Skip to main content
Graph
Search
fr
en
Login
Search
All
Categories
Concepts
Courses
Lectures
MOOCs
People
Practice
Publications
Startups
Units
Show all results for
Home
Lecture
Energy Allocation Mechanisms: Challenges and Solutions
Graph Chatbot
Related lectures (31)
Previous
Page 1 of 4
Next
Energy Markets: Challenges and Mechanisms
Delves into sustainability, human needs, energy challenges, and market limitations.
Energy, Human Needs and Wellbeing
Delves into the interplay between energy, human needs, and sustainability, emphasizing sufficiency and social wellbeing.
A Model of Sustainable Development: Economic Challenges in China
Explores economic challenges in China, focusing on sustainable development, growth sources, and reform processes.
Wellbeing and Human Needs: Exploring Sustainable Satisfaction
Examines the relationship between wellbeing, human needs, and sustainable satisfaction through the lens of sufficiency.
Energy Governance: Markets and Human Needs
Examines the limitations of markets in energy governance and advocates for a hybrid approach to ensure sustainability and equity in energy access.
Agrarian Structures: From Danubian Current to Enclosures
Explores the evolution of agrarian structures from ancient regime Europe to the enclosure movement, covering topics such as the formation of agrarian landscapes and the impact of revolutions on land privatization.
Circular Economy: Sustainable Transition and NetZero Solutions
Delves into sustainability, net-zero solutions, and the circular economy's role in reducing carbon emissions and achieving a sustainable future.
Role of the State in Market Economy
Explores the state's role in market economy, resource allocation, income redistribution, and consumer optimization.
Marxism and Globalisation
Explores Marxism, globalisation, imperialism, and critiques of capitalism, culminating in a discussion on the changing nature of globalisation.
Recycling and Sustainable Development: Challenges and Solutions
Examines the role of recycling in sustainable development, addressing its limitations and the importance of a circular economy.