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The limits of behavioral nudges to increase youth turnout: Experimental evidence from two French elections
International audienceThere is a significant gap in turnout between young people and older voters. The failure to instill a voting habit at an early age may have long term consequences in terms of future political participation as well as on other civic behaviors. Using a pre-registered online experiment with 3,790 subjects, we implemented behavioral interventions aiming to stimulate youth turnout in the 2022 French presidential election. We also provide evidence on the effect of one behavioral intervention on youth turnout in a less salient election, the French legislative election that took place two months after the Presidential one. The results from the two experiments show the absence of any differences in turnout between the baseline and the treatment conditions. We investigate several mechanisms that can explain our results
L'Influence des laboratoires d'innovation publique sur le développement de l'ambidextrie au sein du secteur public
International audienceAmbidexterity has become a major issue for public organizations as they manage increasingly strong contradictory pressures to optimize existing processes while innovating. Moreover, although public innovation laboratories are emerging, their influence on the development of ambidexterity remains largely unexplored. Our research aims to understand how innovation laboratories contribute to the formation of individual ambidexterity within the public sector. Drawing from three case studies, this research underscores the influence of these labs on public ambidexterity through the development of innovations by non-specialized actors and the deployment and reuse of innovative managerial practices and techniques outside the i-labs
Intelligence Artificielle (IA) dans les organisations publiques territoriales : rupture ou continuité dans la transformation numérique ?
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Profiling Consumers: How User Diversity Shapes Green Innovation Adoption
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Optimal adaptation policies under a carbon budget constraint
International audienceWe develop a dynamic model of energy use that relies on three primary sources: a 'dirty' fossil resource, a 'clean' fossil resource equipped with a specific abatement device, and a carbon-free renewable energy source. The total amount of carbon emissions is limited by a given carbon budget. Expenditures on adaptation measures can expand this budget by increasing society's tolerance to the effects of climate change. Therefore, we make the carbon budget endogenous and dependent on the adaptation effort. Within this framework, we study the trade-offs between mitigation (achieved through energy substitutions and abatement) and adaptation to relax the climate constraint imposed by the carbon budget. We find that, without any abatement option, adaptation measures are only taken once carbon concentrations reach a minimum tolerance level for society. On the other hand, when abatement is possible, the economy should start implementing it as soon as it begins adapting. Over time, both abatement and adaptation efforts will increase until the economy reaches a point where it prefers to fully abate carbon emissions rather than investing further in adaptation. We refer to this point as the maximum adaptation frontier
Assessing the relevance of the concept of political corporate social responsibility in management research
International audienceShould we still use the concept of political corporate social responsibility (PCSR) in management research? In response to recent and significant challenges in the management literature regarding the relevance of PCSR as a concept, we conduct a review of the literature in the field. We combine a bibliometric analysis and a qualitative content analysis to assess the use of the concept of PCSR between 2005 and 2022. We contribute to the PCSR literature in four ways: First, we map the field of PCSR in order to develop an objective understanding of the concept. Second, we demonstrate that PCSR exhibits the features of a concept, and that current research has begun to address some of the significant challenges that question its relevance. Third, we identify the four pillars at the base of the concept and uncover a fifth pillar: the dynamic perspective of PCSR. Last, we propose research directions to strengthen the PCSR concept and enrich its contributions to theory and practice
The acceptability of sufficiency practices in food consumption among consumers
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Green Innovation Adoption: Examining the Role of Diverse User Profiles
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