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Professor Jens Holscher
Jens Hӧlscher is an economist. Before coming to Bournemouth he taught at the Universities of Berlin, Swansea, Birmingham, Chemnitz and Brighton. He held Visiting Professorships at the Universities of Halle (Institute of Economic Research IWH), Perugia, East Europe Institute Regensburg, Danube University, Bonn (ZEI), Bolzano-Bozen, Frankfurt (Viadrina), New Brunswick in Cairo, Almaty (KIMEP and KBTU) and the Centre of Economic Research at the Deutsche Bundesbank.

Professor Tim Lloyd
Tim Lloyd is Professor of Economics in the Business School. He was appointed in July 2015 having previously been Associate Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Nottingham.

Professor Adam Blake
Adam Blake is a Professor of Economics in the Bournemouth University Business School, and Head of the International Centre for Tourism and Hospitality Research.

An investigation into the anthropogenic nexus among consumption of energy, tourism, and economic growth: do economic policy uncertainties matter?

Dr Festus Adedoyin
Festus is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, a Senior Lecturer and Programme Leader for BSc Business Computing with Analytics, Data Science and Artificial Intelligence at the Department of Computing and Informatics, Bournemouth University, U.

Professor Nigel Jump
Since 2015, Nigel Jump has been Professor of Regional Economic Development at Bournemouth University, working with the Office of the Vice Chancellor to engage with local businesses/other organisations and to research economic development of the local economy.

Examining the external-factors-led growth hypothesis for the South African economy

Dr Mehdi Chowdhury
I am Principal Lecturer in Economics, Bournemouth University Business School, UK. I joined as a Lecturer in Economics in September 2011 after obtaining my PhD from the School of Economics of the University of Nottingham.

Dr Peter Howard-Jones
A senior lecturer and post-doctoral research assistant at Bournemouth University, having gained a Ph.D. in August 2019 with a thesis entitled “The Influence of the Washington Consensus Programme on the Transitional Economies of Eastern Europe – a firm level micro economic analysis”.

Energy consumption, economic policy uncertainty and carbon emissions; causality evidence from resource rich economies

An empirical assessment of electricity consumption and environmental degradation in the presence of economic complexities

Dr Khurshid Djalilov
Khurshid’s research interests and thought leadership includes: First, Khurshid’s intellectual contributions focus on examining the transition economies of Europe and the former Soviet Union (FSU).

Energy consumption, economic expansion, and CO2 emission in the UK: The role of economic policy uncertainty

Economic dynamism in transition economies: Lessons from Germany

Modelling productivity shocks and economic growth using the Bayesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium approach

Dr Patrick Neveling
Patrick completed a Magister Artium (pre-Bologna reform) in Cultural Anthropology, Indonesian Philology, and Philosophy from the University of Cologne and a PhD in Social Anthropology from Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg.

The impact of productive and non-productive government expenditure on economic growth: an empirical analysis in high-income versus low- to middle-income economies

How does institutional quality moderates the impact of tourism on economic growth? Startling evidence from high earners and tourism-dependent economies

Palgrave Dictionary of Emerging Markets and Transition Economics

Dr Dermot McCarthy
As a dedicated economist with over 15 years of experience, Dr. Dermot McCarthy’s current research specialises in analysing healthcare policies and health technology assessment.

Professor John Fletcher
John is an internationally renowned economist, highly regarded for his pioneering work in tourism impact and development research. John was a member of the Office of the Vice Chancellor, in his role as Pro Vice Chancellor, responsible for the university's Research and Innovation.

Designing policy framework for sustainable development in Next-5 largest economies amidst energy consumption and key macroeconomic indicators

Professor Davide Parrilli
Full Professor of Regional Economic Development and Coordinator of the PhD for the Faculty of 'Business & Law'. Research Output Champion for BUBS for REF2029, and Senate Member (2023-ongoing).

The impact of the economic recession on wellbeing and quality of life of older people.

Modelling coal rent, economic growth and CO2 emissions: Does regulatory quality matter in BRICS economies?

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