Full Participation

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Rory A. Cooper - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

Ulrike Stegemann - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • an international agreement with Full Participation to tackle the stock of greenhouse gases
    Economics Letters, 2012
    Co-Authors: Uwe Kratzsch, Gernot Sieg, Ulrike Stegemann
    Abstract:

    Greenhouse gas emissions build up an atmospheric stock which depreciates over time. We identify weakly renegotiation-proof equilibria with Full Participation in a game of international emission reduction. Treaties are easier to reach for long-lived than for short-lived gases.

  • a Full Participation agreement on global emission reduction through strategic investments in r d
    Economics Research International, 2011
    Co-Authors: Uwe Kratzsch, Gernot Sieg, Ulrike Stegemann
    Abstract:

    If an emission reduction agreement with Participation of all players is not enforceable because politicians are too myopic or not able to commit themselves to sustainable policies or costs of reducing emis- sions are too high, strategic investments in research and development (R&D) of green technology, for example sustainable drive-trains, can pave the way for a future treaty. Although no player will rationally reduce emissions on its own, investments in R&D by at least one player can change the strategic situation of negotiations to control emissions: Emission abatement costs will decrease so that a treaty with Full par- ticipation can be achieved in future periods through time consistent sustainable policies.

  • A Full Participation agreement on global emission reduction through strategic investments in R & D
    Economics Research International, 2011
    Co-Authors: Uwe Kratzsch, Gernot Sieg, Ulrike Stegemann
    Abstract:

    If an emission reduction agreement with Participation of all players is not enforceable because politicians are too myopic or not able to commit themselves to sustainable policies or costs of reducing emis- sions are too high, strategic investments in research and development (R&D) of green technology, for example sustainable drive-trains, can pave the way for a future treaty. Although no player will rationally reduce emissions on its own, investments in R&D by at least one player can change the strategic situation of negotiations to control emissions: Emission abatement costs will decrease so that a treaty with Full par- ticipation can be achieved in future periods through time consistent sustainable policies.

  • an international agreement with Full Participation to tackle the stock of greenhouse gases
    MPRA Paper, 2011
    Co-Authors: Uwe Kratzsch, Gernot Sieg, Ulrike Stegemann
    Abstract:

    This paper analyzes greenhouse gas emissions that build up an atmospheric stock which depreciates over time. Weakly renegotiation-proof and subgame perfect equilibria in a game of international emission reduction exist if countries put a sufficiently high weight on future payoffs, even though there is a discontinuity in the required discount factor due to the integrity of the number of punishing countries. Treaties are easier to reach if the gas depreciates slowly.

Marie Sépulchre - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Citizenship in action: Swedish disabled people claim ‘Full Participation. Now'
    2020
    Co-Authors: Marie Sépulchre
    Abstract:

    In his lecture about Citizenship and Social Class, T.H. Marshall noted that ‘societies in which citizenship is a developing institution create an image of an ideal citizenship against which achieve ...

  • Imagining Citizenship: Swedish Disabled People Claim ‘Full Participation. Now’
    2016
    Co-Authors: Marie Sépulchre
    Abstract:

    The ideal of citizenship is continuously being re-imagined by citizens who claim their right to participate in and be recognized as valuable members of their society. While scholars have documented the struggles of diverse groups of citizens, the citizenship claims of persons with disabilities have received less attention. The study focuses on a blog initiated by disability rights activists five months prior to the 2010 Swedish general elections with the aim to put the issue of disability on the political agenda and claim “Full Participation”. A content analysis was performed on a selection of 70 blogposts published as a book by four Swedish disability organizations to find out what the bloggers wrote about and how they proceeded to claim Full Participation in society. The analysis indicates that the bloggers positioned themselves as ordinary citizens by comparing their situation to citizens without disabilities. The ideal of citizenship underpinning the blogger’s claims corresponds to a traditional masculine conception of citizenship emphasizing independence, control and access to the public sphere. A key difference is, however, that the bloggers also challenge the disembodied notion of citizenship assuming that citizens are disconnected from their bodily needs.

  • Rejecting second class citizenship: Swedish disabled people claim ‘Full Participation. Now'
    2016
    Co-Authors: Marie Sépulchre
    Abstract:

    This paper investigates how citizenship is continuously being imagined, reworked and negotiated in different societal arenas and how people claim their right to participate in society and to be recognised as a valuable member of their society. The study focuses on the case of disabled people in Sweden who feel that they are considered as second class citizens and claim their right to Full citizenship.In his lecture about Citizenship and Social Class, T.H. Marshall noted that ‘there is no universal principle that determines what those [i.e. citizenship] rights and duties shall be, but societies in which citizenship is a developing institution create an image of an ideal citizenship against which achievement can be measured and towards which aspiration can be directed’. The ideal of citizenship is not neutral, however, and various feminist scholars have called attention to the fact that citizenship tends to be tailored to the situation of able-bodied, adult, heterosexual and Full-time employed males. As a consequence, people who do not fit this template find themselves in a position of ‘second class citizens’.The empirical analysis is grounded on an online blog called ‘Full Participation. Now’ which was created five months prior to the federal elections of 2010 in Sweden. The blog’s aim was to get the politicians’ attention to the issue of Full citizenship for persons with disabilities and the analysis shows how citizenship for disabled people is being (re-)imagined by bloggers who point at discriminatory practices at political, community and personal level. The analysis also shows how citizenship is negotiated by the bloggers who imagine citizenship in various – and sometimes contradictory – ways. Finally, the analysis indicates that the ideal of citizenship found in the blog posts not only develops in relation to the political arena but also in relation to everyday activities and experiences.

David A. Hennessy - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Modeling Interdependent Participation Incentives: Dynamics of a Voluntary Livestock Disease Control Program
    American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 2020
    Co-Authors: Tong Wang, David A. Hennessy
    Abstract:

    This paper models producers' interdependent incentives to participate in a voluntary livestock disease control program. Under strategic complementarity among Participation decisions, after a slow start momentum can build such that market premium for Participation and Participation rate increase sequentially. Non-Participation, partial Participation and Full Participation can all be Nash equilibria while Participation cost heterogeneity will dispose the outcome toward incomplete Participation. We find plausible conditions under which temporary government subsidies to the least cost-effective producers causes tipping toward Full Participation. Applying parameters from the literature on Johnes' disease, we illustrate factors that may affect Participation. These include cost heterogeneity and program effectiveness.

  • Modelling interdependent Participation incentives: dynamics of a voluntary livestock disease control programme
    European Review of Agricultural Economics, 2014
    Co-Authors: Tong Wang, David A. Hennessy
    Abstract:

    With focus on seedstock herds selling replacements and a qualified class of diseases, this paper models producers' interdependent incentives to participate in a voluntary livestock disease control programme. Under strategic complementarity among Participation decisions, momentum can build such that market premium for Participation and Participation rate increase sequentially. Non-Participation, partial Participation and Full Participation can all be Nash equilibria. Participation cost heterogeneity will dispose the outcome towards incomplete Participation. We find plausible conditions under which temporary government subsidies cause tipping towards Full Participation. Applying parameters from the literature on Johne's disease, we illustrate factors that may affect Participation.

Hervens Jeannis - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.