Short description:
Kelvin KC Seah is a Lecturer in the Department of Economics at the National University of Singapore and a Research Affiliate at the Institute of Labor Economics (IZA). His research and teaching interests are in the fields of Applied Microeconomics, Population Economics, and Labour Economics.
Kelvin received his Honour’s and Master’s degrees in Economics from the National University of Singapore and his PhD in Economics from the University of Otago.
Kelvin has served in a number of research and teaching positions previously. He was a Research Fellow in the Centre for Research on the Economics of Ageing at the Singapore Management University, a visiting scholar in the Office of Population Research at Princeton University, and an Instructor in the National University of Singapore Business School.
Short description:
Philippe GERBER is a geographer with main interests in Land Use and Transport Interaction, especially those linking residential and daily mobility, using spatial analysis and econometric tools. He also has expertise in survey design and the application of related analytical methods. In doing so, he contributes to a better understanding of spatial mobility behaviours beyond the traditional prism of ‘bounded rationality’, with a focus on individuals’ attitudes, preferences and representations. He is working at the Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research – LISER – since 2001, after his completion of his PhD in 2000 about residential mobility in general, and gentrification, segregation and urban comfort in particular. He is also lecturer in different universities and research associate at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). He is currently visiting scholar at the School of Urban Planning and the Department of Geography at McGill University, and also at the Faculty of Environmental Planning at the University of Montréal (QC, Canada) up to August 2019.
Short description:
I am a geographer and I am working on the fields of urban studies and border studies. I participated in many reserach projects related to cross-border governance, cross-border integration and spatial planning across border. I am currently invovled a Jean Monnet Network on the European Capital of Culture in border context.
Short description:
I am a law professor whose research focuses on national and international tax law and policy issues, with emphasis on the relationship between taxation and economic development and on the role of government and non-government institutions and actors in the creation of tax policy norms. I have written numerous scholarly articles, essays, and book chapters, as well as editorials, columns, and articles in professional journals, addressing national and international tax law and policy issues. Recent research focuses on the alignment of taxation with the sustainable development goals; evolving international norms of tax cooperation and competition; tax aspects of new technologies; and evolving conceptions of rights in taxation