Ihre E-Mail wurde erfolgreich gesendet. Bitte prüfen Sie Ihren Maileingang.

Leider ist ein Fehler beim E-Mail-Versand aufgetreten. Bitte versuchen Sie es erneut.

Vorgang fortführen?

Exportieren
Filter
  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London, England ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    almafu_9960165843502883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (305 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1 ed.
    ISBN: 1-00-303708-9 , 1-003-03708-9 , 1-000-44176-8
    Inhalt: Climate Crisis Economics draws on economics, political economy, scientific literature, and data to gauge the extent to which our various communities - political, economic, business - are making the essential leap to a new narrative and policy approach that will accelerate us towards the necessary transition to a decarbonized economy and sustainable future.The book draws out policies and practices with both national and local examples, which will demonstrate various complementary approaches that are empowering states and people as they seek to pursue the carbon neutral goal. The author delineates a climate crisis economics approach that is fit for purpose and which can help achieve necessary climate change goals in the decades ahead. Ensuring economic and ecological sustainability is neither easy nor cost-free; there is no single solution to the climate crisis. All aspects of our economies, policies, business, and personal practices must come into alignment in order to succeed. Frustratingly, we know what is needed and we have many of the technologies and systems to make the leap to a carbon neutral economy, yet we still fail to act with alacrity. Leaders, communities, and businesses must shift their narratives in how they talk about and think about the climate crisis. In doing so, in making the narrative leap to a new understanding about what is possible and necessary, we can stop endangering our common future and single, fragile, global habitat, and instead set the stage for Green Globalisation 2.0 and a new, sustainable industrial revolution.Climate Crisis Economics will appeal to academics, students, investors, and professionals from varying disciplines including politics, international political economy, and international economics. Written in an accessible voice, it draws on work in fields outside of and in addition to politics and economics to make a case for climate crisis economics as an approach to addressing the climate change challenge ahead.
    Anmerkung: Cover -- Endorsement -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Illustrations -- Boxes -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Prologue: An Imagined Vision of the Near Future Without Action On Climate Change -- 1 Crises as Crucibles for Change -- Covid-19 Lessons for Our Climate Change Responses -- Leadership in Crises is Always Crucial -- Coordination is Crucial to Collective Response -- Delay is Costly - Act Now -- In Crises, What Was Once Impossible Becomes Possible -- Governments Are Our Last-Resort Actors When Disaster Strikes -- Institutions and Trusted Experts Matter in Crisis Policy Responses -- A Great Weight Can Be Borne By All Once a Crisis is Understood -- Individual Responsibility is Required to Achieve Our Goals -- Fairness is Essential and Demanded -- We Need to Find Ways to Communicate a Sense of Urgency to All -- Facts Matter and Must Be Defended and Reiterated -- Crises, Once Recognized, Can Vastly Accelerate the Rate of Societal Evolution -- Markets, Once Galvanized, Can Act and Act Fast -- Firm-level Commitment and Engagement Matter -- Crises Force a Reappraisal of What we Value -- The Structure of the Book -- Note -- References -- 2 Obscured Horizons and Middling Models -- Extend Our Horizons -- Understand the Limits of Our Models -- Is a Model Supporting the Policy Goal? -- Worry More About Fat Tail Risks -- Integrate Economics With Ethical and Moral Judgements -- A Tragedy of Horizons -- No Examples Outside Myth, Archaeology, and Ancient History -- Economic Stories Inform Our Personal and Policy Actions -- Climate Change Models - Their Limitations and Uses -- Models Are Apolitical -- Our Inputs are Not -- Rolling the DICE -- The Discount Rate Problem -- The Intergenerational Inequity Problem: We Value Future Generations - Don't We?. , Will We All Be Wealthier Tomorrow? The Growth Assumption Problem -- The Rising Cost of the Economic Catastrophes to Come: The Damage Function Problem -- Ecosystem Collapse is Not a Minor Matter -- Unbearable Heatwaves -- Rising Tides and Howling Typhoons -- Not Only the Poor Pay for Climate Denial -- Wildfires Scorch the Globe -- Fat Tails and Tipping Points: A Pessimists' Confession -- Sudden Leaps and Nonlinearity Are Not an Economist's Best Friend -- Climate Change is Slow, Then Fast -- Some Locations Already Have Experienced Tipping Points -- Climate Crisis Economics Must Include Local Tipping Points and Global Fat Tails -- Time to Act, Test Models, and Use All Available Policy Levers -- A Return to Adam Smith as Moral Philosopher -- We Need a Homo Economicus Sympatico -- Appendix 2.1 -- Notes -- References -- 3 Setting Targets, Pricing Carbon, and Punishing Laggards -- Set Ambitious Long-Term Targets and Match Them With Clear Interim Steps and Plans -- Europe's Regreening and Rebuilding -- A Chinese Commitment With Potentially Momentous Impact -- Biden's Green New Deal - a Start, Finally -- Leadership at Last -- California's Demonstration of What is Possible With Leadership -- What of the Laggard States? -- At COP26, Governments Must Make the Leap On Enforceable and Rising Carbon Pricing -- Pricing Can Trigger Rapid Changes in Behaviours -- Time to Announce a 'C-Day' -- The Price of Carbon - Set a Minimum, a Timeline, and an Adjustable Glidepath -- Cap-and-trade Schemes -- Europe's ETS - the World Leader, Despite Troubles -- China's ETS - a Lot of Room to Grow -- Whither the US On Carbon Pricing -- A Thin Regional Patchwork, With Some Successes -- A National US ETS is Needed -- Learn Lessons and Apply Them Globally and Locally -- Carbon Prices: How High is High Enough? -- COP26 and Carbon Pricing's Tipping Point -- Can We Get Agreement at COP26?. , Construct a Coalition of the Willing -- Free Riders Should Be Punished With a Carbon Border Adjustment Tariff -- Could It Be Done? -- Enforcement Will Be