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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(24): e2202679119, 2022 Jun 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687672

RESUMO

Following a brief review of the management of environmental externalities under strategic interactions in the traditional temporal domain, results are extended to the spatiotemporal domain. Conditions for spatial open-loop and feedback Nash equilibria, along with conditions for the benchmark cooperative solution, are presented and compared. A simplified numerical example illustrates the spatial patterns emerging at a steady state under Fickian diffusion and dispersal kernels, and the inefficiency of spatially flat emission taxes. This conceptual framework could provide new research areas.

2.
Bioscience ; 70(12): 1139-1144, 2020 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33376456

RESUMO

Global environmental change challenges humanity because of its broad scale, long-lasting, and potentially irreversible consequences. Key to an effective response is to use an appropriate scientific lens to peer through the mist of uncertainty that threatens timely and appropriate decisions surrounding these complex issues. Identifying such corridors of clarity could help understanding critical phenomena or causal pathways sufficiently well to justify taking policy action. To this end, we suggest four principles: Follow the strongest and most direct path between policy decisions on outcomes, focus on finding sufficient evidence for policy purpose, prioritize no-regrets policies by avoiding options with controversial, uncertain, or immeasurable benefits, aim for getting the big picture roughly right rather than focusing on details.

3.
Environ Resour Econ (Dordr) ; 76(4): 811-824, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32836835

RESUMO

This short paper provides a modeling framework for unifying the economy, climate change and the outbreak of infectious diseases such as the recent COVID-19 pandemic. We stress that continuous growth of consumption activities, capital accumulation and climate change could increase the potential of the epidemic, its contact number or the probability of its arrival. This framework of analysis allows us to think of infectious disease policies in two stages. In the short run, containment policies like social distancing could help to stop the epidemic. In the medium and the long run, economic policies could help to reduce the potential of the epidemic or the probability of its emergence.

5.
Ambio ; 35(4): 198-202, 2006 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16944645

RESUMO

Unprecedented global changes caused by human actions challenge society's ability to sustain the desirable features of our planet. This requires proactive management of change to foster both resilience (sustaining those attributes that are important to society in the face of change) and adaptation (developing new socioecological configurations that function effectively under new conditions). The Arctic may be one of the last remaining opportunities to plan for change in a spatially extensive region where many of the ancestral ecological and social processes and feedbacks are still intact. If the feasibility of this strategy can be demonstrated in the Arctic, our improved understanding of the dynamics of change can be applied to regions with greater human modification. Conditions may now be ideal to implement policies to manage Arctic change because recent studies provide the essential scientific understanding, appropriate international institutions are in place, and Arctic nations have the wealth to institute necessary changes, if they choose to do so.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Ecossistema , Modelos Biológicos , Animais , Regiões Árticas , Clima , Monitoramento Ambiental , Efeito Estufa , Humanos
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