18 results on '"Riekhof, Marie-Catherine"'
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2. Five social science intervention areas for ocean sustainability initiatives
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Partelow, Stefan, Schlüter, Achim, Ban, Natalie C., Batterbury, Simon, Bavinck, Maarten, Bennett, Nathan J., Bleischwitz, Raimund, Blythe, Jessica, Bogusz, Tanja, Breckwoldt, Annette, Cinner, Joshua E., Glaser, Marion, Govan, Hugh, Gruby, Rebecca, Hatje, Vanessa, Hornidge, Anna-Katharina, Hovelsrud, Grete K., Kittinger, John N., Kluger, Lotta Clara, Kochalski, Sophia, Mawyer, Alexander, McKinley, Emma, Olsen, Julia, Pittman, Jeremy, Riechers, Maraja, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, Manez, Kathleen Schwerdtner, Shellock, Rebecca J., Siriwardane-de Zoysa, Rapti, Steins, Nathalie A., Van Assche, Kristof, and Villasante, Sebastian
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- 2023
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3. Transdisciplinary Research in Marine Science: What’s the added value of involving stakeholders?
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Rombach, Sonja, primary, Wagner-Ahlfs, Christian, additional, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, additional, and Oppelt, Natascha, additional
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- 2024
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4. DOES THE ADVERSE ANNOUNCEMENT EFFECT OF CLIMATE POLICY MATTER? — A DYNAMIC GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
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RIEKHOF, MARIE-CATHERINE and BRÖCKER, JOHANNES
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- 2017
5. The multifaceted picture of transdisciplinarity in marine research
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Gomez, Silvia, Köpsel, Vera, Grünhagen, Caroline, Schwermer, Heike, Wagner-Ahlfs, Christian, Voss, Rudi, Gross, Felix, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, Gomez, Silvia, Köpsel, Vera, Grünhagen, Caroline, Schwermer, Heike, Wagner-Ahlfs, Christian, Voss, Rudi, Gross, Felix, and Riekhof, Marie-Catherine
- Abstract
The Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget is considered responsible for coining the term transdisciplinarity’ in the 1970s, defining it as a higher stage after the interdisciplinary relations. To date, transdisciplinarity research is a growing field in academia, but still there is no uniform definition. In this book chapter, we explore how the term ‘transdisciplinarity’ is used in marine research including different fields like quantitative ecology and modeling, marine social science or marine conservation. We used a quantitative full-text analysis of peer-reviewed journal publications from 1992 to 2021, ensuring to include most recent contributions to the analysis. A total of over 6000 publications could be identified, about 500 of these focusing on marine realm. We applied an agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis (program R) to consider relative frequencies of significant conceptual words within the transdisciplinary landscape. Multiple research clusters have been identified and further divided regarding the study background (e.g., meta-analysis, case study, theory).
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- 2023
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6. The need for local governance of global commons: The example of blue carbon ecosystems
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Merk, Christine, primary, Grunau, Jonas, additional, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, additional, and Rickels, Wilfried, additional
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- 2022
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7. To tip or not to tip: The Window of Tipping Point Analysis for social‐ecological systems
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Riekhof, Marie‐Catherine, primary, Kluger, Lotta Clara, additional, Salvatteci, Renato, additional, Siebert, Lotta, additional, and Voss, Rudi, additional
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- 2022
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8. The need for local governance of global commons: The example of blue carbon ecosystems
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Merk, Christine, Grunau, Jonas, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, Rickels, Wilfried, Merk, Christine, Grunau, Jonas, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, and Rickels, Wilfried
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To limit global warming to 1.5 °C, vast amounts of CO2 will have to be removed from the atmosphere via Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR). Enhancing the CO2 sequestration of ecosystems will require not just one approach but a portfolio of CDR options, including so-called nature-based approaches alongside CDR options that are perceived as more technical. Creating a CDR “supply curve” would however imply that all carbon removals are considered to be perfect substitutes. The various co-benefits of nature-based CDR approaches militate against this. We discuss this aspect of nature-based solutions in connection with the enhancement of blue carbon ecosystems (BCE) such as mangrove or seagrass habitats. Enhancing BCEs can indeed contribute to CO2 sequestration, but the value of their carbon storage is low compared to the overall contribution of their ecosystem services to wealth. Furthermore, their property rights are often unclear, i.e. not comprehensively defined or not enforced. Hence, payment schemes that only compensate BCE carbon sequestration could create tradeoffs at the expense of other important, often local, ecosystem services and might not result in socially optimal outcomes. Accordingly, one chance for preserving and restoring BCEs lies in the consideration of all services in potential compensation schemes for local communities. Also, local contexts, management structures, and benefit-sharing rules are crucial factors to be taken into account when setting up international payment schemes to support the use of BCEs and other nature- or ecosystem-based CDR. However, regarding these options as the only hope of achieving more CDR will very probably not bring about the desired outcome, either for climate mitigation or for ecosystem preservation. Unhalted degradation, in turn, will make matters worse due to the large amounts of stored carbon that would be released. Hence, countries committed to climate mitigation in line with the Paris targets should not hide behind vague