Necessary for Consensus Or Coalition -- Strike the Deal, Delegate National Market Regulators to Act, and Report and Review -- Shifting Incentives Across All Sectors -- Note -- References -- 4 Demographics, the Changing Investment Narrative Landscape, and Market Incentives -- The Gen X and Millennial Green Wave -- New Investors Demanding a Greener Future -- Shifting Signals: Green is Becoming Synonymous With Sound Investments -- A Green ESG Wave No One Can Ignore -- Firms Need to Get On Board and Set Net-Zero Goals -- Finance and the Net-Zero Transition -- Business Leaders Are Waking Up to the Net-Zero Requirement and the Rising ESG Wave -- Shifting Business Strategies Towards Net-Zero Goals Pays Off -- Ensuring the Markets Bend the GHG Emissions Curve Towards Net Zero -- Disclosure and Transparency - What's Not to Like? -- Make TCFD Mandatory Across the Globe -- Metrics Matter for the Economy and the Planet -- New Markets and Opportunities - Parental Oversight Required -- The Urgent Need for Reliable Offset Markets -- Vigilance Against Abuse and Misuse -- Emerging Markets and Green Investments -- An Evolving Market, Properly Overseen, Will Draw Us Towards Our Net-Zero Goal -- Appendix 4.1 -- Appendix 4.2 -- References -- 5 Building a Decarbonized World: Institutional Innovations That Reinforce Market Outcomes -- Green Institutions for a Sustainable Tomorrow -- Self-reporting and Monitoring Without Enforcement Are Not Enough -- We Should Create a World Carbon Organization -- Replicate WTO Success in the Carbon Pricing Space -- The WCO Could Adjudicate and Establish Norms -- Monitoring New Markets -- Why We Need National Carbon Banks. , Creating Strong, Independent NCBs in Every Country Would Have Many Benefits -- The Importance of Independence -- Accountability … of Course -- Institutional Innovation in Support of Green Globalization 2.0 -- Searing Reality Intervenes -- Build the Architecture of a Green, Decarbonized Tomorrow -- Notes -- References -- 6 A Greening of Industrial Policy: Speeding Diffusion and the Achievement of Net Zero -- Public Policy as Enabler, Supporter, and Backer -- Diffusion Rates, Technology Costs, Innovation, and the Net-Zero Transition -- Diffusion Comes in Waves -- Innovation is Not Episodic But, Rather, is Progressive and Iterative -- Major, Dramatic, and Ongoing Shifts Are Needed in All Industries and Sectors -- An End to Fossil Fuel Subsidies -- An Energy Transition Underway -- Coal is (Almost) Down and Out - in Some Markets -- A Sunnier and Windier Outlook -- Wind is Now Competitive Without Subsidies -- First Movers With the Wind Behind Them -- An EV Transport Revolution in Motion -- Battery Costs Are Falling Fast, Speeding the Transition and Steepening the S-Curve -- Agriculture and Farmers Find the Transition Tough -- Adaptation and Technology Improvement -- Scrap That Old Tractor -- New Crops to Lower Emissions -- Growing Rice But Limiting Methane -- Better Farming Practices Mean Better Outcomes -- Align Incentives With Environmental Goals -- We Need to Change What We Eat -- Industrial Manufacturing and Processes -- Taking Concrete Steps Proves Difficult -- Flying Must reflect the Cost of Convenience -- Slowing and Shifting Shipping's Route -- A Steepening Glidepath Before Us All -- A Steeper S-Curve is Possible -- References -- 7 Greening Our Stories Internationally, Nationally, and Especially Locally -- New Narratives Create New Realities -- Debate and Ownership -- Common Understanding is Essential and Possible. , Regions and Cities Must Lead the Way -- False Narratives and Tackling Climate Change -- The Luntz Memo's Deleterious Effect -- Beware the Danger of False Narratives and Rabbit Holes -- Social Media and Amoral, Unthinking Algorithms -- Talk About It: How Conversations Can Change Minds and Advance the Green Consensus -- Sewerage, Libraries, and Taxation -- Pension Demographics and Longevity -- Scotland's Big Climate Conversation -- Talking Together Changes Our Story and Our Outcomes -- Create Narratives That Resonate With a Locale and With Your Community -- Narrative Shifts Can Be Slow Until They Are Sudden -- The Greta Effect -- Extinction Rebellion's Direct Effect -- Climate Change Narratives Are Also Spiritual -- Declaring an Emergency Shifts the Narrative -- Americans Are Changing Their Climate Story -- The End of the Luntz Effect -- The Biden Administration Policy Shift Supports a Global Climate Break Point -- Devolution of the Climate Change Dialogue and the Ability to Act -- The UK Example -- Cities as Hubs of Green Innovation and Sustainable Liveability -- Cities and the Built Environment -- Transport, Mobility, and Our Cityscapes -- Powering Our Communities -- A Better, Localized, Green, Sustainable, Liveable Future -- Constructing New Tales and Travelling With Them Into the Future -- References -- 8 On Decarbonization, Economic Growth, and a Just Transition -- Growth Or No Growth -- Optimism Or Doom and Disaster - a False Choice -- New Contours for a Green Tomorrow -- Constructing Green Globalization 2.0 -- Green New Deals for All of Us -- Governments Can Afford to Invest in Green Reseeding -- A Greener, More Productive Economy -- But What of the Cost of GNDs? -- A Response to Debt and Deficit Hawks -- GNDs as Policy Accelerators -- Sustainable Growth is Possible and Essential -- Renewed Green Globalization 2.0 as a Partial Answer to Populism. , Biden's Government-Wide, Green Policy Leap.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-367-47870-6
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Electronic books.
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 2
    Buch
    Buch
    London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047508828
    Umfang: xvii, 286 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    ISBN: 9780367478704 , 9780367478698
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-003-03708-8 10.4324/9781003037088
    Sprache: Englisch
    Fachgebiete: Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Wirtschaft ; Ökologie ; Nachhaltigkeit ; Erneuerbare Energien
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 3
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London, England ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    edoccha_9960165843502883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (305 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1 ed.
