180 research outputs found
Cost-Benefit Analysis in a Framework of Stakeholder Involvement and Integrated Coastal Zone Modeling
Active involvement of local stakeholders is currently an increasingly important requirement in European environmental regulations such as the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD) and the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD). The same is true for economic analyses such as cost-benefit analysis (CBA). For example, the Swedish WFD implementation requires i) quantification of cost and benefits of proposed measures and ii) stakeholder involvement. How can these two requirements be integrated in practice? And can such requirements facilitate implementation of projects with a potential net benefit? This paper presents a stepwise CBA procedure with participatory elements and applies it for evaluating nutrient management options for reducing eutrophication effects in the coastal area of Himmerfjärden SW of Stockholm, Sweden. The CBA indicates a positive net benefit for a combination of options involving increased nitrogen removal at a major sewage treatment plant, creation of new wetlands and connecting a proportion of private sewers to sewage treatment plants. The procedure also illustrates how the interdisciplinary development of a coupled ecological-economic simulation model can be used as a tool for facilitating the involvement of stakeholders in a CBA.cost-benefit analysis; stakeholder involvement; integrated modeling; eutrophication
1940:1
ARTIKLAR
Nils Johansson: Το μυστηριον της βασιλειας του θεου
Ragnar Bring: De kristna tankarnas sanningsvärde i olika kultursituationer
Elis Malmeström: Syndernas förlåtelse
Jerker Rosén: De sekulära domkapitlenas tillkomst
FRÅN DEN TEOLOGISKA SAMTIDEN
Arvid Runestam: Einar Billing som teolog
TEOLOGISK LITTERATUR
Hans Pohlmann: Die Metanoia als Zentralbegriff der christlichen Frömmigkeit. Eine systematische Untersuchung zum Ordo salutis auf biblisch-theologischer Grundlage. Anm. av Gösta Lindeskog
David Lindquist: Studier i den svenska andaktslitteraturen under stormaktstidevarvet med särskild hänsyn till bön-, tröste- och nattvardsböcker. Anm. av Sven Kjöllerström
Hilding Pleijel: Från fädernas fromhetsliv. Gestalter och strömningar. Anm. av Krister Gierow
John Cullberg: Das Problem der Ethik in der dialektischen Theologie. 1. Karl Barth. Anm. av Hj. Lindroth
N. H. Søe: Karl Barths Bibelopfattelse. Med saerligt Henblik paa hans Syn paa Gammel Testamente. Anm. av Martin Lindström
Henrik Elmgren: Philon av Alexandria med särskild hänsyn till hans eskatologiska föreställningar. Anm. av Ernst Percy
Valter Lindström: Ur tidskrifterna 193
Kvinnan bortom allfarsvägen. Sonja Åkessons replik till Ragnar Thoursie
The woman beyond the main road. Sonja Åkessons reply to Ragnar Thoursie This article examines the intertextual relations between the Swedish author Sonja Åkesson's poem "Kvällspromenad" (Evening Walk), published in 1959, and the Swedish author Ragnar Thoursie's poem "Sundbybergs-prologen" (The Sundbyberg Prologue) (1952). The aim is to demonstrate how "Kvällspromenad" has a deep and polemic relation to "Sundbybergs-prologen". The comparison between the two poems is made by using Manfred Pfister's six criteria for analysing intertextual relations: reference, communication, autoreflexion, structure, selection and dialogue. The analysis shows that the intertextual relation is deep and strong. Sonja Åkesson gives a completely different view of modern life in post-war Sweden in her poem compared to the intertext. While Ragnar Thoursie describes a male worker walking home from the factory in the middle of the night and through that praises the ongoing building of the Swedish welfare state with its communion for all, Sonja Åkesson, in her poem, lets a lonely and alienated woman walk around in the same modern suburbs, but in a society where she seems homeless. The many intertextual relations between Åkesson's "Kvällspromenad" and its intertext, can be seen on a thematic as well as a metaphorical level
Kvinnan bortom allfarsvägen. Sonja Åkessons replik till Ragnar Thoursie [Elektronisk resurs]
