Academic literature on the topic 'Malawi Economic Justice Network'

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Journal articles on the topic "Malawi Economic Justice Network"

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Murphy, Sean M., Neda Laiteerapong, Mai T. Pho, et al. "Health economic analyses of the justice community opioid innovation network (JCOIN)." Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 128 (September 2021): 108262. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2020.108262.

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Chatfield, Akemi Takeoka, and Christopher G. Reddick. "Collaborative Network Governance Framework for Aligning Open Justice and e-Justice Ecosystems for Greater Public Value." Social Science Computer Review 38, no. 3 (2018): 252–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0894439318771968.

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An ecosystem is a complex system of interdependent subsystems. The disjointed open justice ecosystem and the e-justice ecosystem, if they fail to coevolve and adapt to changing environments, contribute to the conundrum of understanding enablers and inhibitors for public value creation. Drawing on the formal system theory and the literature review, we developed a collaborative network governance framework for aligning ecosystems and creating public value. This framework is applied to guide case study research to identify enablers and inhibitors of strategic alignment and public value creation i
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Almeida, Paul. "The network for environmental and economic justice in the Southwest: Interview with Richard Moore." Capitalism Nature Socialism 5, no. 1 (1994): 21–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10455759409358574.

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Chapman, Fraser, and Dennis. "Investigating Ties between Energy Policy and Social Equity Research: A Citation Network Analysis." Social Sciences 8, no. 5 (2019): 135. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci8050135.

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Just over twenty years ago, the Kyoto Protocol brought nations together to address the emergent issue of climate change. To support the development of energy policy, a number of academic fields were strengthened, particularly surrounding sustainable development and the economic, environmental, and social aspects of sustainability. This research focuses on the social aspects of energy policy, beginning with climate justice, through to the emergence of energy justice and the notion of a just transition. Through a bibliometric analysis of 5529 academic studies incorporating energy policy and soci
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Bandawe, Gama. "Medical cannabis and cannabidiol: A new harvest for Malawi." Malawi Medical Journal 34, no. 2 (2022): 138–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/mmj.v34i2.10.

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In February 2020 parliament passed the Cannabis Regulation Bill (2020) which regulates the cultivation and production of industrial hemp and medical cannabis. The country will only fully benefit from this development if the medical and scientific community can take the lead in enabling the country to exploit the plant’s potential to help address some of our economic and public health challenges. This special communication provides some basic information on cannabis and discusses its history and medical uses. Cannabidiol (CBD) has emerged as one of the most important cannabis-derived phytochemi
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De La Torre, Miguel A. "Interfaith relations and the pursuit of justice." Review & Expositor 114, no. 1 (2017): 81–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0034637316687358.

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Neoliberalism as a religious movement is an economic doctrine that can only be accepted by faith. This neoliberal faith is based on the power amassed by a decentralized network of institutions, and the militarily “advanced” nations it profits, which in turn verifies the universality of its economic doctrines. There can be no salvation outside the global market forces of “free trade.” An alternative to the spirit of neoliberalism can be found within the faith of the people. Within the present post-modern condition, a space has been opened—perhaps inadvertently—for the sacred. In this space, the
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Halushka, John M. "The Runaround: Punishment, Welfare, and Poverty Survival after Prison." Social Problems 67, no. 2 (2019): 233–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spz018.

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AbstractBased on 17 months of ethnographic fieldwork and 45 in-depth interviews with formerly-incarcerated men, this article explores how former prisoners navigate criminal justice and welfare bureaucracies in their daily lives. Formerly-incarcerated men must repeatedly engage with parole, public assistance agencies, transitional housing facilities, and community-based service providers to maintain freedom and access food, shelter, and rehabilitative services. Accessing resources requires the men simultaneously to manage multiple, overlapping entanglements across a fragmented network of bureau
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Alizadeh, Tooran. "The spatial justice implications of telecommunication infrastructure: the socio-economic status of early national broadband network rollout in Australia." International Journal of Critical Infrastructures 11, no. 3 (2015): 278. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijcis.2015.072156.

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Nursanjaya, Nursanjaya. "REVITALISASI ENTREPRENEURSHIP DALAM MEMBANGUN PEREKONOMIAN UMAT." Negotium: Jurnal Ilmu Administrasi Bisnis 3, no. 2 (2020): 161. http://dx.doi.org/10.29103/njiab.v3i2.3057.

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National economic development, apart from bringing positive economic growth among the ummah, also creates socio-economic disparities between large, medium and small entrepreneurs. This situation is certainly not good for the Islam community in particular and the Indonesian nation. So the revival and progress of the Muslim economy must be a supporting factor for the revitalization of entrepreneurship in building the economy of the Ummah. For this reason, a solution to the economic system is needed that is further away from the true essence of justice. The emergence of various innovations in the
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Koppa, Etheldreder Trecia, Innocent Musonda, and Sambo Lyson Zulu. "A Systematic Literature Review on Local Sustainability Assessment Processes for Infrastructure Development Projects in Africa." Sustainability 15, no. 2 (2023): 1013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15021013.

