This paper studies the impact of adaptation on the stability of an international emission agreement. To address this issue we solve a three-stage coalition formation game where in the first stage countries decide whether or not to sign the agreement. Then, in the second stage, signatories (playing together) and non-signatories (playing individually) select their levels of emissions. Finally, in the third stage, each country decides on its level of adaptation non co-operatively. We solve this game for two models. For both, it is assumed that damages are linear with respect to emissions which guarantee that emissions are strategic complements in the second stage of the game. However, for the first model adaptation reduces the marginal damages...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
This paper applies the theory of social situations to study whether international environmental agre...
We investigate whether global cooperation for emission abatement can be improved if asymmetric count...
We study the strategic interaction between mitigation and adaptation strategies in the canonical mod...
The paper examines the stability of self-enforcing International Environmental Agreements (IEAs) amo...
We examine the formation of International Environmental Agreements (IEAs) modelled as a two-stage no...
The present paper examines the stability of self-enforcing International Environmental Agreements (I...
The negotiation and ratification of the Kyoto Protocol has spawned a body of literature aimed at ana...
The negotiation and ratification of the Kyoto Protocol has spawned a body of literature aimed at ana...
International Environmental agreements are modelled along the lines of a non-cooperative, two-stage ...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
We investigate whether global cooperation for emission abatement can be improved if asymmetric count...
Διπλωματική εργασία--Πανεπιστήμιο Μακεδονίας, Θεσσαλονίκη, 2014.The purpose of this study is to pres...
We model an International Environmental Agreement as a two stages game: during the first stage each ...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
This paper applies the theory of social situations to study whether international environmental agre...
We investigate whether global cooperation for emission abatement can be improved if asymmetric count...
We study the strategic interaction between mitigation and adaptation strategies in the canonical mod...
The paper examines the stability of self-enforcing International Environmental Agreements (IEAs) amo...
We examine the formation of International Environmental Agreements (IEAs) modelled as a two-stage no...
The present paper examines the stability of self-enforcing International Environmental Agreements (I...
The negotiation and ratification of the Kyoto Protocol has spawned a body of literature aimed at ana...
The negotiation and ratification of the Kyoto Protocol has spawned a body of literature aimed at ana...
International Environmental agreements are modelled along the lines of a non-cooperative, two-stage ...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
We investigate whether global cooperation for emission abatement can be improved if asymmetric count...
Διπλωματική εργασία--Πανεπιστήμιο Μακεδονίας, Θεσσαλονίκη, 2014.The purpose of this study is to pres...
We model an International Environmental Agreement as a two stages game: during the first stage each ...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
We show that adaptive measures undertaken by countries in the face of climate change, apart from dir...
This paper applies the theory of social situations to study whether international environmental agre...
We investigate whether global cooperation for emission abatement can be improved if asymmetric count...