The woman beyond the main road. Sonja Åkessons reply to Ragnar ThoursieThis article examines the intertextual relations between the Swedish author Sonja Åkesson's poem "Kvällspromenad" (Evening Walk), published in 1959, and the Swedish author Ragnar Thoursie's poem "Sundbybergs-prologen" (The Sundbyberg Prologue) (1952). The aim is to demonstrate how "Kvällspromenad" has a deep and polemic relation to "Sundbybergs-prologen". The comparison between the two poems is made by using Manfred Pfister's six criteria for analysing intertextual relations: reference, communication, autoreflexion, structure, selection and dialogue.The analysis shows that the intertextual relation is deep and strong. Sonja Åkesson gives a completely different view of modern life in post-war Sweden in her poem compared to the intertext. While Ragnar Thoursie describes a male worker walking home from the factory in the middle of the night and through that praises the ongoing building of the Swedish welfare state with its communion for all, Sonja Åkesson, in her poem, lets a lonely and alienated woman walk around in the same modern suburbs, but in a society where she seems homeless. The many intertextual relations between Åkesson's "Kvällspromenad" and its intertext, can be seen on a thematic as well as a metaphorical level.</p
Kvinnan bortom allfarsvägen : Sonja Åkessons replik till Ragnar Thoursie
The article examines the intertextual relations between the Swedish author Sonja Åkesson's poem "Kvällspromenad" (Evening Walk), published in 1959, and the Swedish author Ragnar Thoursie's poem "Sundbybergs-prologen" (The Sundbyberg Prologue) (1952). The aim is to demonstrate how "Kvällspromenad" has a deep and polemic relation to "Sundbybergs-prologen". The comparison between the two poems is made by using Manfred Pfister's six criteria for analyzing intertextual relations: reference, communication, autoreflexion, structure, selection and dialogue.The analysis shows that Åkesson gives a completely different view of modern post-war Sweden in her poem compared to the intertext. Instead of the male worker i Thoursie's poem, Åkesson lets a lonely and alienated woman walk around in the same modern suburbs and in a society where she seems homeless. The many intertxtual relations between "Kvällspromenad" and its intertext, can be seen on a thematic as well as a metaphorical level.</p
Fluctuations and growth in Ragnar Frisch’s rocking horse model
Ragnar Frisch's famous "rocking horse" model has been the object of much praise and even controversy since its publication in 1933. This paper offers a new simulation of the model to show that there exists cyclical trajectories in the propagation mechanism. By building an analytical solution taking the same form as Frisch's original solution, we can provide new insights into the ideas encapsulated in his model, in particular the fact that the author constructed a model combining cycles and growth. The exploration of Frisch's formal construction of the model leads us to link his statistical work on the decomposition of time series with his economic insights on investment cycles, which both led to the 1933 model. We contrast Frisch’s approach to that of other econometricians who used similar equations, showing that their different mathematical solutions were the product of what they wanted to show with their models
Adaptive Coastal Planning and the European Union's Water Framework Directive: A Swedish Perspective
The implementation of the EU Water Framework Directive and the achievement of its water quality objectives will to a large degree depend on scientific knowledge about the sources and status of water resources and the effects of mitigative measures. Coastal waters will be of central interest, since the management of whole river basins may be affected if coastal water status is not satisfactory. The Water Directive's general directions on what information the water authorities need and on suitable methods for obtaining such information leave it to the Member states to decide on more precise instructions. Improved legal mechanisms are needed to assist and guide the managers and scientists charged with implementing the directive and achieving its water quality objectives, particularly when faced with insufficient information, flawed knowledge, or changed circumstances. We assess progress in the current process of implementing the Water Directive in Sweden, focussing on coastal waters, and on general problems arising using this type of legal technique
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