, Alberto;Alemanno, Alberto;The European response to COVID-19 has revealed an inconvenient truth. Despite having integrated public health concerns across all its policies – be it agriculture, consumer protection, or security –, the Union cannot directly act to save people’s lives. Only member states can do so. Yet when they adopted unilateral measures to counter the spread of the virus, those proved not only ineffective but also disruptive on vital supply chains, by ultimately preventing the flow of essential goods and people across the Union. These fragmented efforts in tackling cross-border health threats have almost immediately prompted political calls for the urgent creation of a European Health Union. Yet this call raises more questions than answers. With the aim to offer a rigorous and timely blueprint to decision-makers and the public at large, this Special Issue of the European Journal of Risk Regulation contextualizes such a new political project within the broader constitutional and institutional framework of EU public health law and policy. By introducing the Special, this paper argues that unless the envisaged Health Union will tackle the root causes of what prevented the Union from effectively responding to COVID19 – the divergent health capacity across the Union –, it might fall short of its declared objective of strengthening the EU’resilience for cross-border health threats.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France English EC | CORESMAAuthors: Vanella, Patrizio; Basellini, Ugofilippo; Lange, Berit;Vanella, Patrizio; Basellini, Ugofilippo; Lange, Berit;The current outbreak of COVID-19 has called renewed attention to the need for sound statistical analysis for monitoring mortality patterns and trends over time. Excess mortality has been suggested as the most appropriate indicator to measure the overall burden of the pandemic on mortality. As such, excess mortality has received considerable interest during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous approaches to estimate excess mortality are somewhat limited, as they do not include sufficiently long-term trends, correlations among different demographic and geographic groups, and the autocorrelations in the mortality time series. This might lead to biased estimates of excess mortality, as random mortality fluctuations may be misinterpreted as excess mortality. We present a blend of classical epidemiological approaches to estimating excess mortality during extraordinary events with an established demographic approach in mortality forecasting, namely a Lee-Carter type model, which covers the named limitations and draws a more realistic picture of the excess mortality. We illustrate our approach using weekly age- and sex-specific mortality data for 19 countries and the current COVID-19 pandemic as a case study. Our proposed model provides a general framework that can be applied to future pandemics as well as to monitor excess mortality from specific causes of deaths.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Preprint 2020 France EnglishHAL CCSD Authors: Aloui, Donia; Goutte, Stéphane; Guesmi, Khaled; Hchaichi, Rafla;Aloui, Donia; Goutte, Stéphane; Guesmi, Khaled; Hchaichi, Rafla;On 12 March 2020, the sharp fell of U.S. crude oil price to 30 dollars was explained by the outspreads of coronavirus pandemic and the OPEC's inability to reach a production quota agreement. We employ the structural VAR model with time-varying coefficients and stochastic volatility (TVP-SVAR model) developed by Primiceri (2005) to asses the impact of COVID-19 shocks on the energy futures markets, particularly on crude oil and natural gas S&P GS Indexes. The findings confirm that energy commodities S&P GS Indexes respond to COVID-19 shock that varying over time due to fundamentals factors as well as behavioral and psychological factors.
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