- Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies
- Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
- Migration and Labor Dynamics
- demographic modeling and climate adaptation
- Housing Market and Economics
- Urban Transport and Accessibility
- Health disparities and outcomes
- Urbanization and City Planning
- Cruise Tourism Development and Management
- Maritime Navigation and Safety
- Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
- Spatial and Panel Data Analysis
- Transportation Planning and Optimization
- Maritime Ports and Logistics
- Regional Development and Policy
- Rural development and sustainability
- Migration, Refugees, and Integration
- Housing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
- Global Health Care Issues
- Geographic Information Systems Studies
- Urban Planning and Governance
- Regional Economics and Spatial Analysis
- Fusion materials and technologies
- Horticultural and Viticultural Research
- Employment and Welfare Studies
University College London
2016-2025
Eastern Health
2024
CRC for Spatial information
2022
University of Huddersfield
2013-2018
Logistics Management Institute (United States)
2018
The University of Sydney
2013
Pearson (United Kingdom)
2011
UCL Australia
2011
University of Leeds
2008-2010
Tackling large scale problems like climate change and the Sustainable Development Goals, requires taking a collective approach. Artificial Intelligence (AI) offers tremendous potential to enhance intelligence, both as an actor that contributes solution directly, tool mentor helps coordinate human intelligence. Collective invited experts practitioners highlight key challenges explain how they employ AI advance novel solutions — Christoph Riedl & David De Cremer.
A large evidence base demonstrates that the outcomes of COVID-19 and national local interventions are not distributed equally across different communities. The need to inform policies mitigation measures aimed at reducing spread highlights understand complex links between our daily activities transmission reflect characteristics British society. As a result partnership academic private sector researchers, we introduce novel data driven modelling framework together with computationally...
Abstract This paper explores the age variations in origin–destination migration data from 2001 UK Census. It does so using a national district classification as framework for summarising what is series of matrices, each containing very large numbers cells. The results demonstrate how propensities and patterns vary between different types district, providing new insights into processes through which population redistributed throughout Great Britain. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Achieving net zero in the UK requires radical improvements energy efficiency housing combined with decarbonisation of domestic heating. goals a systems approach which takes account variations at level individual properties but also levels neighbourhood and local governance context. Our study provides insights into scale challenge how this varies by spatial context using property-level measures from Energy Performance Certificates data between 2008–22 covering approximately half residential...
Build-to-Rent (BTR) developments have expanded rapidly in the UK since 2013, often advertised as providing better quality rented accommodation for university-educated Millennials than available elsewhere private rental sector. However, implications of this type housing development, and especially its affordability, are poorly understood at city scale, partly due to a lack evidence where these cluster what they add stock terms property type, amenities cost. This article draws on data relating...
This paper presents a new spatial interaction modelling framework for estimating subnational, international migration flows within Europe. We introduce several-stage model which incorporates constraints at two geographical levels and produces estimates full matrices of interregional adhere to known between countries in the EU system 2002 2007. It is shown that internal data can be usefully employed help distribute subnationally both through in-migration out-migration distributions calibrated...
In this paper we examine the recent rapid growth of new breweries in London and reasons behind it. At turn millennium, just a handful was operating London, but by 2016 number had risen to over 85. Using open data from Companies House database augmented with other online printed sources, show that breweries, particularly since 2011, has exhibited spatial patterning. Ripley's K analysis reveals as soon see emerging, they are clustering space. Cluster analyses reveal Bermondsey Hackney...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate, through metaphor analysis, the complex nature work undertaken by waiters and pursers on-board cruise ships. This an under-researched field empirical research has produced some interesting perceptions that these groups workers have themselves, others, world in which they live. Design/methodology/approach A total 20 semi-structured interviews were conducted over telephone from a sample international participants. data analysed using...
Gentrification has long been a contentious issue which prompted debate among scholars due to variations in its location, timing, context and types of measurements used. Therefore, it is worth seeking simple effective approach measure the processes gentrification, enables comparative studies be conducted across different cities around world. Using six sets thematic data from 2001 2011 at neighbourhood level, this study proposes five gentrification displacement by using Chapple Zuk’s...
Exploring the nature of spatial and temporal variation in house prices is important because it can help better understand such issues as affordability equity access to housing. In UK, research on price has been hindered by a lack extensive data linking properties at different places times their physical attributes. This paper addresses this gap through using new dataset Land Registry Price Paid Data attribute from Ordnance Survey Energy Performance Certificates datasets. The are used...
Emerging forms of data offer new opportunities for developing a deeper understanding poorly understood social and spatial processes. This is no more important than in countries, where large-scale collection processing has been relatively limited. In this paper, we explore how two datasets can be used to enhance our human activity communication interactions Dakar, Senegal. Starting from premise little contextual knowledge about the setting which are working, much these data, combined with...
Abstract While recent debates have widely acknowledged gentrification's varied manifestations, success in enumerating and disentangling the process its defining features from other forms of neighbourhood change at‐scale across entire cities, has remained largely elusive. This paper addresses this gap employs a novel, open reproducible urban analytics approach to systematically examine past future trajectories using London, England, as case‐study example. Using suites datasets relating...
As China transforms and experiences massive rural-to-urban migration, the destination decisions family structures of internal migrants have become increasingly diverse. This study investigates how married with children relate to geography their migration destinations. Our analysis reveals that migrant workers are systematically related destinations, couple relatively more likely be located in mega cities while entire locate less developed regions. Furthermore, this found different paths...
Despite a growing interest in the well-being of cruise ship labor, very little is known this area. This exploratory study seeks to investigate strategies that front-line hospitality workers are able negotiate and attach meaning consumptive work experience. Twenty in-depth qualitative interviews were undertaken with staff (waiters pursers). The ship, being unique working environment—intense, restricted, encapsulated—requires adjust, adopt, sacrifice sociospatial conditions. Therefore, through...
Abstract Using a substantial set of vagrancy removal records for Middlesex (1777–86) giving details the place origin some 11,500 individuals, and analysing these using five‐variable gravity model migration, this article addresses simple question: from which parts England did London draw its lower‐class migrants in late eighteenth century? It concludes, first, that industrializing areas north emerged as competitor potential migrants—contributing relatively fewer than predicted by model....
Journal Article Visualising migration: Online tools for taking us beyond the static map Get access Adam Dennett * *Centre Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, Gower Street, WC1E 6BT. Email: a.dennett@ucl.ac.uk Search other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Migration Studies, Volume 3, Issue 1, March 2015, Pages 143–152, https://doi.org/10.1093/migration/mnu073 Published: 10 2015