- University of Kent
- School of Economics
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- Professor Roger Vickerman
Roger Vickerman is Emeritus Professor of European Economics at the University of Kent where he has been a member of the academic staff since 1977. He is also a Visiting Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Imperial College London where he is Chair of the Transport Strategy Centre.
Educated at the Universities of Cambridge and Sussex, he has an Honorary Doctorate from the Philipps-Universität, Marburg; he is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences; a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a Chartered Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport and a Fellow of the Regional Studies Association. He has been a visiting professor in Canada, Germany, Hungary and Australia.
From 2009 to 2014 he was Dean of the Brussels School of International Studies and then 2014-2017 Dean for Europe, where he was responsible for developing the University’s strategy towards its European engagement, including strategic oversight of its four European Centres in Brussels, Paris, Athens and Rome and how these fit into its wider global strategy.
Roger's research focuses on the relationship between transport (especially infrastructure) and economic development; regional development and integration in the European Union. He is particularly known for his studies on major infrastructure projects, such as the EU’s Trans-European Networks and high-speed rail. He has also recently worked on issues relating to public–private partnerships in transport. He has served as a member of SACTRA (Standing Committee on Trunk Road Assessment), as an advisor to Committees of both the House of Commons and House of Lords in the UK Parliament and acted as a consultant to the European Commission, various government departments and regional and local government authorities in the UK and overseas, and a member of the Economics Advisory Panel to HS2 Ltd. He is the author of 6 books (including the textbook Principles of Transport Economics, with Emile Quinet) and over 150 chapters, journal articles and reports. He has edited the Handbook of Transport Economics (Edward Elgar, 2011) with André de Palma, Robin Lindsey and Emile Quinet, which brings together state of the art reviews from over 50 of the world’s leading transport economists and Recent Developments in the Economics of Transport, 2 volumes (Edward Elgar, 2012). He sits on the editorial boards of several journals in both transport and regional science and was Editor in Chief of Transport Policy 2010-2016. He was awarded the Jules Dupuit Prize of the World Conference on Transport Research Society in 2016.
Roger's main research interest has always been in the development of the spatial economy: how to extend basic microeconomic models of behaviour to allow for spatial separation between the locations where activities take place. This has included work on travel and transport demand (including leisure and shopping activities) and on commuting and migration. Recently he has been involved with work on the role of transport infrastructure in regional development and the implications for regional convergence/divergence, with particular reference to the role of high-speed rail in the UK, the EU and China. He has also worked on issues surrounding the use of public-private partnerships as a means of financing transport infrastructure.
Roger's RePEc page is http://econpapers.repec.org/RAS/pvi166.html
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