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Reviews on sustainability assessment research have shown that Africa is lagging in this research area. As a result, few African countries have local sustainability assessment processes for infrastructure development. Considering the vital role of infrastructure to Africa’s development, the identification of only a few countries with local sustainability assessment processes raises questions on the overall state of sustainability assessment in the continent. To date, there is no study that gives a definite account of which African countries have local sustainability assessment processes for inf
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Malawi Economic Justice Network"

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Kinuthia, Wanyee. "“Accumulation by Dispossession” by the Global Extractive Industry: The Case of Canada." Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/30170.

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This thesis draws on David Harvey’s concept of “accumulation by dispossession” and an international political economy (IPE) approach centred on the institutional arrangements and power structures that privilege certain actors and values, in order to critique current capitalist practices of primitive accumulation by the global corporate extractive industry. The thesis examines how accumulation by dispossession by the global extractive industry is facilitated by the “free entry” or “free mining” principle. It does so by focusing on Canada as a leader in the global extractive industry and the spr
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Trauger, Amy K. "Social, economic, and environmental justice a network analysis of sustainable agricutlure [sic] in Pennsylvania /." 2005. http://etda.libraries.psu.edu/theses/approved/WorldWideIndex/ETD-843/index.html.

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Díaz, Alba Carmen Leticia. "The latin american network of women transforming the economy : building bridges between economic justice and gender equity." Thèse, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/7484.

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Books on the topic "Malawi Economic Justice Network"

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Malawi Economic Justice Network (MEJN): Monitoring and evaluation framework, March 2010. Malawi Economic Justice Network (MEJN), 2010.

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Overview of the 2003/4 budget estimates. Malawi Economic Justice Network, 2004.

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Ecumenical Documentation and Information Centre for Eastern and Southern Africa. and Meeting on Economic Justice Network (1997 : Harare, Zimbabwe), eds. Economic Justice Network: An initiative of the churches in eastern and southern Africa. EDICESA, 1998.

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(Malawi), Democratic Progressive Party. Manifesto of the Democratic Progressive Party: Prosperity, justice, and security. Democratic Progressive Party, 2008.

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Chiramwiwa, Gavi, Economic Justice Network (Fellowship of Councils of Churches in Eastern and Southern Africa), and Ecumenical Documentation and Information Centre for Eastern and Southern Africa., eds. Jubilee 2000: Economic justice for churches in eastern and southern Africa : a report on a workshop on economic justice, organized by the FOCCESA Economic Justice Network and held in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, 28-31 July 1998. EDICESA Publication, 1999.

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Jesuit Centre for Faith and Justice. and International Jesuit Network for Development., eds. Debt and trade: Time to make the connections : proceedings of a conference organised by the Jesuit Centre for Faith and Justice on behalf of the International Jesuit Network for Development, Dublin, 9 September 2004. Veritas, 2005.

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de, Blois Lukas, Rich John 1944-, and Impact of Empire (Organization), eds. The transformation of economic life under the Roman Empire: Proceedings of the Second Workshop of the International Network Impact of Empire (Roman Empire, c. 200 B.C. - A.D. 476), Nottingham, July 4-7, 2001. Gieben, 2002.

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Halvorsen, Tor, Hilde Ibsen, Henri-Count Evans, and Sharon Penderis. Knowledge for Justice: Critical Perspectives from Southern African-Nordic Research Partnerships. African Minds, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.47622/9781928331636.

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With the adoption of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement, the purpose of development is being redefined in both social and environmental terms. Despite pushback from conservative forces, change is accelerating in many sectors. To drive this transformation in ways that bring about social, environmental and economic justice at a local, national, regional and global levels, new knowledge and strong cross-regional networks capable of foregrounding different realities, needs and agendas will be essential. In fact, the power of knowledge matters today in w
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Greene, Alison Collis. Radical Christianity and Cooperative Economics in the Postwar South. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039997.003.0008.

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This chapter tells a pair of stories—a grassroots beginning and a white backlash sparked by charges of outside agitation—that suggest an all-too-familiar civil rights narrative. Yet, in 1940s North Carolina, two communities—the black farmers and professionals in Tyrrell County and the multiracial network of leftist Protestants who applauded and supported their work—open up a new kind of civil rights story. Theirs is a story of interaction, interdependence, and partnerships built on a shared belief in the inseparability of economic and racial justice. Historians have long emphasized the turn fr
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Book chapters on the topic "Malawi Economic Justice Network"

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Henning, Christian, and Eva Krampe. "A Network Based Approach to Evaluate Participatory Policy Processes: An Application to CAADP in Malawi." In Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-60714-6_8.

