947 resultados para Agricultural Society of Trinidad and Tobago
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Evaluación de Quito. Resolución 320XV aprobada por la CEPAL en su Decimoquinto Período de Sesiones, Quito, Ecuador, 1973. Evaluación de Chaguaramas. Resolución 347XVI aprobada por la CEPAL en su Decimosexto Período de Sesiones, Puerto España, Trinidad y Tobago, 1975
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Includes bibliography
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Includes bibliography
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Includes bibliography
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Includes bibliography
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This research paper assesses the likely economic impact of climate change on the health sector in Trinidad and Tobago. The analysis, however, was limited to the economic impact of only a few climate-related diseases1 for which data were available. The approach utilized in this paper makes for easy extrapolation once the data on the other climate-related illnesses become available so that a full impact assessment can be carried out.
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Caribbean census microdata are not easily accessible to researchers. Although there are well-established and commonly used procedures technical, administrative and legal which are used to disseminate anonymized census microdata to researchers, they have not been widely used in the Caribbean. The small size of Caribbean countries makes anonymization relatively more difficult and standard methods are not always directly applicable. This study reviews commonly used methods of disseminating census microdata and considers their applicability to the Caribbean. It demonstrates the application of statistical disclosure control methods using the census datasets of Grenada and Trinidad and Tobago and considers various possible designs of microdata release file in terms of disclosure risk and utility to researchers. It then considers how various forms of microdata dissemination: public use files, licensed use files, remote data access and secure data laboratories could be used to disseminate census microdata. It concludes that there is scope for a substantial expansion of access to Caribbean census microdata and that through collaboration with international organisations and data archives, this can be achieved with relatively little burden on statistical offices.
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18, 1919
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ser. 4 v. 1
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ser. 4 v. 2
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ser. 4 vol. 12