Dansk / baltisk public choice workshop 2025 – præsentationerne

Den 31. januar og 1. februar afholder vi den årlige danske public choice workshop. Det er den 25. af slagsen, og i år også den første ‘baltiske’ public choice workshop, da vi denne gang skal til Malmø. Det er endda, så vidt jeg kan se, den største vi har afholdt, da der er hele 22 præsentationer på programmet.

Mens programmet ikke er helt på plads, da vi må tage hensyn til flere deltageres ønsker, har vi nu en fuld liste af præsentationer. De bliver fordelt i et program, der kører fredag den 31/1 mellem 11 og 17.30, og lørdag den 1/2 mellem 9 og 11, programmet annonceres som altid her på stedet. Indtil da kan læserne danne sig et overblik over de mange emner til workshoppen. Som altid er alle interesserede velkomne til at komme en hel dag, eller måske bare til en enkelt session. Her er den fulde liste af præsentationer:

Fredrik Andersson (Lund): Arm’s-Length Governance in Cultural Policy and Beyond – Some Comparisons

Christine Terjesdotter Bangum, Benny Geys and Rune Sørensen (BI Norwegian Business School): Universalism over the Life Cycle

Ingemar Bengtsson (Lund): Green Inside Activism in Forestry and Possible Reallocation of Value – A Conceptual Analysis

Andreas Bergh (Lund): Does Capital Income Increase Inequality also in the Long Run?

Niclas Berggren (IFN), Erik Enger Karlson (IFN), and Elis Hodzic (VSE): Trust and Income among Immigrants in Europe

Christian Bjørnskov (Aarhus): Was National Sovereignty a Profitable Decision? Exploring Economic Growth after Decolonisation

Otto Brøns-Petersen (Cepos): Fiscal Externalities and Institutional Drift in the EU, Informed by Public Choice

Jesper Deding and Karsten Bo Larsen (Cepos): Improving Quality in Early Childhood Education Through Minimum Staffing Ratios – Politics, Science or Politically Influenced Science? A Meta-Systematic Literature Review Comparing Danish and International Research Literature

Andreas Ek (Lund): Assessing Market-Level Discrimination of Immigrants

Lasse Eskildsen (SDU): How do Social Media Differ from Classical Media in their Relationship to Terrorism?

Jan Fałkowski (Warsaw): But Don’t Play with Me `Cause You’re Playing with a Farmer. Electoral Consequences of Animal Welfare Proposals

Jerg Gutmann (Hamburg) and Christian Bjørnskov (Aarhus): Coups and Constitutional Compliance

Åsa Hanson (Lund): Is a Highly Decentralized Government Sustainable in a Digitalized and Global World?

Adrian Mehic (Lund): Consent-Based Laws and Aggregate Fertility

Lucas Henriksson (Lund): The declining effect of European cigarette taxation on youth smoking

Nicola Maaser (Aarhus): Turned Off by Boundary Reform

Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska (Warsaw): Economic Consequences of Non-Compliance with Constitutions – the Post-Socialist “Illiberal Democracy” Perspective

Martin Paldam (Aarhus): The OPEC/MENA/Arab Nexus and the Missing Democratic Transition

Tim Schnelle (Hamburg): Crafting Compliance: The Role of Inclusion and Participation in the Constitution-Making Process

Charlotta Stern and Martin Björklund (Ratio): Separate but Equal? Understanding the Persistence of Class Segregation in the Swedish Labor Market

Rasmus Wiese (Groningen), Jan-Egbert Sturm (KOF) and Jakob de Haan (Groningen): The Impact of Structural Reforms on the Labour Income Share: New International Evidence

Lasse Aaskoven (SDU), Adam Scharpf (Københavns Universitet) and Christian Gläsel (Hertie School of Governance): Occupation and Collaboration: Evidence from Danish Officers in Nazi Germany’s Military Service

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