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Borsuk, İmren, Pınar Dinç, Sinem Kavak, and Pınar Sayan. "Consolidating and Contesting Authoritarian Neoliberalism in Turkey: Towards a Framework." In Authoritarian Neoliberalism and Resistance in Turkey. Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-4213-5_2.

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AbstractDuring the early years of the ruling Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi (Justice and Development Party, AKP), Turkey was seen as a burgeoning democratic power propped up by economic prosperity in line with the reforms for European Union (EU) accession and International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditionality. However, 20 years later, it is considered an emblematic case of democratic backsliding in line with rising poverty and inequalities that have been amplified as a result of sweeping neoliberal reforms and authoritarian consolidation in the country. The recent literature has identified these concomitant and complementary modes of authoritarian governance and neoliberal policies in Turkey as ‘authoritarian neoliberalism’. In this chapter, we discuss the dynamics of consolidation of authoritarian neoliberalism in Turkey as well as the acts of contention against it. Building mainly on the eight case studies presented in this volume, we put forward a framework that explains the consolidation of authoritarian neoliberalism in Turkey through the mechanisms of executive centralisation, autocratic legalism, cronyism, violence-fuelled rentier accumulation, criminalisation and stigmatisation, and contestations against authoritarian neoliberalism through strikes, protests, demonstrations, network building, litigation, everyday struggles, and armed acts of contention.
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"3. Voces Unidas: The Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice." In Constructing Identities in Mexican-American Political Organizations. University of Texas Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.7560/752757-004.

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Banet, Catherine. "Electricity Network Tariffs Regulation and Distributive Energy Justice." In Energy Justice and Energy Law. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198860754.003.0006.

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In the years to come, electricity consumers will face increased grid costs associated with their consumption due to the need for investments in grid infrastructures. Both ageing infrastructures and new production/consumption patterns relying increasingly on distributed and alternative sources will require economic investments by grid operators, which, in fine, will transfer the costs to final customers. The existing models of remuneration for operators and of costs allocation for consumers need to be updated. A reflection has started in several jurisdictions to address the need for revising grid tariff structure(s) in order to ensure a ‘fair’ share of costs between grid system operators and electricity consumers, as well as to develop the right incentives through tariff regulation. This chapter reviews theory and practice of distribution grid tariff regulatory reforms in the context of the current energy transition. It discusses how distributive energy justice can be better integrated into the tariff structure.
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Dentoni, Domenico, Laurens Klerkx, and Felix Krussmann. "Value Network Analysis for (Re)Organizing Business Models Toward the Sustainable Development Goals." In Science, Technology, and Innovation for Sustainable Development Goals. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190949501.003.0024.

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This chapter introduces the use of value network analysis (VNA) as a diagnostic tool for (re-)organizing business models seeking to contribute to the achievement of multiple sustainable development goals (SDGs). While VNA has already been widely applied to the study of technological innovation ecosystems, this chapter introduces its role for decision-makers in business models seeking to support sustainability transitions toward the SDGs. To demonstrate the approach, the authors apply VNA to the case of the Agricultural Commodity Exchange (ACE) in Malawi. The ACE represents a business model seeking to increase value-chain efficiency while including smallholder farmers to foster food security and reduce rural poverty and marginalization. The authors discuss how VNA can act also as a diagnostic tool for actors seeking to contribute to reduce poverty and hunger (SDGs 1 and 2); enhance economic growth and public infrastructure (SDGs 8 and 9); and foster cross-sector partnerships for sustainability (SDG17). The ACE case demonstrates that VNA provides several entry points for building strategic cross-sector partnerships that act as systemic instruments in science, technology, and innovation policy, coordinating actions to ensure that the right policy mix comes in place to tackle different SDG targets in an integrated way.
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Donnelly, Shawn, and Ramses Wessel. "The International Dimension of EMU: The Interplay Between the Global Financial Stability Architecture and the European Union." In The EU Law of Economic and Monetary Union. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198793748.003.0007.

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It is a truism that the European Union’s self-proclaimed autonomy may be a helpful concept in legal terms–primary to preserve the monopoly of the European Court of Justice to interpret European Union (EU) law–but it is equally clear that the EU is to a large extent influenced by the decisions and policies of other international institutions. The present chapter aims to assess this external influence in relation to a specific, but core dimension of the EU, the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). More specifically, we will assess the influence of what these days is known as the Global Financial Stability Architecture (GFSA), on the EMU. As will be further explained below, the GFSA is a network of the key global financial institutions that collect data, conduct research, provide insight and propose rules of conduct for the financial sector. Its mission is to rethink (global) macroeconomic policy to make economies more resilient–how to steer the economy clear of risks that could lead it to collapse; how to deal with real-time crises; and how to initiate recovery. Its primary method is to find out how differing components of financial markets act and react to one another, and to propose prudential regulation that shapes the behaviour of private financial service providers, of governments and of central banks.
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Gessler, Anne. "Albert Dent and the Free Southern Theater: Intergenerational Civil Rights Cooperatives and the Fight Against Racialized Economic Inequality." In Cooperatives in New Orleans. University Press of Mississippi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496827616.003.0005.