    ISBN: 1-00-303708-9 , 1-003-03708-9 , 1-000-44176-8
    Inhalt: Climate Crisis Economics draws on economics, political economy, scientific literature, and data to gauge the extent to which our various communities - political, economic, business - are making the essential leap to a new narrative and policy approach that will accelerate us towards the necessary transition to a decarbonized economy and sustainable future.The book draws out policies and practices with both national and local examples, which will demonstrate various complementary approaches that are empowering states and people as they seek to pursue the carbon neutral goal. The author delineates a climate crisis economics approach that is fit for purpose and which can help achieve necessary climate change goals in the decades ahead. Ensuring economic and ecological sustainability is neither easy nor cost-free; there is no single solution to the climate crisis. All aspects of our economies, policies, business, and personal practices must come into alignment in order to succeed. Frustratingly, we know what is needed and we have many of the technologies and systems to make the leap to a carbon neutral economy, yet we still fail to act with alacrity. Leaders, communities, and businesses must shift their narratives in how they talk about and think about the climate crisis. In doing so, in making the narrative leap to a new understanding about what is possible and necessary, we can stop endangering our common future and single, fragile, global habitat, and instead set the stage for Green Globalisation 2.0 and a new, sustainable industrial revolution.Climate Crisis Economics will appeal to academics, students, investors, and professionals from varying disciplines including politics, international political economy, and international economics. Written in an accessible voice, it draws on work in fields outside of and in addition to politics and economics to make a case for climate crisis economics as an approach to addressing the climate change challenge ahead.
    Anmerkung: Cover -- Endorsement -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Illustrations -- Boxes -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Prologue: An Imagined Vision of the Near Future Without Action On Climate Change -- 1 Crises as Crucibles for Change -- Covid-19 Lessons for Our Climate Change Responses -- Leadership in Crises is Always Crucial -- Coordination is Crucial to Collective Response -- Delay is Costly - Act Now -- In Crises, What Was Once Impossible Becomes Possible -- Governments Are Our Last-Resort Actors When Disaster Strikes -- Institutions and Trusted Experts Matter in Crisis Policy Responses -- A Great Weight Can Be Borne By All Once a Crisis is Understood -- Individual Responsibility is Required to Achieve Our Goals -- Fairness is Essential and Demanded -- We Need to Find Ways to Communicate a Sense of Urgency to All -- Facts Matter and Must Be Defended and Reiterated -- Crises, Once Recognized, Can Vastly Accelerate the Rate of Societal Evolution -- Markets, Once Galvanized, Can Act and Act Fast -- Firm-level Commitment and Engagement Matter -- Crises Force a Reappraisal of What we Value -- The Structure of the Book -- Note -- References -- 2 Obscured Horizons and Middling Models -- Extend Our Horizons -- Understand the Limits of Our Models -- Is a Model Supporting the Policy Goal? -- Worry More About Fat Tail Risks -- Integrate Economics With Ethical and Moral Judgements -- A Tragedy of Horizons -- No Examples Outside Myth, Archaeology, and Ancient History -- Economic Stories Inform Our Personal and Policy Actions -- Climate Change Models - Their Limitations and Uses -- Models Are Apolitical -- Our Inputs are Not -- Rolling the DICE -- The Discount Rate Problem -- The Intergenerational Inequity Problem: We Value Future Generations - Don't We?. , Will We All Be Wealthier Tomorrow? The Growth Assumption Problem -- The Rising Cost of the Economic Catastrophes to Come: The Damage Function Problem -- Ecosystem Collapse is Not a Minor Matter -- Unbearable Heatwaves -- Rising Tides and Howling Typhoons -- Not Only the Poor Pay for Climate Denial -- Wildfires Scorch the Globe -- Fat Tails and Tipping Points: A Pessimists' Confession -- Sudden Leaps and Nonlinearity Are Not an Economist's Best Friend -- Climate Change is Slow, Then Fast -- Some Locations Already Have Experienced Tipping Points -- Climate Crisis Economics Must Include Local Tipping Points and Global Fat Tails -- Time to Act, Test Models, and Use All Available Policy Levers -- A Return to Adam Smith as Moral Philosopher -- We Need a Homo Economicus Sympatico -- Appendix 2.1 -- Notes -- References -- 3 Setting Targets, Pricing Carbon, and Punishing Laggards -- Set Ambitious Long-Term Targets and Match Them With Clear Interim Steps and Plans -- Europe's Regreening and Rebuilding -- A Chinese Commitment With Potentially Momentous Impact -- Biden's Green New Deal - a Start, Finally -- Leadership at Last -- California's Demonstration of What is Possible With Leadership -- What of the Laggard States? -- At COP26, Governments Must Make the Leap On Enforceable and Rising Carbon Pricing -- Pricing Can Trigger Rapid Changes in Behaviours -- Time to Announce a 'C-Day' -- The Price of Carbon - Set a Minimum, a Timeline, and an Adjustable Glidepath -- Cap-and-trade Schemes -- Europe's ETS - the World Leader, Despite Troubles -- China's ETS - a Lot of Room to Grow -- Whither the US On Carbon Pricing -- A Thin Regional Patchwork, With Some Successes -- A National US ETS is Needed -- Learn Lessons and Apply Them Globally and Locally -- Carbon Prices: How High is High Enough? -- COP26 and Carbon Pricing's Tipping Point -- Can We Get Agreement at COP26?. , Construct a Coalition of the Willing -- Free Riders Should Be Punished With a Carbon Border Adjustment Tariff -- Could It Be Done? -- Enforcement Will Be Necessary for Consensus Or Coalition -- Strike the Deal, Delegate National Market Regulators to Act, and Report and Review -- Shifting Incentives Across All Sectors -- Note -- References -- 4 Demographics, the Changing Investment Narrative Landscape, and Market Incentives -- The Gen X and Millennial Green Wave -- New Investors Demanding a Greener Future -- Shifting Signals: Green is Becoming Synonymous With Sound Investments -- A Green ESG Wave No One Can Ignore -- Firms Need to Get On Board and Set Net-Zero Goals -- Finance and the Net-Zero Transition -- Business Leaders Are Waking Up to the Net-Zero Requirement and the Rising ESG Wave -- Shifting Business Strategies Towards Net-Zero Goals Pays Off -- Ensuring the Markets Bend the GHG Emissions Curve Towards Net Zero -- Disclosure and Transparency - What's Not to Like? -- Make TCFD Mandatory Across the Globe -- Metrics Matter for the Economy and the Planet -- New Markets and Opportunities - Parental Oversight Required -- The Urgent Need for Reliable Offset Markets -- Vigilance Against Abuse and Misuse -- Emerging Markets and Green Investments -- An Evolving Market, Properly Overseen, Will Draw Us Towards Our Net-Zero Goal -- Appendix 4.1 -- Appendix 4.2 -- References -- 5 Building a Decarbonized World: Institutional Innovations That Reinforce Market Outcomes -- Green Institutions for a Sustainable Tomorrow -- Self-reporting and Monitoring Without Enforcement Are Not Enough -- We Should Create a World Carbon Organization -- Replicate WTO Success in the Carbon Pricing Space -- The WCO Could Adjudicate and Establish Norms -- Monitoring New Markets -- Why We Need National Carbon Banks. , Creating Strong, Independent NCBs in Every Country Would Have Many Benefits -- The Importance of Independence -- Accountability … of Course -- Institutional Innovation in Support of Green Globalization 2.0 -- Searing Reality Intervenes -- Build the Architecture of a Green, Decarbonized Tomorrow -- Notes -- References -- 6 A Greening of Industrial Policy: Speeding Diffusion and the Achievement of Net Zero -- Public Policy as Enabler, Supporter, and Backer -- Diffusion Rates, Technology Costs, Innovation, and the Net-Zero Transition -- Diffusion Comes in Waves -- Innovation is Not Episodic But, Rather, is Progressive and Iterative -- Major, Dramatic, and Ongoing Shifts Are Needed in All Industries and Sectors -- An End to Fossil Fuel Subsidies -- An Energy Transition Underway -- Coal is (Almost) Down and Out - in Some Markets -- A Sunnier and Windier Outlook -- Wind is Now Competitive Without Subsidies -- First Movers With the Wind Behind Them -- An EV Transport Revolution in Motion -- Battery Costs Are Falling Fast, Speeding the Transition and Steepening the S-Curve -- Agriculture and Farmers Find the Transition Tough -- Adaptation and Technology Improvement -- Scrap That Old Tractor -- New Crops to Lower Emissions -- Growing Rice But Limiting Methane -- Better Farming Practices Mean Better Outcomes -- Align Incentives With Environmental Goals -- We Need to Change What We Eat -- Industrial Manufacturing and Processes -- Taking Concrete Steps Proves Difficult -- Flying Must reflect the Cost of Convenience -- Slowing and Shifting Shipping's Route -- A Steepening Glidepath Before Us All -- A Steeper S-Curve is Possible -- References -- 7 Greening Our Stories Internationally, Nationally, and Especially Locally -- New Narratives Create New Realities -- Debate and Ownership -- Common Understanding is Essential and Possible. , Regions and Cities Must Lead the Way -- False Narratives and Tackling Climate Change -- The Luntz Memo's Deleterious Effect -- Beware the Danger of False Narratives and Rabbit Holes -- Social Media and Amoral, Unthinking Algorithms -- Talk About It: How Conversations Can Change Minds and Advance the Green Consensus -- Sewerage, Libraries, and Taxation -- Pension Demographics and Longevity -- Scotland's Big Climate Conversation -- Talking Together Changes Our Story and Our Outcomes -- Create Narratives That Resonate With a Locale and With Your Community -- Narrative Shifts Can Be Slow Until They Are Sudden -- The Greta Effect -- Extinction Rebellion's Direct Effect -- Climate Change Narratives Are Also Spiritual -- Declaring an Emergency Shifts the Narrative -- Americans Are Changing Their Climate Story -- The End of the Luntz Effect -- The Biden Administration Policy Shift Supports a Global Climate Break Point -- Devolution of the Climate Change Dialogue and the Ability to Act -- The UK Example -- Cities as Hubs of Green Innovation and Sustainable Liveability -- Cities and the Built Environment -- Transport, Mobility, and Our Cityscapes -- Powering Our Communities -- A Better, Localized, Green, Sustainable, Liveable Future -- Constructing New Tales and Travelling With Them Into the Future -- References -- 8 On Decarbonization, Economic Growth, and a Just Transition -- Growth Or No Growth -- Optimism Or Doom and Disaster - a False Choice -- New Contours for a Green Tomorrow -- Constructing Green Globalization 2.0 -- Green New Deals for All of Us -- Governments Can Afford to Invest in Green Reseeding -- A Greener, More Productive Economy -- But What of the Cost of GNDs? -- A Response to Debt and Deficit Hawks -- GNDs as Policy Accelerators -- Sustainable Growth is Possible and Essential -- Renewed Green Globalization 2.0 as a Partial Answer to Populism. , Biden's Government-Wide, Green Policy Leap.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-367-47870-6
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 4
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London ; New York : Routledge
    UID:
    b3kat_BV047551424
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (xvii, 286 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781003037088
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Hardcover ISBN 978-0-367-47870-4
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Paperback ISBN 978-0-367-47869-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    Fachgebiete: Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Wirtschaft ; Ökologie ; Nachhaltigkeit ; Erneuerbare Energien
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 5
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London, England ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    almahu_9949269728702882
    Umfang: 1 online resource (305 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1 ed.
