Journal of Bioeconomics
2000 - 2023
Current editor(s): Ulrich Witt, Michael T. Ghiselin and David Sloan Wilson From Springer Bibliographic data for series maintained by Sonal Shukla () and Springer Nature Abstracting and Indexing (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 15, issue 3, 2013
- On the intergenerational transmission of preferences pp. 217-249

- Benjamin Volland
- Charitable giving among females and males: an empirical test of the competitive altruism hypothesis pp. 251-267

- Robert Böhm and Tobias Regner
- Adaptationist punishment in humans pp. 269-279

- Robert Kurzban and Peter DeScioli
- A survey of evolutionary policy: normative and positive dimensions pp. 281-303

- Jeroen van den Bergh and Giorgos Kallis
- Modelling the economic consequences of Marine Protected Areas using the BEMCOM model pp. 305-323

- A. Hoff, Jesper Andersen, A. Christensen and H. Mosegaard
- The pitfalls of Darwinian “progress”. A comment on “Evolvability and progress in evolutionary economics” by Tim Cochrane and James Maclaurin pp. 325-328

- Christian Schubert
- The purpose of progress: A response to Schubert pp. 329-331

- Tim Cochrane and James Maclaurin
Volume 15, issue 2, 2013
- The biological standard of living and body height in colonial and post-colonial Indonesia, 1770–2000 pp. 103-122

- Joerg Baten, Mojgan Stegl and Pierre van der Eng
- Is cooperation instinctive? Evidence from the response times in a public goods game pp. 123-133

- Gianna Lotito, Matteo Migheli and Guido Ortona
- Land-use changes, forest/soil conditions and carbon sequestration dynamics: A bio-economic model at watershed level in Nepal pp. 135-170

- Thakur Upadhyay, Birger Solberg, Prem Sankhayan and Chander Shahi
- Rotating the Necker cube: A bioeconomic approach to cooperation and the causal role of synergy in evolution pp. 171-193

- Peter Corning
- Paul J. Zak (ed.): The moral molecule: the source of love and prosperity pp. 195-198

- Jonathan Wight
- Robert A. McGuire and Phillip R. P. Coelho: Parasites, pathogens, and progress: diseases and economic development pp. 199-201

- Moshe Hazan
- R. Ford Denison: Darwinian agriculture—how understanding evolution can improve agriculture pp. 203-207

- Alfons Balmann
- László Mérő: Die Biologie des Geldes: Darwin und der Ursprung der Ökonomie, 2009 pp. 209-212

- Michael Ghiselin
- Geoffrey M. Hodgson, From pleasure machines to moral communities: an evolutionary economics with homo economicus pp. 213-215

- Mark White
Volume 15, issue 1, 2013
- Differences in body mass indices for males imprisoned in the 19th century American South pp. 1-16

- Scott Carson
- Guanxi: Personal connections in Chinese society pp. 17-40

- Bingyuan Hsiung
- Love, war and cultures: an institutional approach to human evolution pp. 41-66

- Ugo Pagano
- A note on the difference between human and non-human productive factors: Comments on ‘Love, war, and culture: An institutional approach to human evolution’ pp. 67-70

- Alberto Battistini
- Darwin, Marx and Pagano: a comment on “Love, War, and Cultures” pp. 71-81

- Samuel Bowles
- The evolutionary roots of human hyper-cognition pp. 83-89

- Herbert Gintis
- Sex on the brain: some comments on ‘love, war and cultures: An institutional approach to human evolution’ pp. 91-95

- Geoffrey Hodgson
- Hierarchical societies of primates: Comments on love, war and cultures pp. 97-101

- Riccardo Pansini
Volume 14, issue 3, 2012
- A model of decision making in an ecologically realistic environment: Relative comparison and the Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives pp. 197-215

- Avi Waksberg, Andrew Smith and Martin Burd
- Making profits working on patients’ expectations, a behavioral analysis of pharmaceutical clinical research pp. 217-241

- Roberto Ippoliti
- Influence of body image in urbanized areas: differences in long-term changes in teenage body mass index between boys and girls in Japan pp. 243-256

- Eiji Yamamura
- Regional culture and adaptive behavior of physicians pp. 257-266

- Desmond Mascarenhas and Amoolya Singh
- Keeping the big fish: Economic and ecological tradeoffs in size-based fisheries management pp. 267-285

