Unspoken ethical issues in the climate affair: insights from a theoretical analysis of negotiation mandates
From MaRDI portal
Publication:663212
DOI10.1007/s00199-010-0589-zzbMath1277.91144OpenAlexW2015996908MaRDI QIDQ663212
Jean-Charles Hourcade, Franck Lecocq
Publication date: 14 February 2012
Published in: Economic Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00199-010-0589-z
Environmental economics (natural resource models, harvesting, pollution, etc.) (91B76) Public goods (91B18)
Related Items (11)
Taxes versus quantities for a stock pollutant with endogenous abatement costs and asymmetric information ⋮ Nested externalities and polycentric institutions: Must we wait for global solutions to climate change before taking actions at other scales? ⋮ Carbon leakages: a general equilibrium view ⋮ Capital growth in a global warming model: Will China and India sign a climate treaty? ⋮ Detrimental externalities, pollution rights, and the ``Coase theorem ⋮ Intergenerational equity, efficiency, and constructibility ⋮ Sustainable exploitation of a natural resource: a satisfying use of Chichilnisky's criterion ⋮ Economic theory and the global environment ⋮ Sustainable markets with short sales ⋮ Global warming and economic externalities ⋮ Sustainable recursive social welfare functions
Cites Work
- Taxes versus quantities for a stock pollutant with endogenous abatement costs and asymmetric information
- Nested externalities and polycentric institutions: Must we wait for global solutions to climate change before taking actions at other scales?
- Capital growth in a global warming model: Will China and India sign a climate treaty?
- Detrimental externalities, pollution rights, and the ``Coase theorem
- Intergenerational equity, efficiency, and constructibility
- Sustainable exploitation of a natural resource: a satisfying use of Chichilnisky's criterion
- Sustainable markets with short sales
- Global warming and economic externalities
- Sustainable recursive social welfare functions
- Intertemporal and intergenerational Pareto efficiency
- Who should abate carbon emissions? An international viewpoint
- WELFARE ECONOMICS AND EXISTENCE OF AN EQUILIBRIUM FOR A COMPETITIVE ECONOMY
This page was built for publication: Unspoken ethical issues in the climate affair: insights from a theoretical analysis of negotiation mandates