Labour market frictions have negative impact on climate policy
New publication in Dutch about the effects of the energy transition and climate policy on labour market frictions

New publication in Dutch about the effects of the energy transition and climate policy on labour market frictions
Failures are a source of innovation
While the energy crisis forces us more than ever to look critically at the climate in our buildings, it is important not to lose sight of the well-being of the users.
Technology can increase as well as decrease inequality in education. That is the conclusion of professor of education Carla Haelermans of the Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market (ROA) in Maastricht. She conducted years of research on the subject and will deliver her inaugural address...
Investors are increasingly engaging with companies about their impact on the environment and society. This seems to be bearing fruit, as shown by a study conducted by Maastricht University.
Drie jaar achtereen bezochten Steffen Kühn en zijn collega’s een zeven weken durend schaaktoernooi in Keulen, om het verband tussen luchtvervuiling en cognitieve prestaties vast te stellen. De media doken gretig op de ietwat alarmerende resultaten, maar er waren nog meer gegevens nodig om de...
Sustainability has become a business model. Not only for companies struggling for new markets, more reliable supply chains and a good reputation with their customers. Training centers for managers have also discovered the opportunities of change for themselves.
Let's say you want to make some money: will you go to the casino or buy stocks?
Roman Briker en Fynn Gerken, twee getalenteerde van de School of Business and Economics (SBE), hebben onlangs een Marie Sklodowska Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship gekregen voor hun onderzoek naar kunstmatige intelligentie.
A pair of pants that tear after a year, a laptop that only lasts three years. We keep buying and throwing away and buying. We know it's destroying our planet, but we let it happen. Professor of sustainable business Nancy Bocken investigates how we can break that pattern.