Garantie de satisfaction à 100% Disponible immédiatement après paiement En ligne et en PDF Tu n'es attaché à rien 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Examen

REM 100 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE.

Note
-
Vendu
-
Pages
34
Qualité
A+
Publié le
20-12-2024
Écrit en
2024/2025

©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. REM 100 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE. Dominant Social Paradigm - Answers• Definition: The most widely held set of beliefs, values and ideals that guide thinking about society, governance, and the role of individuals. • Organizes the way people perceive and interpret the functioning of the world around them. Dominant Social Paradigm of Western Societies - Answers- democracy, acceptance of regulated capitalism, individualism, economic growth, the notion of progress, faith in science and technology, domination towards the environment • The dominant social paradigm manifests itself in the totality of our institutions. - Institutions are not defined as organizations per se, but more broadly as a set of rules and norms that govern the behaviour of individuals and organizations in the system. Institutions versus Organizations - AnswersInstitution: The accepted rules, norms and strategies adopted by individuals operating within or across organizational settings (Ostrom, 2008). Canada's Constitution and political system set up under its term - Federalism - Legislative process - Rights and responsibilities of citizens Organization: An organized entity/body of people with a particular purpose Parliament of Canada People - Senate and House of Commons - Personnel (e.g., senators, members of parliament, supporting staff, etc.) Purpose - Govern Canada by making laws, setting taxes and authorizing spending "We often say that institutions are the rules of the game and organizations are the players in these institutions" Purpose / Role Institutions ... - Answers• ... are sets of expectations or norms that pattern human behavior. • ... structure social order (authority). ©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. "Institutions are the rules of the game in a society or, more formally, the humanly devised constraints that shape human interactions." Key Characteristics • Can be formal and/or informal (can be imposed or emerge from society itself) Example of Written Institutions Canada's Constitution Act, 1982 Relevance to REM: Federal and provincial governments are granted different legislative jurisdiction over natural resources and the environment Institutional and Financial Arrangements for Intern. Environ. Cooperation • Established in 1972 after the UN Conference on Human Environment (Stockholm Conference) • Foundation for UNEP, a global environ. authority that has overall responsibility for environmental programs among United Nations agencies • Has aided guidelines and treaties on issues such as international trade of potentially harmful chemicals, transboundary air pollution, and contamination of international waterways. • Together with the WMO, the UNEP established the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) • Talks on climate change are overseen by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Examples of Informal/Unwritten Institutions • Informal rules among a group of resource users (e.g., fishermen) • Culturally appropriate behaviour • Informal rules among a group of resource users (e.g., fishermen) • Culturally appropriate behaviour Components of Economic System - Answers"[W]e often say that institutions are the rules of the game and organizations are the players in these institutions." Organizations - Businesses - Buyers ©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. - Producers - Customers - Sellers Institutions - Rules that determine how these players interact Economics = is the social science that seeks to describe the factors which determine the production, distribution and consumption of goods and services. Environmental economics - Answersis a sub-field of economics that is concerned with environmental issues. • Market failures • Measures of prosperity/development • Ecosystem services • Economic approaches to sustainability Dominant Economic Paradigm: - AnswersFree-Market Economy An economic system ... • where prices for goods and services are set freely by the forces of supply and demand and are allowed to reach their point of equilibrium without intervention by government policy. • that typically entails support for private ownership of productive enterprises and highly competitive markets. A market is a medium that allows buyers and sellers of a specific good or service to interact in order to facilitate exchange (e.g., farmers market, housing market, stock exchange). In a free market, the transactions between buyers (consumers) and sellers (producers) are driven by the relationship between supply and demand. Supplier = Given a market price for tomatoes, how many am I willing to produce? Initial Price > PriceEqu - Answers• Surplus • Supplier unhappy • Price goes down • Quantity demanded increases • Quantity supplied decreases • Reach equilibrium price

Montrer plus Lire moins
Établissement
REM 100
Cours
REM 100











Oups ! Impossible de charger votre document. Réessayez ou contactez le support.

École, étude et sujet

Établissement
REM 100
Cours
REM 100

Infos sur le Document

Publié le
20 décembre 2024
Nombre de pages
34
Écrit en
2024/2025
Type
Examen
Contenu
Questions et réponses

Sujets

Aperçu du contenu

©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


REM 100 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE.


Dominant Social Paradigm - Answers✔• Definition: The most widely held set of beliefs, values
and ideals that guide thinking about society, governance, and the role of individuals.
• Organizes the way people perceive and interpret the functioning of the world around them.
Dominant Social Paradigm of Western Societies - Answers✔- democracy, acceptance of
regulated capitalism, individualism, economic growth, the notion of progress, faith in science
and technology, domination towards the environment


• The dominant social paradigm manifests itself in the totality of our institutions.
- Institutions are not defined as organizations per se, but more broadly as a set of rules and norms
that govern the behaviour of individuals and organizations in the system.
Institutions versus Organizations - Answers✔Institution: The accepted rules, norms and
strategies adopted by individuals operating within or across organizational settings (Ostrom,
2008).
Canada's Constitution and political system set up under its term - Federalism - Legislative
process - Rights and responsibilities of citizens


Organization: An organized entity/body of people with a particular purpose
Parliament of Canada People - Senate and House of Commons - Personnel (e.g., senators,
members of parliament, supporting staff, etc.) Purpose - Govern Canada by making laws, setting
taxes and authorizing spending


"We often say that institutions are the rules of the game and organizations are the players in these
institutions"
Purpose / Role Institutions ... - Answers✔• ... are sets of expectations or norms that pattern
human behavior.
• ... structure social order (authority).

, ©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
"Institutions are the rules of the game in a society or, more formally, the humanly devised
constraints that shape human interactions."


