create a website

Interfaces and divisions in the Dublin Docklands Smart District. (2018). Heaphy, Liam James.
In: SocArXiv.
RePEc:osf:socarx:z2afc.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Cited: 0

Citations received by this document

Cites: 87

References cited by this document

Cocites: 30

Documents which have cited the same bibliography

Coauthors: 0

Authors who have wrote about the same topic

Citations

Citations received by this document

    This document has not been cited yet.

References

References cited by this document

  1. Antoniadis P and Apostol I (2014) The Right(s) to the Hybrid City and the Role of DIY Networking. The Journal of Community Informatics 10(3).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  2. Available from: http://ukandeu.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Who-voted-for-Brexit.pdf (accessed 10 November 2016).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  3. Bartley B (2007) Planning in Ireland. In: Kitchin R and Bartley B (eds), Understanding Contemporary Ireland. London: Pluto, London: Pluto Press, pp. 31–43.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  4. Becker SO, Fetzer T and Novy D (2016) Who Voted for Brexit? A Comprehensive District-Level Analysis.

  5. Blok A and Farías I (eds) (2016) Urban cosmopolitics: agencements, assemblies, atmospheres. Questioning cities, New York, NY: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  6. Boyd R (1990) Realism, Approximate Truth and Philosophical Method. In: Savage W (ed.), Scientific Theories, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 253–289.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  7. Brand R (2009) Urban Artifacts and Social Practices in a Contested City. Journal of Urban Technology 16(2– 3): 35–60.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  8. Brenner N, Madden DJ and Wachsmuth D (2011) Assemblage urbanism and the challenges of critical urban theory. City 15(2): 225–240.

  9. Byrne M (2016) Entrepreneurial Urbanism After the Crisis: Ireland’s “Bad Bank” and the Redevelopment of Dublin’s Docklands: Entrepreneurial Urbanism After the Crisis. Antipode 48(4): 899–918.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  10. Calzada I (2017) The Techno-Politics of Data and Smart Devolution in City-Regions: Comparing Glasgow, Bristol, Barcelona, and Bilbao. Systems 5(1): 18.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  11. Calzada I and Cobo C (2015) Unplugging: Deconstructing the Smart City. Journal of Urban Technology 0(0): 1–21.

  12. Caragliu A, Bo CD and Nijkamp P (2011) Smart Cities in Europe. Journal of Urban Technology 18(2): 65–82.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  13. Coletta C, Heaphy L and Kitchin R (2017) From the accidental to articulated smart city: The creation and work of ‘Smart Dublin’. Available from: https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/93ga5/download?format=pdf (accessed 19 June 2017).

  14. COMPETE (2006) The COMPETE Network: Final Report - Messages for Competitive European Cities.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  15. Cugurullo F (2016) Urban eco-modernisation and the policy context of new eco-city projects: Where Masdar City fails and why. Urban Studies 53(11): 2417–2433.

  16. Cugurullo F (2017) Exposing smart cities and eco-cities: Frankenstein urbanism and the sustainability challenges of the experimental city. Environment and Planning A 0(0): 1–20.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  17. Cullen M (2016) Cities on the path to ‘smart’: information technology provider interactions with urban governance through smart city projects in Dubuque, Iowa and Portland, Oregon. Doctoral Thesis, The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Available from: http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/3392/ (accessed 7 June 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  18. Datta A (2015) The smart entrepreneurial city: Dholera and 100 other utopias in India. In: Marvin S, LuqueAyala A, and McFarlane C (eds), Smart Urbanism: Utopian Vision Or False Dawn?, Routledge, pp. 52–70.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  19. Dawe SN and Paradice D (2016) A Systems Approach to Smart City Infrastructure: A Small City Perspective.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  20. Dawson GM (1984) Defensive planning in Belfast. Irish Geography 17(1): 27–41.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  21. DKM Consultants (2017) Enhancing Ireland’s Infrastructure: Construction Industry Federation Report.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  22. Dublin City Council (2014) North Lotts and Grand Canal Dock Planning Scheme 2014. Available from: http://www.dublincity.ie/main-menu-services-planning-urban-development-plans-local-areaplans /north-lotts-grand-canal-dock (accessed 11 January 2018).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  23. Dublin, Ireland: Construction Industry Federation. Available from: https://cif.ie/wpcontent /uploads/2017/07/CIF-Enhancing-Irelands-Infrastructure-Report-LR.pdf (accessed 1 October 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  24. Ersoy A (2017) Smart cities as a mechanism towards a broader understanding of infrastructure interdependencies. Regional Studies, Regional Science 4(1): 1–6.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  25. Farías I and Bender T (eds) (2012) Urban Assemblages: How Actor-Network Theory Changes Urban Studies. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  26. Farías I and Blok A (2016) Technical democracy as a challenge to urban studies: Introduction. City 20(4): 539– 548.