- C. Mullon, J. Field, O. Thébaud, P. Cury and C. Chaboud
- Joan Roughgarden, The genial gene: deconstructing Darwinian selfishness pp. 287-293

- Michael Ghiselin
- Johannes Hirata: Happiness, ethics and economics pp. 295-297

- Dwight Lee
- Peter Corning: The fair society: the science of human nature and the pursuit of social justice pp. 299-301

- Benjamin Hardisty
Volume 14, issue 2, 2012
- Evolvability and progress in evolutionary economics pp. 101-114

- Tim Cochrane and James Maclaurin
- Parental preference for investment risk incites family strife pp. 115-128

- Scott Forbes
- Weather, investor irrationality and day-of-the-week anomaly: case of Indonesia pp. 129-146

- Rayenda Brahmana, Chee-Wooi Hooy and Zamri Ahmad
- Measuring potential profits in a bioeconomic model of the mixed demersal fishery in the North Sea pp. 147-166

- Trond Bjørndal, Daniel Gordon and Mintewab Bezabih
- Another Fatal Conceit: the lesson from evolutionary economics is bottom-up self-organization, not top-down government design pp. 167-181

- Michael Shermer
- In defense of a libertarian welfare state: response to Michael Shermer pp. 183-196

- Robert Frank
Volume 14, issue 1, 2012
- Imitation and evolutionary stability of poverty traps pp. 1-20

- Edgar Sánchez Carrera
- Technology adoption and mitigation of invasive species damage and risk: application to zebra mussels pp. 21-40

- Damian Adams and Donna Lee
- Cooperative and non-cooperative management of the Northeast Atlantic cod fishery pp. 41-60

- Trond Bjørndal and Marko Lindroos
- Natural selection as a paradigm of opportunism in biology pp. 61-75

- Joseph Bozorgmehr
- Toward a holistic nonprofit economics: insights from institutionalism and systems theory pp. 77-89

- Vladislav Valentinov
- Honest signal theory, meet “The Family” pp. 91-93

- Benjamin Hardisty
- John R. Searle: The making of the social world: the structure of human civilization pp. 95-99

- Adam Gifford
Volume 13, issue 3, 2011
- Editorial announcement pp. 179-179

- Adam Gifford
- Consumer specialization and the Romantic transformation of the British Grand Tour of Europe pp. 181-203

- Andreas Chai
- Murders, he wrote: a note on declining deadly violence pp. 205-212

- James McClure
- Loss of economic rents in the global fishery pp. 213-232

- Ragnar Arnason
- Survival, reproduction and congestion: the spaceship problem re-examined pp. 233-273

- Pierre-André Jouvet and Gregory Ponthiere
- Melissa J. Brown (ed.): Explaining culture scientifically pp. 275-280

- Adam Gifford
Volume 13, issue 2, 2011
- The intertemporal allocation of consumption, time preference, and life-history strategies pp. 79-95

- Junji Kageyama
- Sustainable use of renewable resources: an identity approach pp. 97-123

- Isabel Almudi and Julio Sanchez Choliz
- Information theory in ecosystems pp. 125-137

- Arthur Michalowski
- When is fish quota enforcement worth while? A study of the Northeast Arctic cod pp. 139-160

- Rögnvaldur Hannesson
- Joan Martinez-Alier and Ingo Ropke (eds.): Recent developments in ecological economics (2 vols.) pp. 161-178

- Benjamin Leard
Volume 13, issue 1, 2011
- Nineteenth century African-American and white US statures: the primary sources of vitamin D and their relationship with height pp. 1-15

- Scott Carson
- A 4D natural selection model illuminates the enigma of altruism in the Shedao pit viper pp. 17-29

- Deby Cassill, Benjamin Hardisty and Alison Watkins
- Copyright piracy as prey–predator behavior pp. 31-43

- Francisco Vázquez and Richard Watt
- A bioeconomic model for determining the optimal response strategies for a new weed incursion pp. 45-72

- Rohan Jayasuriya, Randall Jones and Remy Ven
- Richard Dawkins, The God delusion pp. 73-74

- Deby Cassill
- Tim Harford: The logic of life: the rational economics of an irrational world pp. 75-77

- Adam Gifford
| |