Behavioural Public Policy
2017 - 2025
From Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK.
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Volume 1, issue 2, 2017
- When to consider boosting: some rules for policy-makers pp. 143-161

- Ralph Hertwig
- Educating good decisions pp. 162-176

- Ellen Peters
- Policy solutions to conflicts of interest: the value of professional norms pp. 177-189

- Sunita Sah
- Behavioural economics, consumer behaviour and consumer policy: state of the art pp. 190-206

- Lucia A. Reisch and Min Zhao
- Paternalism, coercion and the unimportance of (some) liberties pp. 207-218

- Sarah Conly
- Behavioral considerations for effective time-varying electricity prices pp. 219-251

- Ian Schneider and Cass R. Sunstein
- Behavioural public policy: the constitutional approach pp. 252-265

- Shaun Hargreaves Heap
Volume 1, issue 1, 2017
- Nudges that fail pp. 4-25

- Cass R. Sunstein
- Putting nudges in perspective pp. 26-53

- George Loewenstein and Nick Chater
- Motivated numeracy and enlightened self-government pp. 54-86

- Dan M. Kahan, Ellen Peters, Erica Cantrell Dawson and Paul Slovic
- How psychological bias shapes accounting and financial regulation pp. 87-105

- David Hirshleifer and Siew Hong Teoh
- Choice, freedom, and well-being: considerations for public policy pp. 106-121

- Barry Schwartz and Nathan N. Cheek
- Weighing private preferences in public sector safety decisions: some reflections on the practical application of the willingness-to-pay approach pp. 122-142

- Michael Jones-Lee and Terje Aven