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- 2022
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9. TECHNOLOGY TREATIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE
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GERSBACH, HANS, primary and RIEKHOF, MARIE-CATHERINE, additional
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- 2022
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10. Professional identity and the gender gap in risk-taking. Evidence from field experiments with scientists
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Drupp, Moritz A., Khadjavi, Menusch, Riekhof, Marie Catherine, Voss, Rudi, Drupp, Moritz A., Khadjavi, Menusch, Riekhof, Marie Catherine, and Voss, Rudi
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The gender gap in risk-taking is often used to explain differences in labor market outcomes. Yet, a number of studies suggest that this gap is larger in private contexts and is reduced in professional contexts. In two online field experiments with more than 1500 scientists we shed light on the causal role of the professional context by varying the salience of the professional or private identity. The main study finds that the gender gap in risk-taking is moderated—and vanishes for older scientists—when the professional identity is salient. The second study—designed to further explore mechanisms relating to non-professional identity—yields inconclusive results. While the results of the main study imply that gender gaps may be driven by the ability to switch between identities and adapt to prevailing norms, our second study suggest the need for further research to examine how prevailing norms are shaped and identity affects gender gaps.
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- 2020
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11. Economic growth, international trade, and the depletion or conservation of renewable natural resources
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Riekhof, Marie-catherine, Regnier, Esther, Quaas, Martin F., Riekhof, Marie-catherine, Regnier, Esther, and Quaas, Martin F.
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Conservation of renewable natural resources and promotion of economic growth are both sustamable development goals. Here, we study the interdependency between economic growth, international trade, and the use of renewable natural resources under alternative institutional settings of either open access or full property rights in an endogenous growth model. We find that if the resource is depleted over time, consumption growth is reduced. Economic growth and international trade only impact resource use when the resource is harvested under full property rights. Then, widening international trade can lead countries to shift from conservation to depletion. Changes in the institutional setting of resource use in one country may have repercussions on trading partners. Our results indicate potential trade-offs between the sustainable development goals and imply that policies focusing on resource use or trade (e.g., international trade bans or certified trade) are not sufficient to prevent resource depletion. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2019
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12. Technology treaties and climate change
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Gersbach, Hans and Riekhof, Marie-Catherine
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O31 ,Klimawandel ,Q54 ,EU-Emissionshandel ,H23 ,Economics ,International permit markets ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Externer Effekt ,Climate change mitigation ,Klimapolitik ,Technology promotion ,International treaty ,Externalities ,ddc:330 ,Technologiewahl ,EU-Staaten ,Innovation - Abstract
We introduce an international technology treaty that couples the funding of research for a more advanced abatement technology with an international emissions permit market. Under the treaty, each country decides on the amount of permits for its domestic industries, but a fraction of these permits is auctioned on the permit market, and the revenues are used to scale up license revenues for the innovators of abatement technologies. We discuss the conditions under which such a technology treaty can slow down climate change through technological innovations and whether it creates complementary incentives for countries to tighten permit issuance. Finally, we discuss how participation in Tech Treaties can be fostered and how such treaties might be implemented.
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- 2017
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13. Professional identity and the gender gap in risk-taking: Evidence from a field experiment with scientists
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Drupp, Moritz A., Khadjavi, Menusch, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, and Voss, Rüdiger
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D81 ,C93 ,J16 ,field experiment ,risk-taking ,ddc:330 ,gender ,labor market ,priming ,identity - Abstract
The gender gap in risk-taking is often used to explain differences in labor market outcomes. Some studies, however, suggest that this gender gap does not extend to professional contexts. This paper examines potential drivers of the gender gap in risk-taking, comparing the professional context of academia to a private setting. We draw on identity economics, which posits that individuals form multiple identities that moderate behavior across contexts. In an online field experiment with 474 scientists we vary the salience of the professional or private identity. We find that the gender gap in risk-taking is mediated when the professional identity is salient. We identify the switching of identities by females as an explanation. Our results suggest that if the gender gap in risk-taking is driven by selection, the selection is not (only) along risk-aversion, but (also) along the ability to switch between identities and to adapt to prevailing norms. This provides new insights for the discussion on gender, risk-taking and labor market policies, and suggests an important role for mentoring programs.
