William Nordhaus can recall the precise moment when he became interested in what is now known as “green accounting,” a type of accounting that factors environmental costs and benefits into measures of economic activity.
It was 1969, and he was thumbing...
Since 1996, Yale anthropologist Eduardo Fernandez-Duque has studied owl monkeys — the only primate species in the Americas with nocturnal habits — in the wild at a field site he established in northeastern Argentina.
During those years, Fernandez-Duque...
Economic research is uniquely able to account for tradeoffs inherent in raising global living standards while also meeting environmental targets. In this video, Yale economists Rohini Pande, Eli Fenichel, and Nicholas Ryan discuss the future of economic...