Highlighted articles by Rudolf Agricola Fellows
Property investments are proving to be an important explanation for the gap between large cities and the region, says dr. Michiel Daams, assistant professor of Economic Geography of Real Estate Markets. He carried out a study on property investments in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Capital shocks and the great urban divide, in: Journal of Economic Geography, Volume 24, Issue 1, January 2024
Blog on the same article:
Our interview with dr. Michiel Daams on this article:
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'Every year, I sail to a place where there used to be a glacier,' says polar biologist dr. Maarten Loonen. He has been conducting research in Svalbard in the Arctic Ocean for over 30 years. Loonen feels a sense of helplessness when it comes to climate change. |
Article: 'Playfully building resilience: Dutch children’s risk-managing tactics in digital risky play.'
December 2023 Dr. Marcel Broersma and Denise Mensondines (RAS PhD Grant winner) have collaborated in a study addressing the concept of 'digital risky play.' This article explores children's development of resilience through a taxonomy of tactics employed in this type of play. The full publication can be accessed here |
Article: 'Leveraging keystone agents in extractive industries to advance sustainability.'
Rudolf Agricola Fellow dr. Bert Scholtens' opinion article covers the impact of natural resource extraction on the environment and society. The study highlights the inadequacy of public policy and governmental regulation alone in achieving sustainability, and emphasises the importance of influencing key stakeholders, particularly the dominant firms and their owners international extractive industries.
Access the full article here |
Article: 'Simulating the Role of Norms in Processes of Social Innovation: Three Case Studies.'
Together with colleagues, dr. Wander Jager (Rudolf Agricola School Fellow) examined the pivotal role of norms and values in social innovation, specifically in sustainable energy community projects, proposing three case simulations to elucidate the supportive conditions. The research highlights the difficulty of condensing the extensive literature on social innovation drivers into computational rules.
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Further Reading
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"Met regeneratieve landbouw kun je prima de wereld voeden" | dr. Pablo Tittonell
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Groninger economen hekelen Nexit-plannen Wilders: gevolgen desastreus | dr. Harry Garretsen en dr. Tristan Kohl
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Sustainable economic growth is a matter of creative thinking says economist Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn | Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn
Last modified: | 04 November 2024 11.43 a.m. |