Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2015
Authors
Alessandra Lagomarsino Alessandroelio Agnelli Roberta Pastorelli Grazia Pallara Daniel Rasse Hanna Marika SilvennoinenAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Authors
Paul Eric Aspholm Aune Veersalu Lars Ola Nilsson Bjørn Mejdell Larsen Guttorm Christensen Patrik OlofssonAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Abstract
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Authors
Lars Aksel OpsahlAbstract
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Authors
Erik Biørn Hild-Marte BjørnsenAbstract
Some labour market consequences of transitions in the agriculture sector are examined by combining 20-year unbalanced panel data from Norwegian farm households and logit modeling of transition probabilities. The multi-dimensionality of the problem follows from two decision makers having four possible choices in each period: the farm operator and spouse can be working fully on the farm or having supplementary outside occupation. Transitions are modeled by five logit models. The most flexible model has a high number of parameters. Overall, the results indicate that transitions have mainly been directed towards the state where both partners work off the farm. An increasing livestock reduces the probability of moving to states with substantial off-farm labour participation. Increasing farm size tends to have the opposite effect. Recent on-farm investments come out with ambiguous effects. Having children seems to motivate operators to withdraw from off-farm labour and spouses to stay in or enter off-farm employment.
Abstract
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Authors
Attila NemesAbstract
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Authors
T. Jung L. Orlikowski B. Henricot P. Abad-Campos A.G. Aday O. Aguín Casal J. Bakonyi S.O. Cacciola T. Cech D. Chavarriaga T. Corcobado A. Cravador T. Decourcelle G. Denton S. Diamandis H.T. Doğmuş-Lehtijärvi A. Franceschini B. Ginetti M. Glavendekić J. Hantula G. Hartmann Maria Herrero D. Ivic M. Horta Jung A. Lilja N. Keca V. Kramarets A. Lyubenova H. Machado G. Magnano di San Lio P.J. Mansilla Vázquez B. Marçais I. Matsiakh I. Milenkovic S. Moricca Z.Á. Nagy J. Nechwatal C. Olsson T. Oszako A. Pane E.J. Paplomatas C. Pintos Varela S. Prospero C. Rial Martínez D. Rigling C. Robin A. Rytkönen M.E. Sánchez B. Scanu A. Schlenzig J. Schumacher S. Slavov A. Solla E. Sousa J. Stenlid Venche Talgø Z. Tomic P. Tsopelas A. Vannini A. M. Vettraino M. Wenneker S. Woodward A. Perez-SierraAbstract
No abstract has been registered
Abstract
High northern latitudes are increasingly exposed to the combination of extreme winter climate and deposition of long-distance dispersed nitrogen pollution. The nature in the north is vulnerable, and these combined stresses may over time affect the composition of plant species and carbon uptake. How will North-Norwegian ecosystems tolerate unstable winters and nitrogen pollution?