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16 August, 2023

Why Canada should rethink their Net-Zero act

Considering the recent wildfires in Canada, the harmful effects of climate change are undeniably evolving faster than previously expected. It is now imperative for leaders in government, business and

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05 October, 2021
Completed: Social contract theory and future generations

Completed: Social contract theory and future generations

How should principles of justice be applied to a constantly changing society, where new types of injustices emerge, and dynamic decision making affects potential future generations?

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10 September, 2020

Sequential Requisites Analysis: A New Method for Analyzing Sequential Relationships in Ordinal Data

Social Science Quarterly, 838-856 Abstract Objectives This article presents a new method inspired by evolutionary biology for analyzing longer sequences of requisites for the emergence of particular outc

Type of publication: Journal articles | Lindenfors, Patrik , , Krusell, Joshua & Lindberg, Staffan I.
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15 December, 2022

How does political discussion frequency impact political moral opinions? The moral argument theory of opinion dynamics

Frontiers in Psychology Abstract Discussions of political issues may influence people's opinions. Is there any systematic difference in opinions between those who discuss frequently and those who do notnn

Type of publication: Journal articles | Eriksson, Kimmo , Vartanova, Irina , Strimling, Pontus
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12 December, 2023

Cooperation through collective punishment and participation

Political Science Research and Methods Abstract We experimentally explore the role of institutions imposing collective sanctions in sustaining cooperation. In our experiment, players only observe noisy

Type of publication: Journal articles | Mohlin, Erik , Duell, D., Mengel, F. & S. Weidenholzer
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16 November, 2016

Mikael Holmqvist: Djursholm – Sweden’s Leader Community

Mikael Holmqvist is Associate Professor of Sociology and Professor of Management at Stockholm University. ABSTRACTAll around the world there are ”leader communities”, i.e., places where leaders choose

Mikael Holmqvist is Associate Professor of Sociology and Professor of Management at Stockholm University.
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05 May, 2021

New study deconstructs Dunbar’s number – yes, you can have more than 150 friends

An individual human can maintain stable social relationships with about 150 people. This is the proposition known as ‘Dunbar’s number’ – that the architecture of the human brain sets an upper limit on

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