- Antibiotic Use and Resistance
- Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
- Bacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing
- Misinformation and Its Impacts
- Public Relations and Crisis Communication
- Corporate Finance and Governance
- Fiscal Policies and Political Economy
- International Business and FDI
- Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and Political Violence
- Electoral Systems and Political Participation
- Security, Politics, and Digital Transformation
- Human Rights and Development
- Social Media and Politics
- Global Security and Public Health
- European and Russian Geopolitical Military Strategies
- International Law and Human Rights
- Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth
- International Arbitration and Investment Law
- Data-Driven Disease Surveillance
- Judicial and Constitutional Studies
- International Relations and Foreign Policy
- Economic Sanctions and International Relations
University of British Columbia
2016-2024
World Health Organization
2023
An infodemic is an overflow of information varying quality that surges across digital and physical environments during acute public health event. It leads to confusion, risk-taking, behaviors can harm lead erosion trust in authorities responses. Owing the global scale high stakes emergency, responding related pandemic particularly urgent. Building on diverse research disciplines expanding discipline infodemiology, more evidence-based interventions are needed design management tools implement...
The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by an
Foreign direct investment involves substantial and long-term investments by foreign companies, which have sometimes been expropriated national governments. Over the past 35 years, international treaties enabled private companies to sue governments at tribunals for alleged treaty violations, a shift from traditional state-to-state judicial actions. This dissertation explores how such disputes impact destinations through statistical analyses interviews. Additionally, survey experiment in U.S....
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We use data from Canadian legislatures to examine how legislative pension rules affect the propensity of incumbents seek re‐election. predict that legislators with defined‐benefits pensions are more likely re‐election than without pensions. Once legislator is vested (i.e., qualified) in pension, however, this incentive disappears; indeed, accrue value quickly and can be collected at an early age, induce retire rather Difference‐in‐differences estimates bear out these predictions: on average,...