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- 2017
14. Informal credit markets, common-pool resources and education
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Riekhof, Marie-Catherine and Noack, Frederik
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Child labor ,Q20 ,Kreditmarkt ,Common-pool resources ,Economics ,Kinderarbeit ,J24 ,Fragmented credit markets ,Education ,Humankapital ,Informal credit markets ,Informal Credit Markets ,D91 ,Fragmented Credit Markets ,ddc:330 ,D13 ,Child Labor ,Common-pool Externality ,Bildungsinvestition ,Common-pool externality ,Common-pool Resources ,Externer Effekt ,O16 ,Informelle Wirtschaft ,Theorie - Abstract
The paper analyses the effect of interest rate changes on education and child labor in an economy with a high-skilled sector, a low-skilled sector and fragmented credit markets. The high-skilled sector takes educated labor as input. The low-skilled sector takes unskilled labor, physical capital and natural common-pool resources as inputs. Credit supply consists of (a) loans with collateral in form of productive investments in the low-skilled sector and (b) higher-priced loans without collateral. Lower interest rates increase the net present value of the returns to education. They also reduce costs of capital investment in current production. This increases labor productivity and the opportunity costs of education. Overuse of the common-pool resource can reverse this productivity effect. We show that the overall effect of interest rate changes on education depends on the initial wealth of the household, resource use and the credit market segment that is subject to improvements.
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- 2016
15. The Insurance Premium in the Interest Rates of Interlinked Loans in a Small-scale Fishery
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Riekhof, Marie-Catherine
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Informal insurance ,Economics ,H23 ,India ,Q22 ,Kreditrisiko ,0502 economics and business ,Informal credit markets ,Kreditgeschäft ,ddc:330 ,Indien ,050207 economics ,Small-scale fishery ,O31 ,Zins ,Interlinked loan ,Insurance premium ,Interest rate ,Interlinked contracts ,Risk-sharing ,Q54 ,05 social sciences ,O17 ,Kleinfischerei ,O16 ,050202 agricultural economics & policy - Abstract
Interest payments based on income flows are a common feature of informal loans. Such so-called `interlinked loans' can be seen as an insurance against very low disposable incomes, as interest payments are lowest when income turns out to be low. This paper examines whether interlinked loans indeed contain an insurance premium and how those premia are determined. A simple theoretical model predicts that interest rates of interlinked loans increase with income volatility when insurance premia exist. Based on data from a small-scale fishery in India, calculations show that on average, lenders receive 25% of the income, which corresponds to an average interest rate of 49% p.a.. A panel data analysis confirms theoretical predictions that interlinked loans contain an insurance component paid by the borrowers.
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- 2016
16. Use rights for common pool resources and economic development
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Noack, Frederik, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, and Quaas, Martin
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natural resources and development ,Q20 ,O44 ,use rights and development ,wealth distribution and occupational choice ,Economics ,Natural resources and development ,Q28 ,O13 ,O15 ,Use rights and development ,Wealth distribution and occupational choice ,ddc:330 - Abstract
This paper explores the long–run development of an economy with a traditional sector based on common–pool resource-use, a modern, resource–independent sector with fixed entry costs, and an imperfect capital market. We show theoretically that introducing resource-use regulations increases incomes in the traditional sector and that this can trigger a development process with labor reallocation to the modern sector. Allowing trade of resource-use rights, or distributing resource-use rights unequally, broadens the scope for development.