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Chapter four follows African American activists generational shift away from black-run Rochdale businesses toward racial justice cooperatives that experimented with communist rhetoric, non-hierarchical collective structures, and African diasporic spiritual and aesthetic practices. Between the 1930s and 1940s, Albert Dent fused southern civil rights activism and global cooperative philosophy to create the Flint-Goodridge Hospital insurance cooperative and public health plan for black patients. Collaborating with white southern New Deal liberals allowed Dent to implement black economic justice and self-advocacy at the city and state level. Between the 1960s and 1980s, writer and playwright Tom Dent incorporated his father’s coalitional strategies into the leftist Free Southern Theater Collective’s cooperative vision. While based in black Ninth Ward and Central City neighborhoods, it worked with local and national antipoverty officials and non-profit organizations to expand a southern network of theatrical, producer, and consumer cooperatives empowering impoverished African Americans without replicating capitalism’s abuses.
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Gessler, Anne. "The Louisiana Association of Cooperatives and Gathering Tree Growers’ Collective: Rebuilding a Cooperative Food Economy in Katrina’s Aftermath." In Cooperatives in New Orleans. University Press of Mississippi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496827616.003.0006.

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Chapter five documents the legacy of hybrid racial justice cooperatives on the post-Hurricane Katrina recovery projects the Gathering Tree Growers Collective and the Louisiana Association of Cooperatives. New racial justice cooperatives reenacted the historical circulation of goods, people, and ideas across neighborhood, national, and international channels to thread seemingly isolated ethnic enclaves into a robust regional network promoting egalitarian food policy into city and state economic development, labor policies, and land-use plans. In keeping with the International Cooperative Alliance’s aims, minority cooperative activists like Harvey Reed have opened autonomous food cooperatives that spread workplace democracy regionally, nationally, and internationally.
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Child, John, David Faulkner, Stephen Tallman, and Linda Hsieh. "Behavioral perspectives." In Cooperative Strategy. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198814634.003.0004.

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Chapter 4 presents behavioral perspectives relevant to cooperative strategy. These perspectives are relational signaling theory, attention-based view, justice theory, and sociological views (social network, social exchange). They complement the more traditional economic, organizational, and managerial perspectives by explaining the effects of a set of relational, cognitive, and social-psychological factors on the formation, governance, and management of strategic alliances. A major theme is that trust is an essential component of social order in cooperation. Trust between partner firms facilitates social exchange, and its value is widely appreciated by the managers of strategic alliances. This chapter examines the significance of trust, its multi-level nature and foundations, followed by a discussion of how trust evolves with alliance development. The chapter closes with a discussion of practical ways through which trust can be enhanced in alliances.
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Koch, Andreas. "The Impact of Contemporary Housing Functions on Its Social Sustainability." In Sustainable Housing [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.99277.

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Social housing functions are interrelated in manifold ways, expressing different needs and preferences of heterogeneous and socially unequal modern societies. The home as a place of individual shelter and privacy and as a node of interaction in social networks interferes with activities that had been spatially outsourced in the past and reintegrated again in recent times, such as productive labor, care or supply. In addition, social housing functions compete with economic functions of capital accumulation and profitmaking, transforming the dwelling into a tradeable commodity. Likewise, ecological functions of saving land and resources and reducing greenhouse gas emissions have to be satisfied. These interdependencies challenge sustainable housing politics, most prominently signified in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals 1, 10, and 11. The contribution captures this network of housing functions by advocating to strengthen social housing functions against economic functions. Political and philosophical justification of this position refers to theories of social capital and relational justice. Political measures feasible of being applied within the neoliberal system will be delineated, aiming to sustain social housing functions.
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Reports on the topic "Malawi Economic Justice Network"

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Kontou, Eleftheria, Yen-Chu Wu, and Jiewen Luo. Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Plan in Illinois. Illinois Center for Transportation, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36501/0197-9191/22-023.

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We study the allocation of dynamic electric vehicle charging investments from the policymaker’s perspective, which aims to meet statewide emission-reduction targets for the Illinois passenger vehicle sector. We determine statewide charging deployment trajectories over a 30-year planning horizon and estimate their emission reduction. Electric vehicle demand functions model the electrified vehicle market growth and capture network externalities and spatial heterogeneity. Our analysis indicates that most chargers need to be deployed in the first 10 to 15 years of the transition to allow benefits
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