| Economic Institutions
Economic Institutions (such as banks, labor unions, corporations, legal systems, not-for-profit organizations, property rights and equity) can contribute positively and negatively to the wealth and protection of the natural environment and the fair distribution of costs and benefits of development. We focus on institutions that mediate between individual and group interests in utilizing natural resources on the one side and societal interests in preserving them on the other side.
Behavioral Microeconomics: Equilibria Under Context-Sensitive Choice »
This study develops a microeconomic model while assuming that both production and consumption choices are context-sensitive and non-transitive.
Surveillance and Control of Rift Valley Fever in the Greater Horn of Africa and the Middle East »
This project tries to model disease risk and to understand how such a model can be used in a large-scale multilevel decision system involving stakeholders in animal trade.
Interdependent Security: Toward Realistic Behavioral Models »
This research extends the analysis of interdependent security to understand how different actors are responding to prospects of global change.
More Research
Climate, Investment, and Economic Growth »
Effective Use of Scientific Information: Social Goals, Incentive Structures, and Learning Under Uncertainty »
Hypothesis Testing: Historical Research on Individual and Group Decision Making in Grasslands »
Individual, Household, and Technical Advisor-Assisted Agriculture Decision Making in the Argentine Pampas »
Interdependent Security: Toward Realistic Behavioral Models »
Strategic Use of Uncertainty »
Wage Bargaining, Inflation Uncertainty and Central Bank Independence: an Experimental Investigation »
Last Updated: June 1, 2006
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