Public Choice (2012) 151:91–119
DOI 10.1007/s11127-010-9735-1
Inequity and risk aversion in sequential public good
games
Sabrina Teyssier
Received: 5 January 2010 / Accepted: 12 October 2010 / Published online: 3 November 2010
³ Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010
Abstract Behavioral hypotheses have recently been introduced into public-choice theory
(Ostrom in American Political Science
/media/loftslag/Public-Choice-2012---Teyssier---Inequity-and-risk-aversion-in-sequential-public-good-games.pdf
Question: How much of the lowland surrounding the volcano is
exposed to jökulhlaups?Answer: The major part of
the lowland between the rivers Skaftafellsá and Breiðá (340 km2) is
susceptible to flooding because of jökulhlaups descending the western and
southern slopes of Öræfajökull. Very few settlements can be considered as safe. Question: What damage can jökulhlaup cause?Answer: Jökulhlaups
/volcanoes/about-volcanoes/oraefajokull/q-a/
type is probably the
least reliable because of its memory and operation system design. Comprehensive
information on how much maintenance has been done for each model has not been
collected, but it is advisable to do. In the near future, several of the oldest receivers will
have to be upgraded with newer models. Number of receivers for each model is given in
Table 5.
Table 5. Receiver models
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2011/2011_005.pdf
-
risk management - Part 2
Eriksson
Exercise work - how to
combine into a general
adaptive management
framework
PhD students
10:45 - 11:00 Coffee Coffee Coffee Coffee Coffee
11:00 - 12:45
Stakeholder involvement
methodologies - Part 1
Hare
Exercise work
PhD students
Scenario building
methodologies - Part 2
Kok
Uncertainty - concepts and
tools - Part 2
Refsgaard
Case in adaptive
management
/media/vedurstofan/NONAM-PhD_program.pdf
to be linked to
scenarios that are often based on similar system changes.
5. Strong and weak points of Fuzzy Cognitive Maps
5.1. Fuzzy Cognitive Mapping as addition to the Story-and-Simulation
approach
Fig. 6 illustrates how the Story-and-Simulation approach could
be expanded to incorporate Fuzzy Cognitive Maps. As before, a
scenario team and a scenario panel will be established and
narratives
/media/loftslag/Kok_JGEC658_2009.pdf
amount of ice is melted and, accordingly, little danger of large jökulhlaups. The floods are monitored by online gauges in several rivers around the volcanoes Katla and Eyjafjallajökull. Large or damaging jökulhlaups are not expected in connection to this event unless changes occur in the eruption pattern.
How is the eruption monitored?
The Icelandic Meteorological Office monitors earth
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/1880
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Climate change adaptation in European river basins
Patrick Huntjens • Claudia Pahl-Wostl •
John Grin
Received: 1 July 2008 / Accepted: 24 December 2009 / Published online: 2 February 2010
The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com
Abstract This paper contains an assessment and stan-
dardized comparative analysis of the current water man
/media/loftslag/Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change.pdf
estimated to be 11 Mt (+/- 5 Mt) for the entire duration of the eruption (Gislason et al., 2015).
SO2 can have human and animal health implications when present in high concentrations. For this reason, IMO was asked to provide hazard maps for SO2 ground concentration at local and regional scale. The maps were produced using the dispersal model CALPUFF. The maps were used to identify and draw
/pollution-and-radiation/volcanic-gas/hazard-zoning/
estimated to be 11 Mt (+/- 5 Mt) for the entire duration of the eruption (Gislason et al., 2015).
SO2 can have human and animal health implications when present in high concentrations. For this reason, IMO was asked to provide hazard maps for SO2 ground concentration at local and regional scale. The maps were produced using the dispersal model CALPUFF. The maps were used to identify and draw
/pollution-and-radiation/volcanic-gas/hazard-zoning
basic forms of participatory modelling, identied by classifying
nine example participatory modelling processes. The second part considers the potential
widespread adoption of participatory modelling by resource managers in the water sector,
concluding that this potential is low. It proposes recommendations as to how the potential
for the adoption of participatory modelling by water managers can
/media/loftslag/Hare-2011-ParticipatoryModelling.pdf