    ISBN: 1-00-303708-9 , 1-003-03708-9 , 1-000-44176-8
    Inhalt: Climate Crisis Economics draws on economics, political economy, scientific literature, and data to gauge the extent to which our various communities - political, economic, business - are making the essential leap to a new narrative and policy approach that will accelerate us towards the necessary transition to a decarbonized economy and sustainable future.The book draws out policies and practices with both national and local examples, which will demonstrate various complementary approaches that are empowering states and people as they seek to pursue the carbon neutral goal. The author delineates a climate crisis economics approach that is fit for purpose and which can help achieve necessary climate change goals in the decades ahead. Ensuring economic and ecological sustainability is neither easy nor cost-free; there is no single solution to the climate crisis. All aspects of our economies, policies, business, and personal practices must come into alignment in order to succeed. Frustratingly, we know what is needed and we have many of the technologies and systems to make the leap to a carbon neutral economy, yet we still fail to act with alacrity. Leaders, communities, and businesses must shift their narratives in how they talk about and think about the climate crisis. In doing so, in making the narrative leap to a new understanding about what is possible and necessary, we can stop endangering our common future and single, fragile, global habitat, and instead set the stage for Green Globalisation 2.0 and a new, sustainable industrial revolution.Climate Crisis Economics will appeal to academics, students, investors, and professionals from varying disciplines including politics, international political economy, and international economics. Written in an accessible voice, it draws on work in fields outside of and in addition to politics and economics to make a case for climate crisis economics as an approach to addressing the climate change challenge ahead.
    Anmerkung: Cover -- Endorsement -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Illustrations -- Boxes -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Prologue: An Imagined Vision of the Near Future Without Action On Climate Change -- 1 Crises as Crucibles for Change -- Covid-19 Lessons for Our Climate Change Responses -- Leadership in Crises is Always Crucial -- Coordination is Crucial to Collective Response -- Delay is Costly - Act Now -- In Crises, What Was Once Impossible Becomes Possible -- Governments Are Our Last-Resort Actors When Disaster Strikes -- Institutions and Trusted Experts Matter in Crisis Policy Responses -- A Great Weight Can Be Borne By All Once a Crisis is Understood -- Individual Responsibility is Required to Achieve Our Goals -- Fairness is Essential and Demanded -- We Need to Find Ways to Communicate a Sense of Urgency to All -- Facts Matter and Must Be Defended and Reiterated -- Crises, Once Recognized, Can Vastly Accelerate the Rate of Societal Evolution -- Markets, Once Galvanized, Can Act and Act Fast -- Firm-level Commitment and Engagement Matter -- Crises Force a Reappraisal of What we Value -- The Structure of the Book -- Note -- References -- 2 Obscured Horizons and Middling Models -- Extend Our Horizons -- Understand the Limits of Our Models -- Is a Model Supporting the Policy Goal? -- Worry More About Fat Tail Risks -- Integrate Economics With Ethical and Moral Judgements -- A Tragedy of Horizons -- No Examples Outside Myth, Archaeology, and Ancient History -- Economic Stories Inform Our Personal and Policy Actions -- Climate Change Models - Their Limitations and Uses -- Models Are Apolitical -- Our Inputs are Not -- Rolling the DICE -- The Discount Rate Problem -- The Intergenerational Inequity Problem: We Value Future Generations - Don't We?. , Will We All Be Wealthier Tomorrow? The Growth Assumption Problem -- The Rising Cost of the Economic Catastrophes to Come: The Damage Function Problem -- Ecosystem Collapse is Not a Minor Matter -- Unbearable Heatwaves -- Rising Tides and Howling Typhoons -- Not Only the Poor Pay for Climate Denial -- Wildfires Scorch the Globe -- Fat Tails and Tipping Points: A Pessimists' Confession -- Sudden Leaps and Nonlinearity Are Not an Economist's Best Friend -- Climate Change is Slow, Then Fast -- Some Locations Already Have Experienced Tipping Points -- Climate Crisis Economics Must Include Local Tipping Points and Global Fat Tails -- Time to Act, Test Models, and Use All Available Policy Levers -- A Return to Adam Smith as Moral Philosopher -- We Need a Homo Economicus Sympatico -- Appendix 2.1 -- Notes -- References -- 3 Setting Targets, Pricing Carbon, and Punishing Laggards -- Set Ambitious Long-Term Targets and Match Them With Clear Interim Steps and Plans -- Europe's Regreening and Rebuilding -- A Chinese Commitment With Potentially Momentous Impact -- Biden's Green New Deal - a Start, Finally -- Leadership at Last -- California's Demonstration of What is Possible With Leadership -- What of the Laggard States? -- At COP26, Governments Must Make the Leap On Enforceable and Rising Carbon Pricing -- Pricing Can Trigger Rapid Changes in Behaviours -- Time to Announce a 'C-Day' -- The Price of Carbon - Set a Minimum, a Timeline, and an Adjustable Glidepath -- Cap-and-trade Schemes -- Europe's ETS - the World Leader, Despite Troubles -- China's ETS - a Lot of Room to Grow -- Whither the US On Carbon Pricing -- A Thin Regional Patchwork, With Some Successes -- A National US ETS is Needed -- Learn Lessons and Apply Them Globally and Locally -- Carbon Prices: How High is High Enough? -- COP26 and Carbon Pricing's Tipping Point -- Can We Get Agreement at COP26?. , Construct a Coalition of the Willing -- Free Riders Should Be Punished With a Carbon Border Adjustment Tariff -- Could It Be Done? -- Enforcement Will Be Necessary for Consensus Or Coalition -- Strike the Deal, Delegate National Market Regulators to Act, and Report and Review -- Shifting Incentives Across All Sectors -- Note -- References -- 4 Demographics, the Changing Investment Narrative Landscape, and Market Incentives -- The Gen X and Millennial Green Wave -- New Investors Demanding a Greener Future -- Shifting Signals: Green is Becoming Synonymous With Sound Investments -- A Green ESG Wave No One Can Ignore -- Firms Need to Get On Board and Set Net-Zero Goals -- Finance and the Net-Zero Transition -- Business Leaders Are Waking Up to the Net-Zero Requirement and the Rising ESG Wave -- Shifting Business Strategies Towards Net-Zero Goals Pays Off -- Ensuring the Markets Bend the GHG Emissions Curve Towards Net Zero -- Disclosure and Transparency - What's Not to Like? -- Make TCFD Mandatory Across the Globe -- Metrics Matter for the Economy and the Planet -- New Markets and Opportunities - Parental