Infinite-horizon social evaluation with variable population size
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2629516
DOI10.1007/s00355-016-0953-4zbMath1392.91058OpenAlexW2279266085MaRDI QIDQ2629516
Publication date: 6 July 2016
Published in: Social Choice and Welfare (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-016-0953-4
Related Items (2)
Infinite-horizon social evaluation with variable population size ⋮ Infinite-population approval voting: a proposal
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Justifying social discounting: the rank-discounted utilitarian approach
- Egalitarianism under population change: age structure does matter
- Sustainable recursive social welfare functions
- Unjust intergenerational allocations
- Ordering infinite utility streams comes at the cost of a non-Ramsey set
- Sustainability and discounted utilitarianism in models of economic growth
- Generalized time-invariant overtaking
- Leximin population ethics
- Optimal population size and endogenous growth
- Birth-date dependent population ethics: Critical-level principles
- Intertemporal equity and the extension of the Ramsey criterion.
- Critical levels and the (reverse) repugnant conclusion
- Resolving distributional conflicts between generations
- On the leximin and utilitarian overtaking criteria with extended anonymity
- Utilitarianism for infinite utility streams: a new welfare criterion and its axiomatic characterization
- Fleurbaey-Michel conjecture on equitable weak Paretian social welfare order
- Some formal models of grading principles
- Infinite-horizon social evaluation with variable population size
- The Impossibility of a Satisfactory Population Ethics
- Equity Among Generations
- Equity and the Informational Basis of Collective Choice
- Escaping the repugnant conclusion: Rank-discounted utilitarianism with variable population
- Intertemporal Population Ethics: Critical-Level Utilitarian Principles
- The Evaluation of Infinite Utility Streams
- Stationary Ordinal Utility and Impatience
- Justifying sustainability
This page was built for publication: Infinite-horizon social evaluation with variable population size