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Dr. Vincent
Cheng (Hong Kong) Dr. Vincent Cheng's bio will be available soon.
Dr. Philippa
Dee (Melbourne)
Dr. Philippa Dee specializes in research focusing on services trade liberalization and the costs of services trade barriers as a Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University. She has also conducted extensive industry-specific quantitative research, analyses of the implications of offshoring, the economic effects of deforestation, the economic impacts of trade liberalization on Australia, and the impacts of tax and regulatory changes.
Dr. Chris
Findlay (Canberra)
Dr. Chris Findlay's bio will be available soon.
Dr. David
Greenaway (Nottingham)
David Greenaway is a Professor of Economics at the University
of Nottingham, a post he has held since 1987. He also served
as a University Pro-Vice-Chancellor (1994-2001) and Dean
of the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences (1991-1994). Greenaway's
research interests lie primarily in the fields of trade
and labor market adjustment, cross-border investment, international
trade policy, and the funding of higher education. Greenaway
has published widely in academic journals and is a member
of the Editorial Boards of several premiere economics journals.
He has been an Associate Editor of the Economic Journal
and is Joint Managing Editor of The World Economy. He is
a regular contributor to the Advanced Studies Programme
at the Institut für Weltwirtschaft in Kiel. Greenaway
has been a consultant to the World Bank, UNIDO, UNCTAD,
European Commission, the GATT, UNECE and the British Treasury.
These assignments have resulted in work on, inter alia,
Bangladesh, Malaysia, Madagascar, Mauritius, Nigeria, Ivory
Coast, Burundi, Tanzania and the Caribbean.
Dr. Jan
Haaland (Bergen)
Jan I. Haaland is Professor of International Economics at
the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration
(NHH). He is also Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic
Policy Research in London, and member of the scientific
committee of the European Trade Study Group. Haalands
research fields include international trade and trade policies,
foreign direct investments and multinational firms, and
general equilibrium modeling of global and regional economic
integration, subjects on which he has published widely.
Haaland participated in projects for the European Commission
Directorate General for Trade, and the Norwegian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.
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Dr. Thomas
Hertel (Purdue)
Dr Thomas Hertel bio will be available soon.
Dr. Patrick
Messerlin (Paris)
Dr Patrick Messerlin's bio will be available soon.
Dr. James
Riedel (Nanjing/Ho Chi Minh City)
Dr James Riedel's bio will be available soon.
Dr. Kenneth
Reinert (George Mason University)
Kenneth A. Reinert is Associate Professor of Public Policy
at George Mason University where he received the Distinguished
Teaching Award in 2003. He holds his B.A. and M.A. degrees
in Geography from Boston University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees
in Economics from the University of Maryland. He has also
held the positions of International Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission and Associate Professor of
Economics at Kalamazoo College. Dr. Reinert has published
over 40 journal articles and book chapters in the areas
of international trade, economic development, and environmental
policy. He also co-edited Applied Methods of Trade Policy
Analysis: A Handbook, which was published by Cambridge
University Press. His textbook, Windows on the World
Economy: An Introduction to International Economics,
was published in 2004.
Dr. Kara Reynolds (American University)
Kara M. Reynolds is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Economics at American University. She holds a B.A. degree in International Studies from American University, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Economics from the University of Virginia. She is the author of a number of articles on antidumping, including "The Spread of Antidumping Regimes and the Role of Retaliation in Filings" and "Subsidizing Rent Seeking: Antidumping Protection and the Byrd Amendment." Her current research focuses on the variance in the determinants of antidumping decisions across WTO Members.
Dr. Ian
Wooton (Glasgow)
Ian Wooton is Professor of Economics at the University of
Strathclyde in Glasgow. A Research Fellow of the Centre
for Economic Policy Research since 1994, Wooton is an established
authority in international economics and has published widely
in the areas of international trade theory and policy, including
economic geography, discriminatory trading agreements and
customs unions, trade and the environment, international
and intersectoral factor mobility, and foreign direct investment
and multinational enterprises. He and TRADE PARTNERSHIP
WORLDWIDE, LLC, Managing Director Joseph
Francois established the European Trade Study Group,
now the major annual international trade conference in the
world. Wooton has acted as consultant to national and international
agencies including the World Bank, the European Commission,
and British Treasury.
Stephen Yeo (London)
Stephen Yeo is the Chief Executive Officers of the Centre
for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) in London. CEPR is the
leading European research network in economics, and brings
together over 600 European economists who produce applied
theory and empirical work on a wide range of international
economic policy issues. The Centre is the focus of most European
research on international trade and trade policy. Yeo also
has extensive experience in trade research and trade capacity
building in Sub-Saharan Africa. He worked with the Department
of Trade and Industry in South Africa to establish the Trade
and Industrial Policy Secretariat, and later established the
Southern African Trade Research Network (SATRN). He currently
chairs SATRNs Technical Advisory Committee.
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