Oversight Required -- The Urgent Need for Reliable Offset Markets -- Vigilance Against Abuse and Misuse -- Emerging Markets and Green Investments -- An Evolving Market, Properly Overseen, Will Draw Us Towards Our Net-Zero Goal -- Appendix 4.1 -- Appendix 4.2 -- References -- 5 Building a Decarbonized World: Institutional Innovations That Reinforce Market Outcomes -- Green Institutions for a Sustainable Tomorrow -- Self-reporting and Monitoring Without Enforcement Are Not Enough -- We Should Create a World Carbon Organization -- Replicate WTO Success in the Carbon Pricing Space -- The WCO Could Adjudicate and Establish Norms -- Monitoring New Markets -- Why We Need National Carbon Banks. , Creating Strong, Independent NCBs in Every Country Would Have Many Benefits -- The Importance of Independence -- Accountability … of Course -- Institutional Innovation in Support of Green Globalization 2.0 -- Searing Reality Intervenes -- Build the Architecture of a Green, Decarbonized Tomorrow -- Notes -- References -- 6 A Greening of Industrial Policy: Speeding Diffusion and the Achievement of Net Zero -- Public Policy as Enabler, Supporter, and Backer -- Diffusion Rates, Technology Costs, Innovation, and the Net-Zero Transition -- Diffusion Comes in Waves -- Innovation is Not Episodic But, Rather, is Progressive and Iterative -- Major, Dramatic, and Ongoing Shifts Are Needed in All Industries and Sectors -- An End to Fossil Fuel Subsidies -- An Energy Transition Underway -- Coal is (Almost) Down and Out - in Some Markets -- A Sunnier and Windier Outlook -- Wind is Now Competitive Without Subsidies -- First Movers With the Wind Behind Them -- An EV Transport Revolution in Motion -- Battery Costs Are Falling Fast, Speeding the Transition and Steepening the S-Curve -- Agriculture and Farmers Find the Transition Tough -- Adaptation and Technology Improvement -- Scrap That Old Tractor -- New Crops to Lower Emissions -- Growing Rice But Limiting Methane -- Better Farming Practices Mean Better Outcomes -- Align Incentives With Environmental Goals -- We Need to Change What We Eat -- Industrial Manufacturing and Processes -- Taking Concrete Steps Proves Difficult -- Flying Must reflect the Cost of Convenience -- Slowing and Shifting Shipping's Route -- A Steepening Glidepath Before Us All -- A Steeper S-Curve is Possible -- References -- 7 Greening Our Stories Internationally, Nationally, and Especially Locally -- New Narratives Create New Realities -- Debate and Ownership -- Common Understanding is Essential and Possible. , Regions and Cities Must Lead the Way -- False Narratives and Tackling Climate Change -- The Luntz Memo's Deleterious Effect -- Beware the Danger of False Narratives and Rabbit Holes -- Social Media and Amoral, Unthinking Algorithms -- Talk About It: How Conversations Can Change Minds and Advance the Green Consensus -- Sewerage, Libraries, and Taxation -- Pension Demographics and Longevity -- Scotland's Big Climate Conversation -- Talking Together Changes Our Story and Our Outcomes -- Create Narratives That Resonate With a Locale and With Your Community -- Narrative Shifts Can Be Slow Until They Are Sudden -- The Greta Effect -- Extinction Rebellion's Direct Effect -- Climate Change Narratives Are Also Spiritual -- Declaring an Emergency Shifts the Narrative -- Americans Are Changing Their Climate Story -- The End of the Luntz Effect -- The Biden Administration Policy Shift Supports a Global Climate Break Point -- Devolution of the Climate Change Dialogue and the Ability to Act -- The UK Example -- Cities as Hubs of Green Innovation and Sustainable Liveability -- Cities and the Built Environment -- Transport, Mobility, and Our Cityscapes -- Powering Our Communities -- A Better, Localized, Green, Sustainable, Liveable Future -- Constructing New Tales and Travelling With Them Into the Future -- References -- 8 On Decarbonization, Economic Growth, and a Just Transition -- Growth Or No Growth -- Optimism Or Doom and Disaster - a False Choice -- New Contours for a Green Tomorrow -- Constructing Green Globalization 2.0 -- Green New Deals for All of Us -- Governments Can Afford to Invest in Green Reseeding -- A Greener, More Productive Economy -- But What of the Cost of GNDs? -- A Response to Debt and Deficit Hawks -- GNDs as Policy Accelerators -- Sustainable Growth is Possible and Essential -- Renewed Green Globalization 2.0 as a Partial Answer to Populism. , Biden's Government-Wide, Green Policy Leap.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-367-47870-6
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 6
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    London, England ; : Routledge,
    UID:
    edocfu_9960165843502883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (305 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1 ed.
    ISBN: 1-00-303708-9 , 1-003-03708-9 , 1-000-44176-8
    Inhalt: Climate Crisis Economics draws on economics, political economy, scientific literature, and data to gauge the extent to which our various communities - political, economic, business - are making the essential leap to a new narrative and policy approach that will accelerate us towards the necessary transition to a decarbonized economy and sustainable future.The book draws out policies and practices with both national and local examples, which will demonstrate various complementary approaches that are empowering states and people as they seek to pursue the carbon neutral goal. The author delineates a climate crisis economics approach that is fit for purpose and which can help achieve necessary climate change goals in the decades ahead. Ensuring economic and ecological sustainability is neither easy nor cost-free; there is no single solution to the climate crisis. All aspects of our economies, policies, business, and personal practices must come into alignment in order to succeed. Frustratingly, we know what is needed and we have many of the technologies and systems to make the leap to a carbon neutral economy, yet we still fail to act with alacrity. Leaders, communities, and businesses must shift their narratives in how they talk about and think about the climate crisis. In doing so, in making the narrative leap to a new understanding about what is possible and necessary, we can stop endangering our common future and single, fragile, global habitat, and instead set the stage for Green Globalisation 2.0 and a new, sustainable industrial revolution.Climate Crisis Economics will appeal to academics, students, investors, and professionals from varying disciplines including politics, international political economy, and international economics. Written in an accessible voice, it draws on work in fields outside of and in addition to politics and economics to make a case for climate crisis economics as an approach to addressing the climate change challenge ahead.
