- Research,
Fatima Ezzahrae TAHRI, PhD student in finance
Magellan research center- iaelyon since September 2022
Published on February 24, 2023 – Updated on April 2, 2024
Theme: “Implications of the phenomenon of inhabitability on the performance of companies and on risk management”
Fatima Ezzahrae TAHRI, PhD student in Management, Lyon University, Jean Moulin Lyon 3 University, iaelyon School of Management, Magellan research center.
After graduating with a Master’s degree in Finance from the Ecole Nationale de Commerce et de Gestion (ENCG) in Morocco, her passion for research led Fatima Ezzahrae Tahri to pursue her academic studies in the Master’s in Studies and Research in Management at iaelyon, where she completed a research paper on Climate Finance.
Holding a PhD contract, Fatima Ezzahrae TAHRI joined the Finance Group of the Magellan Laboratory. Her PhD suggests to integrate an innovative notion in management– borrowed from climatology - which is "uninhabitability”. It is a phenomenon that focuses on the distribution of the human niche in the climatic space and on the consequences of global warming on the habitability of certain regions in the world. The main objective of her thesis is to study the implications of this phenomenon of inhabitability on the performance of companies and on risk management.
Her doctoral thesis is co-supervised by Jean-François Gajewski and Paul-Olivier Klein
After graduating with a Master’s degree in Finance from the Ecole Nationale de Commerce et de Gestion (ENCG) in Morocco, her passion for research led Fatima Ezzahrae Tahri to pursue her academic studies in the Master’s in Studies and Research in Management at iaelyon, where she completed a research paper on Climate Finance.
Holding a PhD contract, Fatima Ezzahrae TAHRI joined the Finance Group of the Magellan Laboratory. Her PhD suggests to integrate an innovative notion in management– borrowed from climatology - which is "uninhabitability”. It is a phenomenon that focuses on the distribution of the human niche in the climatic space and on the consequences of global warming on the habitability of certain regions in the world. The main objective of her thesis is to study the implications of this phenomenon of inhabitability on the performance of companies and on risk management.
Her doctoral thesis is co-supervised by Jean-François Gajewski and Paul-Olivier Klein
Last updated: April 2, 2024