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- 2015
17. Essays in resource and development economics
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Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, Bröcker, Johannes, and Quaas, Martin
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Announcement Effect ,Human Capital ,Abschlussarbeit ,Small-Scale Fishery ,Strong Green Paradox ,Announcement Effect, Dynamic General Equilibrium, Climate Policy, Strong Green Paradox,Welfare Evaluation, Secured Loan, Human Capital, Child Labor, Education, Common Pool Resources,Informal Credit Markets, Credit-Output Interlinkages, Regression Analysis, Risk Sharing, Small-Scale Fishery, India ,India ,Welfare Evaluation ,Dynamic General Equilibrium ,Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences ,Education ,doctoral thesis ,Secured Loan ,Informal Credit Markets ,ddc:330 ,Credit-Output Interlinkages ,ddc:3XX ,Regression Analysis ,Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät ,Risk Sharing ,Child Labor ,Climate Policy ,Common Pool Resources - Abstract
Chapter 1: Does the Adverse Announcement Effect of Climate Policy Matter? A Dynamic General Equilibrium Analysis We quantify the welfare effect of a climate policy that is announced today, but implemented with a known time lag as political procedures impede immediate implementation. The policy is a carbon emissions tax whose time path is chosen optimally at the time when implemented. During the time span before implementation, the announcement induces a lower price of fossil fuel and thus higher emissions as compared to a no-intervention scenario. In principle, this adverse ‘announcement effect’ could more than outweigh in welfare terms the gain from the tax after implementation. We show this not to be just a theoretical curiosity. We quantify a ‘window of opportunity’ such that implementation before (after) its end is a welfare gain (loss) over the no-intervention scenario. The result is highly sensitive to assumptions on the resource stock which is afflicted with particular empirical uncertainties. Our central estimate is a window of opportunity of about 60 years. Hence, there is still time to act, but the window of opportunity may be smaller. Thus, the adverse announcement effect is a worrying phenomenon deserving political awareness. The model is a Ramsey model extended by an exhaustible carbon resource and linked to a stylized dynamic climate model adapted from Nordhaus (2008b). Chapter 2: When will Higher Interest Payments Lead to More Education? Based on observations from field studies in fishing communities in India, we include a fragmented credit market into a two-sector, two-period model with common pool externalities to establish conditions under which credit market distortions either increase or decrease education. We show that higher interest payments increase education if their negative effect on capital investment and therefore labor productivity in low-skilled production outweighs their positive effect on subjective discounting and therefore the present value of highskilled production. Positive common pool externalities from reduced capital investment in low-skilled production can counterbalance the impact of capital changes on low-skilled labor productivity and therefore on education. The overall outcome depends on the affected interest factor, the household’s initial wealth and the common pool externality. Chapter 3: Estimating the Insurance Premium in Interlinked Credit-Output Contracts On informal credit markets, one often observes a type of credit that does not base interest payments on the loan amount, but on income flows (interlinked credit-output contract). This can be understood as a risk sharing mechanism where interest payments include an insurance premium. This paper shows that the premium increases with the income volatility. Based on observations from small-scale fishing communities around Chilika lagoon, India, the paper also confirms the finding empirically. Furthermore, in contrast to pure credit contracts, interlinked contracts allow fishing boats as collateral around Chilika lagoon. This reduces their interest rate. It explains why interlinked interest rates turn out to be of similar size as micro finance interest rates even though the former include an insurance component.
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- 2014
18. Predictive Markets: Ein vielversprechender Weg zur Verbesserung der Prognosequalität im Unternehmen?
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Riekhof, Hans-Christian, Riekhof, Marie-Catherine, and Brinkhoff, Stefan
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Die möglichst präzise und vor allem zutreffende Vorhersage unsicherer zukünftiger Ereignisse ist eine permanente Herausforderung für Unternehmen. Prognosemärkte adressieren diese Aufgabe, indem sie relevante Informationen aufdecken, bewerten und aggregieren. Mit diesem Bericht leisten wir einen Beitrag zur Bewertung der Leistungsfähigkeit von Prognosemärkten und tragen zusammen, wo potentielle Schwierigkeiten liegen und inwiefern dafür bereits Lösungsansätze vorhanden sind. Es hat sich gezeigt, dass ein webbasiertes System mit einem virtuellen Aktienmarkt über den Preismechanismus effizient individuelle Urteile aggregieren kann und sich durch vergleichsweise niedrige Transaktionskosten und hohe Skalierbarkeit in Bezug auf die Anzahl möglicher Teilnehmer auszeichnet. Die operative Implementierung kann durch internes Marketing bereits vor dem Launch, durch die richtige Sprache, durch eine kontinuierliche Kontrolle des Anreizsystems und durch eine klare Unterstützung vom Topmanagement unterstützt werden. Erfahrungen der Wirtschaft zeigen die bisher noch schwierige Realisierung langfristiger Prognosen über Predictive Markets, da das hierfür optimale Anreizschema noch nicht ausreichend erforscht ist. Außerdem sind weitere empirische Untersuchungen notwendig, um bessere Aussagen über den Umgang mit spekulativen Blasen, über die ideale Anzahl von parallel handelbaren Aktien und über die Kalibrierung des Prognosehorizonts treffen zu können.
- Published
- 2012
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