    Anmerkung: Cover -- Endorsement -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Illustrations -- Boxes -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Prologue: An Imagined Vision of the Near Future Without Action On Climate Change -- 1 Crises as Crucibles for Change -- Covid-19 Lessons for Our Climate Change Responses -- Leadership in Crises is Always Crucial -- Coordination is Crucial to Collective Response -- Delay is Costly - Act Now -- In Crises, What Was Once Impossible Becomes Possible -- Governments Are Our Last-Resort Actors When Disaster Strikes -- Institutions and Trusted Experts Matter in Crisis Policy Responses -- A Great Weight Can Be Borne By All Once a Crisis is Understood -- Individual Responsibility is Required to Achieve Our Goals -- Fairness is Essential and Demanded -- We Need to Find Ways to Communicate a Sense of Urgency to All -- Facts Matter and Must Be Defended and Reiterated -- Crises, Once Recognized, Can Vastly Accelerate the Rate of Societal Evolution -- Markets, Once Galvanized, Can Act and Act Fast -- Firm-level Commitment and Engagement Matter -- Crises Force a Reappraisal of What we Value -- The Structure of the Book -- Note -- References -- 2 Obscured Horizons and Middling Models -- Extend Our Horizons -- Understand the Limits of Our Models -- Is a Model Supporting the Policy Goal? -- Worry More About Fat Tail Risks -- Integrate Economics With Ethical and Moral Judgements -- A Tragedy of Horizons -- No Examples Outside Myth, Archaeology, and Ancient History -- Economic Stories Inform Our Personal and Policy Actions -- Climate Change Models - Their Limitations and Uses -- Models Are Apolitical -- Our Inputs are Not -- Rolling the DICE -- The Discount Rate Problem -- The Intergenerational Inequity Problem: We Value Future Generations - Don't We?. , Will We All Be Wealthier Tomorrow? The Growth Assumption Problem -- The Rising Cost of the Economic Catastrophes to Come: The Damage Function Problem -- Ecosystem Collapse is Not a Minor Matter -- Unbearable Heatwaves -- Rising Tides and Howling Typhoons -- Not Only the Poor Pay for Climate Denial -- Wildfires Scorch the Globe -- Fat Tails and Tipping Points: A Pessimists' Confession -- Sudden Leaps and Nonlinearity Are Not an Economist's Best Friend -- Climate Change is Slow, Then Fast -- Some Locations Already Have Experienced Tipping Points -- Climate Crisis Economics Must Include Local Tipping Points and Global Fat Tails -- Time to Act, Test Models, and Use All Available Policy Levers -- A Return to Adam Smith as Moral Philosopher -- We Need a Homo Economicus Sympatico -- Appendix 2.1 -- Notes -- References -- 3 Setting Targets, Pricing Carbon, and Punishing Laggards -- Set Ambitious Long-Term Targets and Match Them With Clear Interim Steps and Plans -- Europe's Regreening and Rebuilding -- A Chinese Commitment With Potentially Momentous Impact -- Biden's Green New Deal - a Start, Finally -- Leadership at Last -- California's Demonstration of What is Possible With Leadership -- What of the Laggard States? -- At COP26, Governments Must Make the Leap On Enforceable and Rising Carbon Pricing -- Pricing Can Trigger Rapid Changes in Behaviours -- Time to Announce a 'C-Day' -- The Price of Carbon - Set a Minimum, a Timeline, and an Adjustable Glidepath -- Cap-and-trade Schemes -- Europe's ETS - the World Leader, Despite Troubles -- China's ETS - a Lot of Room to Grow -- Whither the US On Carbon Pricing -- A Thin Regional Patchwork, With Some Successes -- A National US ETS is Needed -- Learn Lessons and Apply Them Globally and Locally -- Carbon Prices: How High is High Enough? -- COP26 and Carbon Pricing's Tipping Point -- Can We Get Agreement at COP26?. , Construct a Coalition of the Willing -- Free Riders Should Be Punished With a Carbon Border Adjustment Tariff -- Could It Be Done? -- Enforcement Will Be Necessary for Consensus Or Coalition -- Strike the Deal, Delegate National Market Regulators to Act, and Report and Review -- Shifting Incentives Across All Sectors -- Note -- References -- 4 Demographics, the Changing Investment Narrative Landscape, and Market Incentives -- The Gen X and Millennial Green Wave -- New Investors Demanding a Greener Future -- Shifting Signals: Green is Becoming Synonymous With Sound Investments -- A Green ESG Wave No One Can Ignore -- Firms Need to Get On Board and Set Net-Zero Goals -- Finance and the Net-Zero Transition -- Business Leaders Are Waking Up to the Net-Zero Requirement and the Rising ESG Wave -- Shifting Business Strategies Towards Net-Zero Goals Pays Off -- Ensuring the Markets Bend the GHG Emissions Curve Towards Net Zero -- Disclosure and Transparency - What's Not to Like? -- Make TCFD Mandatory Across the Globe -- Metrics Matter for the Economy and the Planet -- New Markets and Opportunities - Parental Oversight Required -- The Urgent Need for Reliable Offset Markets -- Vigilance Against Abuse and Misuse -- Emerging Markets and Green Investments -- An Evolving Market, Properly Overseen, Will Draw Us Towards Our Net-Zero Goal -- Appendix 4.1 -- Appendix 4.2 -- References -- 5 Building a Decarbonized World: Institutional Innovations That Reinforce Market Outcomes -- Green Institutions for a Sustainable Tomorrow -- Self-reporting and Monitoring Without Enforcement Are Not Enough -- We Should Create a World Carbon Organization -- Replicate WTO Success in the Carbon Pricing Space -- The WCO Could Adjudicate and Establish Norms -- Monitoring New Markets -- Why We Need National Carbon Banks. , Creating Strong, Independent NCBs in Every Country Would Have Many Benefits -- The Importance of Independence -- Accountability … of Course -- Institutional Innovation in Support of Green Globalization 2.0 -- Searing Reality Intervenes -- Build the Architecture of a Green, Decarbonized Tomorrow -- Notes -- References -- 6 A Greening of Industrial Policy: Speeding Diffusion and the Achievement of Net Zero -- Public Policy as Enabler, Supporter, and Backer -- Diffusion Rates, Technology Costs, Innovation, and the Net-Zero Transition -- Diffusion Comes in Waves -- Innovation is Not Episodic But, Rather, is Progressive and Iterative -- Major, Dramatic, and Ongoing Shifts Are Needed in All