•  29
    Admissibility and Feasibility in Game Forms
    Analyse & Kritik 18 (1): 54-66. 1996.
    This paper examines the exercise of individual or group rights within the game form approach. It focuses in particular on what it means for a strategy or action to be feasible and admissible. Admissibility is best discussed in relation to two basic distinctions among rights, passive and active rights on the one hand and negative and positive rights on the other. It is argued that while there are quite a few cases in which the outcomes of mutual rights exercising are to the fore, there are many s…Read more
  • Book Review (review)
    Economics and Philosophy 13 (1): 128-131. 1997.
  •  41
    The impact of human health co-benefits on evaluations of global climate policy
    with Noah Scovronick, Mark Budolfson, Francis Dennig, Frank Errickson, Wei Peng, Robert H. Socolow, Dean Spears, and Fabian Wagner
    Nature Communications 2095 (19). 2019.
    The health co-benefits of CO2 mitigation can provide a strong incentive for climate policy through reductions in air pollutant emissions that occur when targeting shared sources. However, reducing air pollutant emissions may also have an important co-harm, as the aerosols they form produce net cooling overall. Nevertheless, aerosol impacts have not been fully incorporated into cost-benefit modeling that estimates how much the world should optimally mitigate. Here we find that when both co-b…Read more
  •  21
    The comparative importance for optimal climate policy of discounting, inequalities and catastrophes
    with Mark Budolfson, Francis Dennig, and Asher Siebert
    Climatic Change 145. 2017.
    Integrated assessment models (IAMs) of climate and the economy provide estimates of the social cost of carbon and inform climate policy. With the Nested Inequalities Climate Economy model (NICE) (Dennig et al. PNAS 112:15,827–15,832, 2015), which is based on Nordhaus’s Regional Integrated Model of Climate and the Economy (RICE), but also includes inequalities within regions, we investigate the comparative importance of several factors—namely, time preference, inequality aversion, intraregional i…Read more
  •  30
    Inequality, climate impacts on the future poor, and carbon prices
    with Mark Budolfson, Francis Dennig, Asher Siebert, and Robert H. Socolow
    Pnas 112 (52). 2015.
    Integrated assessment models of climate and the economy provide estimates of the social cost of carbon and inform climate policy. We create a variant of the Regional Integrated model of Climate and the Economy (RICE)—a regionally disaggregated version of the Dynamic Integrated model of Climate and the Economy (DICE)—in which we introduce a more fine-grained representation of economic inequalities within the model’s regions. This allows us to model the common observation that climate change impac…Read more
  •  136
    Evaluating life or death prospects
    with Luc Bovens
    Economics and Philosophy 28 (2): 217-249. 2012.
    We consider a special set of risky prospects in which the outcomes are either life or death. There are various alternatives to the utilitarian objective of minimizing the expected loss of lives in such prospects. We start off with the two-person case with independent risks and construct taxonomies of ex ante and ex post evaluations for such prospects. We examine the relationship between the ex ante and the ex post in this restrictive framework: There are more possibilities to respect ex ante and…Read more
  • De l'autogestion au socialisme associatif
    with T. Andréani
    Actuel Marx 14. 1993.
  •  3758
    Democracy and proportionality
    Journal of Political Philosophy 18 (2): 137-155. 2008.