This conference, organized by the Dipartimento di Studi Aziendali e Quantitativi of the Università degli studi di Napoli - PARTHENOPE, in collaboration with the Joint Research Centre, aims at stimulating the discussion about the bidirectional nature of the relationship between climate change and finance.
Specifically, the aim of this conference is to encouraging novel research about the following main, but non-exclusive, topics:
- Financial system’s characteristics and carbon emissions across the globe
- Estimating the impact of central banks investment on global warming
- The impact of climate change on the corporate governance practices
- The impact of ESG factors on the stability of the global financial system
- Global warming and financial institutions
- Fintech for climate change
- Green bonds and sustainability-linked loans
- Climate risks and asset management
- Climate risk, financing decisions, firm performance and innovation
- sustainable finance | green economy | sustainable development
- -
- External event
Practical information
- When
- -
- Languages
- English
- Organisers
- Joint Research Centre | Dipartimento di Studi Aziendali e Quantitativi of the Università degli studi di Napoli - PARTHENOPE
- Website
- 1st Conference on Sustainable Banking & Finance CSBF 2023
Description

Over the last few years, the threats about climate change have dramatically increased because of the sharp intensification of the frequency and impact of natural catastrophes across the globe. While the politicians in many countries have proclaimed a “climate emergency”, financial markets’ participants and financial regulators are gaining awareness about the role they can play in stopping global warming and the effects that climate change may have on the stability of the financial sector.
Conference Objective
Against this backdrop, the goal of this conference is to contribute to the literature on environmental topics related to the functioning of financial systems and corporate governance. The aim is the collection of both qualitative and quantitative studies that analyse the interaction between global warming, financial institutions and their relationships with firms and regulators. In particular, we would like to encourage academics, from different disciplines, to provide theoretical contributions and empirical evidence that document the phenomenon under investigation but also provide new insights and pioneering results.