Industries and Sectors -- An End to Fossil Fuel Subsidies -- An Energy Transition Underway -- Coal is (Almost) Down and Out - in Some Markets -- A Sunnier and Windier Outlook -- Wind is Now Competitive Without Subsidies -- First Movers With the Wind Behind Them -- An EV Transport Revolution in Motion -- Battery Costs Are Falling Fast, Speeding the Transition and Steepening the S-Curve -- Agriculture and Farmers Find the Transition Tough -- Adaptation and Technology Improvement -- Scrap That Old Tractor -- New Crops to Lower Emissions -- Growing Rice But Limiting Methane -- Better Farming Practices Mean Better Outcomes -- Align Incentives With Environmental Goals -- We Need to Change What We Eat -- Industrial Manufacturing and Processes -- Taking Concrete Steps Proves Difficult -- Flying Must reflect the Cost of Convenience -- Slowing and Shifting Shipping's Route -- A Steepening Glidepath Before Us All -- A Steeper S-Curve is Possible -- References -- 7 Greening Our Stories Internationally, Nationally, and Especially Locally -- New Narratives Create New Realities -- Debate and Ownership -- Common Understanding is Essential and Possible. , Regions and Cities Must Lead the Way -- False Narratives and Tackling Climate Change -- The Luntz Memo's Deleterious Effect -- Beware the Danger of False Narratives and Rabbit Holes -- Social Media and Amoral, Unthinking Algorithms -- Talk About It: How Conversations Can Change Minds and Advance the Green Consensus -- Sewerage, Libraries, and Taxation -- Pension Demographics and Longevity -- Scotland's Big Climate Conversation -- Talking Together Changes Our Story and Our Outcomes -- Create Narratives That Resonate With a Locale and With Your Community -- Narrative Shifts Can Be Slow Until They Are Sudden -- The Greta Effect -- Extinction Rebellion's Direct Effect -- Climate Change Narratives Are Also Spiritual -- Declaring an Emergency Shifts the Narrative -- Americans Are Changing Their Climate Story -- The End of the Luntz Effect -- The Biden Administration Policy Shift Supports a Global Climate Break Point -- Devolution of the Climate Change Dialogue and the Ability to Act -- The UK Example -- Cities as Hubs of Green Innovation and Sustainable Liveability -- Cities and the Built Environment -- Transport, Mobility, and Our Cityscapes -- Powering Our Communities -- A Better, Localized, Green, Sustainable, Liveable Future -- Constructing New Tales and Travelling With Them Into the Future -- References -- 8 On Decarbonization, Economic Growth, and a Just Transition -- Growth Or No Growth -- Optimism Or Doom and Disaster - a False Choice -- New Contours for a Green Tomorrow -- Constructing Green Globalization 2.0 -- Green New Deals for All of Us -- Governments Can Afford to Invest in Green Reseeding -- A Greener, More Productive Economy -- But What of the Cost of GNDs? -- A Response to Debt and Deficit Hawks -- GNDs as Policy Accelerators -- Sustainable Growth is Possible and Essential -- Renewed Green Globalization 2.0 as a Partial Answer to Populism. , Biden's Government-Wide, Green Policy Leap.
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-367-47870-6
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 7
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Milton Park : Routledge
    UID:
    gbv_1797091085
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (xvii, 286 Seiten) , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    ISBN: 9781003037088 , 9781000441765
    Inhalt: "Climate Crisis Economics draws on economics, political economy, scientific literature, and data to gauge the extent to which our various communities - political, economic, business - are making the essential leap to a new narrative and policy approach that will accelerate us towards the necessary transition to a decarbonised economy and sustainable future. The book draws out policies and practices with both national and local examples, which will demonstrate various complementary approaches that are empowering states and people as they seek to pursue the carbon neutral goal. The author delineates a climate crisis economics approach that is fit for purpose and which can help achieve necessary climate change goals in the decades ahead. Ensuring economic and ecological sustainability is neither easy nor cost-free; there is no single solution to the climate crisis. All aspects of our economies, policies, business, and personal practices must come into alignment in order to succeed. Frustratingly, we know what is needed and we have many of the technologies and systems to make the leap to a carbon neutral economy, yet we still fail to act with alacrity. Leaders, communities, and businesses must shift their narratives in how they talk about and think about the climate crisis. In doing so, in making the narrative leap to a new understanding about what is possible and necessary, we can stop endangering our common future and single, fragile, global habitat, and instead set the stage for Green Globalisation 2.0 and a new sustainable industrial revolution. Climate Crisis Economics will appeal to academics, students, investors, and professionals from varying disciplines including politics, international political economy, and international economics. Written in an accessible voice, it draws on work in fields outside of and in addition to politics and economics to make a case for climate crisis economics as an approach to addressing the climate change challenge ahead"--
    Anmerkung: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 9780367478704
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 9780367478698
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Mackintosh, Stuart P. M. Climate crisis economics Milton Park : Routledge, 2022 ISBN 9780367478704
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 9780367478698
    Sprache: Englisch
    Fachgebiete: Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    RVK:
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
Meinten Sie 1000337189?
Meinten Sie 1000034089?
Meinten Sie 1000057089?
Schließen ⊗
Diese Webseite nutzt Cookies und das Analyse-Tool Matomo. Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf den KOBV Seiten zum Datenschutz