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Cem Işık

Researcher at Anadolu University

Publications -  65
Citations -  2733

Cem Işık is an academic researcher from Anadolu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Kuznets curve. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 64 publications receiving 1010 citations. Previous affiliations of Cem Işık include Atatürk University.

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The use of ecological footprint in estimating the Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis for BRICST by considering cross-section dependence and heterogeneity

TL;DR: Empirical results show that the EKC hypothesis is not valid, and energy intensity and energy structure are important determinants of environmental degradation, and possible policy suggestions are discussed in the present study.
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A nexus of linear and non‐linear relationships between tourism demand, renewable energy consumption, and economic growth: Theory and evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between tourism development, renewable energy consumption, and economic growth in the United States, France, Spain, China, Italy, Turkey, and Germany using an innovative bootstrap panel Granger causality model.
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Analyzing the causalities between economic growth, financial development, international trade, tourism expenditure and/on the CO2 emissions in Greece

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the dynamic causalities between economic growth, financial development, international trade, tourism expenditure and/on the CO2 emissions in Greece over the period of 1970-2014.
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Ecological footprint, economic complexity and natural resources rents in Latin America: Empirical evidence using quantile regressions

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of economic complexity and the natural resources rents on the per capita ecological footprint in Latin America was examined and it was shown that the level of inequality for the utilization of region-specific climatic distribution of natural resources increases the ecological footprint while in the upper quantiles, it decreases the same.
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Testing the EKC hypothesis for ten US states: an application of heterogeneous panel estimation method

TL;DR: The empirical findings of the study indicate that the EKC (inverted U-shaped) hypothesis is valid only for Florida, Illinois, Michigan, New York, and Ohio.