The present study bridges the field of happiness economics with the economics of climate change, based on two research questions. One is related to the effects of (extreme) climate events on individual happiness and their qualitative measurement. The empirical method to analyze this relation includes the identification of proxies of extreme climate events and studying their relationships with well-being for the impacted population. Here floods, and to some extent forest fires, are taken as an approximation of extreme climate events. The second research question concerns the way happiness studies can inform climate policy and how stringent climate policy would affect well-being. Assuming that effective climate abatement implies a reduction i...
Previous studies, to some extent, link creativity, well-being, and environmental concerns. Therefore...
Are people condemned to an inherent level of experienced happiness? A review of the economic researc...
In the contemporary discussion on society\u27s transformation towards long-termclimate targets, it i...
The present article builds upon the results of an empirical study exploring key factors which determ...
There is much interest among Economists using both theoretical and empirical approaches regarding su...
Burlager ii Global climate change is perhaps the most pressing issue our world faces today. Greenhou...
A small (but increasing) number of economists has recently started to recognize that the costs of cl...
Recent literature on developed countries have shown evidence that, despite enjoying rapid growth and...
There has been a tremendous growth in the number of empirical research on happiness by economists in...
Climate change is a clear and pressing environmental, social, and psychological issue. Although it i...
Climate and environmental hazards make the current phase of growth increasingly uneconomic - its cos...
The economic effects of environmental policies are of paramount interest to policymakers. The tradit...
We investigate the relationships between carbon-intensive consumption and two dimensions of human we...
Global climate change is perhaps the most pressing issue our world faces today. Greenhouse gas emiss...
Happiness research is a new, rapidly growing and provocative aspect of economic science. In fact, th...
Previous studies, to some extent, link creativity, well-being, and environmental concerns. Therefore...
Are people condemned to an inherent level of experienced happiness? A review of the economic researc...
In the contemporary discussion on society\u27s transformation towards long-termclimate targets, it i...
The present article builds upon the results of an empirical study exploring key factors which determ...
There is much interest among Economists using both theoretical and empirical approaches regarding su...
Burlager ii Global climate change is perhaps the most pressing issue our world faces today. Greenhou...
A small (but increasing) number of economists has recently started to recognize that the costs of cl...
Recent literature on developed countries have shown evidence that, despite enjoying rapid growth and...
There has been a tremendous growth in the number of empirical research on happiness by economists in...
Climate change is a clear and pressing environmental, social, and psychological issue. Although it i...
Climate and environmental hazards make the current phase of growth increasingly uneconomic - its cos...
The economic effects of environmental policies are of paramount interest to policymakers. The tradit...
We investigate the relationships between carbon-intensive consumption and two dimensions of human we...
Global climate change is perhaps the most pressing issue our world faces today. Greenhouse gas emiss...
Happiness research is a new, rapidly growing and provocative aspect of economic science. In fact, th...
Previous studies, to some extent, link creativity, well-being, and environmental concerns. Therefore...
Are people condemned to an inherent level of experienced happiness? A review of the economic researc...
In the contemporary discussion on society\u27s transformation towards long-termclimate targets, it i...