T
Tom Heggedal
Publications - 6
Citations - 4785
Tom Heggedal is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Perspective (graphical). The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 4771 citations.
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MonographDOI
Mitigation from a cross-sectoral perspective
Terry Barker,I. Bashmakov,Awwad Alharthi,Markus Ammann,Luis Cifuentes,John Drexhage,Duan Maosheng,Ottmar Edenhofer,Brian Flannery,Michael Grubb,Monique Hoogwijk,Francis Ibitoye,Catrinus J. Jepma,William A. Pizer,Kenji Yamaji,Shimon Awerbuch,Lenny Bernstein,André Faaij,Hitoshi Hayami,Tom Heggedal,Snorre Kverndokk,John Latham,Axel Michaelowa,David Popp,Peter L. Read,Stefan Schleicher,Michael D. Smith,Ferenc Toth,Bert Metz,Ogunlade Davidson,Peter Bosch,Rutu Dave,Leo Meyer +32 more
Chapter 11 Mitigation from a cross-sectoral perspective
Catrinus J. Jepma,William A. Pizer,Lenny Bernstein,Shimon Awerbuch,Tom Heggedal,Snorre Kverndokk,John Latham,Axel Michealowa,David Popp,Michael H. Smith,Ferenc Toth,David Hawkins +11 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Age and vote choice: Is there a conservative shift among older voters?
TL;DR: Using eleven rotating panels of the Norwegian Election Studies (1977-2017) and exploiting first-derivative properties of the vote choice function, the authors identify non-linear life-cycle effects while controlling for cohort and period effects.
Journal ArticleDOI
The power of outside options in the presence of obstinate types
TL;DR: The authors investigate the role of two-sided reputation-building in dynamic bargaining and find that outside options are exercised excessively and that efficiency is no better than it is in their absence, but only if subjects share a belief about what constitutes obstinacy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Can paying politicians well reduce corruption? The effects of wages and uncertainty on electoral competition
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigate the effects of wages and uncertainty on political corruption as measured by rent-taking, and find that rent taking is not independent of, but decreases with wages in the absence of popularity shocks.