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Institution

Economic and Social Research Institute

NonprofitDublin, Ireland
About: Economic and Social Research Institute is a nonprofit organization based out in Dublin, Ireland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & European union. The organization has 425 authors who have published 1530 publications receiving 41567 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impacts of the EU-US Open Skies agreement on the environment on emissions from the aviation sector using the Hamburg Tourism Model of domestic and international tourist numbers and flows.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The evidence show that job loss is causally linked to significant declines in health for men, but not for women, yet, the increased risk of poor health is lower for coupled men, especially if the partner is employed, suggesting that both emotional and economic support play a role.

18 citations

BookDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide case studies of three of the most important FDI-intensive manufacturing sectors (ICT, pharmaceuticals and medical devices) and two of the substantially foreign-owned internationally traded services segments (software & IT and international financial services).
Abstract: Ireland is one of the most FDI-intensive economies in the OECD and is a significant export platform for both manufacturing and internationally traded services. This chapter provides case studies of three of the most important FDI-intensive manufacturing sectors ? ICT, pharmaceuticals and medical devices ? and two of the substantially foreign-owned internationally traded services segments ? software & IT and international financial services. It also updates earlier analyses of how Ireland's inward FDI sectors have fared over the course of the global financial crisis.

18 citations

01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore for the first time the global impacts of extreme sea-level rise, triggered by a hypothetical collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS).
Abstract: The threat of an abrupt and extreme rise in sea level is widely discussed in the media, but little understood in practise, especially the likely impacts of such a rise including a potential adaptation response. This paper explores for the first time the global impacts of extreme sea-level rise, triggered by a hypothetical collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS). As the potential contributions remain uncertain, a wide range of scenarios are explored: WAIS contributions to sea-level rise of between 0.5 and 5 m/century. Together with other business-as-usual sea-level contributions, in the worst case this gives an approximately 6-m rise of global-mean sea level from 2030 to 2130. Global exposure to extreme sea-level rise is significant: it is estimated that roughly 400 million people (or about 8% of global population) are threatened by a 5-m rise in sea level, just based on 1995 data. The coastal module within the Climate Framework for Uncertainty, Negotiation and Distribution (FUND) model is tuned with global data on coastal zone characteristics concerning population, land areas and land use, and then used for impact analysis under the extreme sea-level rise scenarios. The model considers the interaction of (dry)land loss, wetland loss, protection costs and human displacement, assuming perfect adaptation based on cost-benefit analysis. Unlike earlier analyses, response costs are represented in a non-linear manner, including a sensitivity analysis based on response costs. It is found that much of the world’s coast would be abandoned given these extreme scenarios, although according to the global model, significant lengths of the world’s coast are worth defending even in the most extreme case. This suggests that actual population displacement would be a small fraction of the potential population displacement, and is consistent with the present distribution of coastal population, which is heavily concentrated in specific areas. Hence, a partial defence can protect most of the world’s coastal population. However, protection costs rise substantially diverting large amounts of investment from other sectors, and large areas of (dry)land and coastal wetlands are still predicted to be lost. Detailed case studies of the WAIS collapse in the Netherlands, Thames Estuary and the Rhone delta suggest greater abandonment than shown by the global model, probably because the model assumes perfect implementation of coastal protection and does not account for negative feedbacks when implementation is imperfect. The significant impacts found in the global model together with the potential for greater impacts as found in the detailed case studies shows that the response to abrupt sea-level rise is worthy of further research.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors review the experience gained in the econometric estimation and simulation of the three HERMIN national models and show interesting features that may indicate broad patterns of national behaviour rather than specific results in terms of sophisticated hypothesis testing.

18 citations


Authors

Showing all 433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard S.J. Tol11669548587
Mario Coccia7239812366
Marco Vivarelli582659909
Joel W. Grube5419311499
Leslie Daly5423316133
René Kemp5318516666
Mark Wooden493188783
Brian Nolan4836911371
Richard J. T. Klein4712618096
Christopher T. Whelan461896687
Patrick Honohan442349853
Richard Breen4314811007
Richard Layte422127281
Katrin Rehdanz401616453
Emer Smyth391684245
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202219
202178
202084
201991
201891