The Centre for Globalisation Research (CGR) conducts research, dissemination and user engagement activities around three research themes:
CGR’s collective contribution to theoretical and empirical research is evidenced by publications in high quality journals in economics and management, including the Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Public Economics, Management Science and Academy of Management. CGR’s interdisciplinary research on innovation and social networks has been published in the world’s top medical journals (Lancet, BMJ, Annals of Surgery) and other leading journals, including Nature.
As part of its international reach, the Centre also hosts the Research Circle for the Study of Inequality and Poverty (RCSIP).
Follow us on Twitter @QmulCgr
CGR is composed by academics based at Queen Mary University of London. Members also comprise researchers based at other universities in UK and overseas. Along with visiting scholars, who make a significant contribution to the Centre’s academic life, we host PhD students with an interest in our three research themes.
Mr Kairan Chen
Monetary Economics
Ms Yolotl Nayely Iturbe Lugo
Sociology
Dr Deven Bathia
Political economy and macroeconomics
Dr Guven Demirel
Business analytics, innovation and networks
Dr Natalia Efremova
Dr Georg von Graevenitz
Dr Zeynep Gurguc
Development, inequality and environmental economicsPolitical economy and macroeconomics
Dr Roxana Gutiérrez-Romero
Dr Michel Ferreira Cardia Haddad
Dr Georgios Kavetsos
Dr Charlotte Meng
Dr Eun-Seok Kim
Dr Maria Koumenta
Political economy and macroeconomicsDevelopment, inequality and environmental economics
Dr Stella Ladi
Dr Eleni Lioliou
Dr Giuliano Maielli
Professor Sushanta Mallick
Political economy and macroeconomicsDevelopment, inequality and environmental economicsBusiness analytics, innovation and networks
Professor Roman Matousek
Dr Ravshonbek Otojanov
Dr Pietro Panzarasa
Dr Ni Peng
Dr Martha Prevezer
Dr Thomas Zhang
Dr Xue Zhou
Dr Giorgos Galanis
Professor Gulnur Muradoglu
Dr Toan L.D. Huynh
Dr Po Yin Wong
Dr Valentin Danchev
Dr Federica Liberni
Professor Mark Casson
Dr Lucia Corno
Dr Sabine D'Costa
Professor Janet Dine
Professor Teresa da Silva Lopes
Dr Pedro Martins
Dr Beatriz Rodriguez-Satizabal
Professor Almudena Sevilla
Dr Praveen Gupta
Dr Thomas Kemeny
Galanis, G., 2022. A Baseline Model of Behavioral Political Cycles and Macroeconomic Fluctuation.
Gouzoulis, G., Iliopoulos, P. and Galanis, G., 2022. EU-induced Financialisation and Its Impact on the Greek Wage Share, 1999-2021 . GLO Discussion Paper.
Gutiérrez-Romero, R. and Salgado, N., 2023. New trends in South-South migration: The economic impact of COVID-19 and immigration enforcement. Applied Geography, p.102939.
Gutiérrez-Romero, R., 2022. Violence in Guatemala pushes adults and children to seek work in Mexico. arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.12796.
Lastauskas, P., Prosukute, A. and Zaldokas, A., 2021. How do firms adjust when trade stops.
Wong, P.Y., Kuralbayeva, K., Anderson, L.O., Pessoa, A.M. and Harding, T., 2023. Individual Pay for Collective Performance and Deforestation: Evidence from Brazil.
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2023
Carattini, S., Fankhauser, S., Gao, J., Gennaioli, C., and Panzarasa, P., 2023. What Does Network Analysis Teach Us About International Environmental Cooperation?, Ecological Economics, 205:107670
Gutiérrez-Romero, R., 2023. The contrasting effects of ethnic and partisan identity on performance evaluation, Political Behavior.
Meng, C.C., 2023. The price paid: Heuristic thinking and biased reference points in the housing market, Journal of Urban Economics, 134, p.103514.
2022
Alzahrani, A.I., Al-Samarraie, H., Eldenfria, A., Dodoo, J.E., Zhou, X. and Alalwan, N., 2022. COVID-19 and people's continued trust in eHealth systems: a new perspective, Behaviour & Information Technology, pp.1-17.
Aman, Z., Granville, B., Mallick, S.K. and Nemlioglu, I., 2022. Does greater financial openness promote external competitiveness in emerging markets?, The role of institutional quality. International Journal of Finance & Economics.
Carreto, C., Gutiérrez-Romero, R., and Rodríguez, T., 2022. Climate-driven mosquito-borne viral suitability index: measuring risk transmission of dengue, chikungunya and Zika in Mexico, International Journal of Health Geographics, 21 (1), 1-23.