Key Characteristics
• Can be formal and/or informal (can be imposed or emerge from society itself)
Example of Written Institutions
Canada's Constitution Act, 1982 Relevance to REM: Federal and provincial governments are
granted different legislative jurisdiction over natural resources and the environment


Institutional and Financial Arrangements for Intern. Environ. Cooperation
• Established in 1972 after the UN Conference on Human Environment (Stockholm Conference)
• Foundation for UNEP, a global environ. authority that has overall responsibility for
environmental programs among United Nations agencies
• Has aided guidelines and treaties on issues such as international trade of potentially harmful
chemicals, transboundary air pollution, and contamination of international waterways.
• Together with the WMO, the UNEP established the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC)
• Talks on climate change are overseen by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC)


Examples of Informal/Unwritten Institutions
• Informal rules among a group of resource users (e.g., fishermen)
• Culturally appropriate behaviour
• Informal rules among a group of resource users (e.g., fishermen)
• Culturally appropriate behaviour
Components of Economic System - Answers✔"[W]e often say that institutions are the rules of
the game and organizations are the players in these institutions."


Organizations
- Businesses
- Buyers

, ©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
- Producers
- Customers
- Sellers
Institutions
- Rules that determine how these players interact


Economics = is the social science that seeks to describe the factors which determine the
production, distribution and consumption of goods and services.
Environmental economics - Answers✔is a sub-field of economics that is concerned with
environmental issues.
• Market failures
• Measures of prosperity/development
• Ecosystem services
• Economic approaches to sustainability
Dominant Economic Paradigm: - Answers✔Free-Market Economy
An economic system ...
• where prices for goods and services are set freely by the forces of supply and demand and are
allowed to reach their point of equilibrium without intervention by government policy.
• that typically entails support for private ownership of productive enterprises and highly
competitive markets.


A market is a medium that allows buyers and sellers of a specific good or service to interact in
order to facilitate exchange (e.g., farmers market, housing market, stock exchange).


In a free market, the transactions between buyers (consumers) and sellers (producers) are driven
by the relationship between supply and demand.


Supplier = Given a market price for tomatoes, how many am I willing to produce?
Initial Price > PriceEqu - Answers✔• Surplus • Supplier unhappy • Price goes down • Quantity
demanded increases • Quantity supplied decreases • Reach equilibrium price

, ©THESTAR EXAM SOLUTIONS 2024/2025
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Initial Price < PriceEqu - Answers✔• Shortage • Buyers unhappy • Price is pushed up • Quantity
demanded decreases • Quantity supplied increases • Reach equilibrium price
Some of the requirements for a free market: - Answers✔• Large number of buyers and sellers
• Perfect information about current and future prices, products available, etc.
• All economic agents behave rationally; producers maximize profits and consumers maximize
their satisfaction or "utility"
• Market prices reflect full costs of production and consumption
• Inputs being supplied and goods being produced are individually owned and divisible
Benefit of Free Market - Answers✔"In principle, markets provide us with an extraordinarily
efficient mechanism for allocating society's limited productive capacity - its stock of productive
resources, including labour, capital, technology, and natural resources - to their most highly
valued uses."
Price plays an important role in the free market: - Answers✔• Communicates information about
scarcity of a good
• Incentivizes behavior that tends to make the most productive use of the available scarce
resources.


Invisible hand: Individuals' efforts to pursue their own interest may [magically] result in benefit
for the society better than if you explicitly planned for it.
Ownership of Property 4 To own: - Answers✔To have or hold as one's own; to belong to one, be
the proprietor of, possess.
Several tests:
• Property has value (implies scarcity)
• Property is definable / controllable
• Others can be excluded from its use or enjoyment
Ownership implies following rights: - Answers✔• to use or 'enjoy' the property (access &
withdrawal)
• to control who else may use the property (exclusion)
• to regulate use patterns (management)
• to sell, rent or dispose of the property to another (alienation)
Natural Resources - The Problem - Answers✔• Many natural resources do not meet all the
ownership conditions (e.g., excludability).
10,64 €
Accéder à l'intégralité du document:

Garantie de satisfaction à 100%
Disponible immédiatement après paiement
En ligne et en PDF
Tu n'es attaché à rien

Faites connaissance avec le vendeur

Seller avatar
Les scores de réputation sont basés sur le nombre de documents qu'un vendeur a vendus contre paiement ainsi que sur les avis qu'il a reçu pour ces documents. Il y a trois niveaux: Bronze, Argent et Or. Plus la réputation est bonne, plus vous pouvez faire confiance sur la qualité du travail des vendeurs.
TheStar Florida State University
S'abonner Vous devez être connecté afin de pouvoir suivre les étudiants ou les formations
Vendu
609
Membre depuis
2 année
Nombre de followers
178
Documents
24049
Dernière vente
2 jours de cela
Stuvia Prodigy

Tested, Verified and Updated Study Materials with 100% Guaranteed Success.

3,8

121 revues

5
58
4
21
3
21
2
4
1
17

Pourquoi les étudiants choisissent Stuvia

Créé par d'autres étudiants, vérifié par les avis

Une qualité sur laquelle compter : rédigé par des étudiants qui ont réussi et évalué par d'autres qui ont utilisé ce document.

Le document ne convient pas ? Choisis un autre document

Aucun souci ! Tu peux sélectionner directement un autre document qui correspond mieux à ce que tu cherches.

Paye comme tu veux, apprends aussitôt

Aucun abonnement, aucun engagement. Paye selon tes habitudes par carte de crédit et télécharge ton document PDF instantanément.

Student with book image

“Acheté, téléchargé et réussi. C'est aussi simple que ça.”

Alisha Student

Foire aux questions