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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Israel Waichman Clear advanced filters
  • Little is known about decentralized institutions that could facilitate cooperation for the sake of future generations. Here, the authors show that allowing for peer punishment within a generation is only partially successful in facilitating cooperation for the sake of later generations.

    • Johannes Lohse
    • Israel Waichman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-8
  • Scope 3 emissions across the supply chain typically account for the largest share of a company’s carbon footprint. The EU Data Act can remove barriers to primary data sharing required for Scope 3 emission reporting by unlocking primary emission data currently stored in industrial assets. Such primary data sharing would increase transparency and accountability, and would be a step towards mandatory, more effective reporting regulations.

    • Israel Waichman
    • Matthias Niebuhr
    • Aurel Stenzel
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    npj Climate Action
    Volume: 4, P: 1-3
  • Behavioral economics plays a key role in explaining the lack of current climate action and in facilitating effective future interventions. For instance, it can help us evaluate the efficacy and efficiency of policy instruments and institutions, understand the effectiveness of “hard” and “soft” interventions, and estimate pro-environmental preferences. In this editorial, we provide examples for some of the contributions of behavioral economics to the study of climate action and review the eight studies published in this collection. These studies introduce “social tipping points”, study related aspects of international organizations, explore the relationship between pro-environmental behaviors and individual well-being, investigate the effect of “Veggie Days” on emissions in German university cafeterias, test whether an intervention can increase the adoption of certified solar devices for refugees in Uganda, conduct a systematic review and a meta-analysis of public support for carbon pricing policies, examine arguments for and against the use of pricing instruments to mitigate emissions, and analyze social media communications of three groups of stakeholders.

    • Till Requate
    • Gernot Wagner
    • Israel Waichman
    EditorialOpen Access
    npj Climate Action
    Volume: 4, P: 1-4