3 results match your criteria: "CEDON - Center for Economics and Corporate Sustainability[Affiliation]"
J Environ Manage
January 2025
CEDON - Center for Economics and Corporate Sustainability, Faculty of Economics and Business, KU Leuven, Warmoesberg 26, B-1000, Brussel, Belgium.
Through a natural experiment setting in Hong Kong, this study examines the effects of financial incentives and nudges on consumer choices among three types of coffee cups: bring-your-own-cup (BYOC), shop-provided reusable cups, and disposable cups. Our dataset comprises 223 structured observations of coffee shops with 522 data points. The financial incentive-a direct price instrument set as a discount-is offered exclusively to customers who bring their own cups, while shop-provided (reusable) cups are not eligible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
June 2021
Safety and Security Science Group (S3G), Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, 2628BX Delft, The Netherlands.
This paper presents a bibliometric overview of the publications in the principal international journal Process Safety and Environmental Protection (PSEP) from 1990 to 2020 retrieved in the Web of Science (WoS) database to explore the evolution in safety and environmental engineering design and practice, as well as experimental or theoretical innovative research. Therefore, based on the WoS database and the visualization of similarities (VOS) viewer software, the bibliometric analysis and scientometric mapping of the literature have been performed from the perspectives of document types, publication and citation distribution over time, leading authors, countries (regions), institutions, the corresponding collaboration networks, most cited publications and references, focused research fields and topics, research trend evolution over time, etc. The paper provides a comprehensive and quantitative overview and significant picture representation for the journal's leading and evolutionary trends by employing specific aforementioned bibliometric analysis factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
March 2021
CEDON Center for Economics and Corporate Sustainability, KU Leuven, Warmoesberg 26, B-1000, Brussel, Belgium.
We explore and illustrate the potential consequences of identity salience on stated choice valuation outcomes. The dual role of individuals as citizens and as consumers is brought to the foreground when considering investments in wind energy. To this end, we use two different settings in a stated choice experiment to elicit household preferences: one based on the decision to buy a home with particular characteristics in the neighbourhood of a wind farm and one based on the decision to support a policy to locate a wind farm in the respondent's municipality.
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