Dechezleprêtre, A., Gennaioli, C., Martin, R., Muûls, M. and Stoerk, T., 2022. Searching for carbon leaks in multinational companies, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 112, p.102601.
Esener, C., Granville, B. and Matousek, R., 2022. Choosing the Optimal Tool for Fiscal Adjustment or Living under Fiscal Constraints: Panel Evidence from Selected OECD Countries, Economic Research Guardian, 12(1).
Gutiérrez-Romero, R., 2022. Conflicts increased in Africa shortly after COVID-19 lockdowns, but welfare assistance reduced fatalities, Economic Modelling, 116.
Kim, E.-S. and I.-S. Lee., 2022. Scheduling of two-machine flowshop with outsourcing lead-times, Computers and Operations Research, 145, 105864.
Kim, H.-J., E.-S. Kim, J. Lee, L. Tang and Y. Yang., 2022. Single Machine Scheduling with Energy Generation and Storage Systems, International Journal of Production Research, 60(23), 7033-7052.
Kim, H.-J., E.-S. Kim and J. Lee., 2022. Scheduling of step-improving jobs with an identical improving rate, Journal of the Operational Research Society, 73(5), 1127-1136.
Maielli, G., Oh, S.J. and Prevezer, M., 2022. Matching boundaries of GVCs to boundaries of technological platforms: explaining geographical dispersion of innovation in value chains in the case of South Korea. International Journal of Technological Learning, Innovation and Development.
O’Dea, X. and Zhou, X., 2022. Policy concern about university students’ online professionalism in the post-pandemic era in UK context, Policy Futures in Education.
Wong., 2022. Dynamics in the Returns to Capital: Natural Experimental Evidence from Indonesia, Journal of Development Studies, 2022, Vol.58 - Issue 2.
Wong., 2022. Who Takes the Hit? Gender Differences in Employment Outcomes after Disasters, Pacific Economic Review, 2022, Vol.27 - Issue 3.
Zhou, X. and Wolstencroft, P., 2022. A home away from home: building an organic online support community for Chinese students using WeChat, Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (24).
Granville, B., 2021. What Ails France?. McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP.
Moury, C., Ladi, S., Cardoso, D. and Gago, A., 2021. Capitalising on Constraint - Bailout Politics in EuroZone Countries. In Capitalising on constraint. Manchester University Press.
Granville, B., 2013. Remembering Inflation. In Remembering Inflation. Princeton University Press.
Granville, B. and Dine, J. eds., 2012. The Processes and Practices of Fair Trade: Trust, Ethics and Governance. Routledge.
The CGR engages with the international academic community by organising annual conferences, workshops and seminars. We also host CGR Brown Bag seminars, an opportunity for CGR members to present their works in progress. You can find a comprehensive list of events below.
CGR Seminar - Dr. Felipe Netto (Bank of England)
SBM - Bancroft 3.27
CGR Seminar - Dr. Karlygash Kuralbayeva (King's)
CGR Seminar - Dr. Neslihan Uler (U Maryland)
CGR Seminar - Dr. Eleonora Guarnieri (Exeter)
CGR Seminar - Dr. Cevat Aksoy (King's)
Workshop on Climate Change and Inequality
Research Circle for the Study of Inequality and Poverty (CGR, QMUL) and International Inequalities Institute (LSE)
LSE Fawcett House, Room 9.04
The Globalisation Lecture Series is a prestigious annual series offering a platform to prominent academics and policy-makers to discuss the latest debate in economics and economic policy. The Series has attracted world leading scholars such as Scott Barrett (Columbia), Esther Duflo (MIT), Jeffrey Sachs (Columbia), Alberto Alesina (Harvard), Paul Collier (Oxford) and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya (Paris School of Economics and EHESS).
The Centre organises various workshops on topics at the intersection of political economy, development and economic policy. The workshops have attracted eminent speakers such as Michael Kremer (Harvard University), Kaivan Munshi (University of Cambridge), Gerard Padro i Miguel (LSE), Sandra Sequeira (LSE), Sabina Alkire (Oxford), Pramila Krishnan (Cambridge), Natalie Quinn (Oxford) and Gaston Yalonetzky (Leeds).
Organised by: Dr. Caterina Gennaioli
Organised by: Dr. Sanghamitra Bandyopadhyay
The aim of the seminars is to present early-stage papers and receive timely feedbacks from peers to improve papers before submission.
This seminar series discusses research on the obstacles to career progression and discrimination faced by female, ethnic minority and LGBTQA+ members of the academic economics profession.
Seminar details:
Professor Almudena Sevilla (London School of Economics) 'The Gender Gap in Student Performance: The Role of Stakes'
Erin Hengel (University College London) ‘Gender and the Time Cost of Peer Review’
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