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2021 - February Newsletter - Trinity College Cambridge
https://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/newsletters/2021-february-newsletter/13 May 2021: The partnership with Trinity College also includes invaluable input from Dom Clarke (2002) who studied Economics, qualified as an accountant and returned to Bolton where he became Finance Director of the ... The primarily digital festival aims to tackle
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The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review | Conservation…
https://www.conservation.cam.ac.uk/events/economics-biodiversity-dasgupta-review27 Jan 2021: Join economist Professor Sir Partha Dasgupta and Nobel-prize winning biologist Sir Venki Ramakrishnan to mark the publication of The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review. ... Commissioned by the UK Government, this independent, global Review -
Study suggests R rate for tracking pandemic should be dropped in…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/study-suggests-r-rate-for-tracking-pandemic-should-be-dropped-in-favour-of-nowcasts29 Sep 2021: The Harvey-Kattuman model has been adapted into two trackers. The two Cambridge academics worked with the National Institute of Economic and Social Research to produce a UK tracker which is ... published biweekly by the National Institute of Economic and
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Brand-new Design Tripos brings arts and science together in one…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/brand-new-design-tripos-brings-arts-and-science-together-in-one-degree1 Nov 2021: Studio work and practical skills, including drawing, writing, coding, and fabricating, will complement taught courses in the humanities, social and natural sciences, and mathematics - bringing historical, cultural, ecological and economic context.
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Conservation Seminar: Dr Robin Naidoo | Conservation Research…
https://www.conservation.cam.ac.uk/events/conservation-seminar-dr-robin-naidoo26 Apr 2021: Here, I will discuss how quantitative, interdisciplinary approaches from fields such as economics, ecology, and health can be integrated to investigate various human dimensions of conservation, at scales ranging from local ... I will highlight how -
Loan applications processed around midday more likely to be rejected…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/loan-applications-processed-around-midday-more-likely-to-be-rejected5 May 2021: By studying decisions made at a bank, the researchers could calculate the economic cost of decision fatigue in a specific context - the first time this has been done.
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At home with Professor Amartya Sen - Trinity College Cambridge
https://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/news/at-home-with-professor-amartya-sen/11 Oct 2021: He travels seamlessly across academic disciplines – delving into history, economics, philosophy, medicine, and more – woven together by a rough chronology of his life from Santiniketan to Harvard, and everywhere in between. ... Later, he developed
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Dasgupta Review: Nature’s Value Must be at the Heart of Economics |…
https://www.conservation.cam.ac.uk/news/dasgupta-review-natures-value-must-be-heart-economics8 Feb 2021: Nature is a “blind spot” in economics. We can no longer afford for it to be absent from accounting systems that dictate national finances, or ignored by economic decision makers. ... Nature is our home,” said Dasgupta. “Good economics demands we -
The economics of biodiversity: the Dasgupta Review - Johnian
https://johnian.joh.cam.ac.uk/news/the-economics-of-biodiversity-the-dasgupta-review/14 Apr 2021: me: ‘what does it mean to bring biodiversity to the heart of economics?’. ... nature. The Review argues that mainstream economics – both theory and practice – has ignored what we know about how ecosystems function, and how they are affected by
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The Economic Consequences of Conserving or Restoring Sites for Nature …
https://www.conservation.cam.ac.uk/news/economic-consequences-conserving-or-restoring-sites-nature11 Mar 2021: Search site. Conservation Research Institute. The Economic Consequences of Conserving or Restoring Sites for Nature. ... Yet in almost half of the cases we studied, human-induced exploitation subtracted rather than increased economic value.”.
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