  27. Fuller S (2012) CSI: Kuhn and Latour. Social Studies of Science 42(3): 429–434.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  28. Gaffikin F, Karelse C, Morrissey M, et al. (2016) Making Space for Each Other: Civic Place-Making in a Divided Society. Belfast: Queen’s University Belfast. Available from: https://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/making-space-for-each-other-civic-placemaking-in-adivided -society(202fab7c-da83-4ecb-80b0-2ea579464d2d).html (accessed 11 January 2018).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  29. Gardner N and Hespanhol L (2017) SMLXL: Scaling the smart city, from metropolis to individual. City, Culture and Society 0(0): 1–8.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  30. Giere RN (2005) Scientific Realism: Old and New Problems. Erkenntnis 63(2): 149–165.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  31. Giffinger R and Pichler-Milanović N (2007) Smart cities: Ranking of European medium-sized cities. Vienna: Centre of Regional Science, Vienna University of Technology.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  32. Gilbert Simondon (1958) Du Mode d’Existence des Objets Techniques. Paris: Aubier-Montaigne.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  33. Graham S and Marvin S (2001) Splintering urbanism: networked infrastructures, technological mobilities and the urban condition. London: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  34. Gray E, Farrall S, Hay C, et al. (2015) Thatcher’s Grandchildren: The Long Road to Inequality. Political Insight 6(1): 16–19.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  35. Guallart V (2012) La ciudad autosuficiente: Habitar en la sociedad de la información. Barcelona: RBA Libros.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  36. Guggenheim M (2016) Im/mutable im/mobiles. From the socio-materiality of cities towards a differential cosmopolitics. In: Farías I and Blok A (eds), Urban cosmopolitics: agencements, assemblies, atmospheres, Questioning cities, New York, NY: Routledge, pp. 63–81.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  37. Haase T (2009) Divided City – The Changing Face of Dublin’s Inner City. Dublin: Dublin Inner City Partnership. Available from: http://trutzhaase.eu/wp/wp-content/uploads/R_2009_Divided-City.pdf (accessed 21 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  38. Harding LJ (2002) The Socio-Economic Impact Of The IFSC On The Local Community. Dublin, National College of Ireland. Available from: http://trap.ncirl.ie/292/ (accessed 19 September 2016).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  39. Harvey D (2002) From managerialism to entrepreneurialism: The transformation of urban governance in late capitalism. The blackwell city reader: 456–463.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  40. Hebbert M (2006) Town planning versus urbanismo. Planning Perspectives 21(3): 233–251.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  41. Hollands RG (2008) Will the real smart city please stand up? City 12(3): 303–320.

  42. Hooydonk E van (2007) Soft Values of Seaports: A Strategy for the Restoration of Public Support for Seaports. Garant.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  43. Houdart S and Minato C (2009) Kuma Kengo: An Unconventional Monograph. Editions Donner Lieu Paris.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  44. Hoyle BS (1989) The Port-City interface: Trends, problems and examples. Geoforum 20(4): 429–435.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  45. In: Dublin, Ireland, p. 11. Available from: http://iot-smartcities.lero.ie/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/ASystems -Approach-to-Smart-City-Infrastructure-A-Small-City-Perspective.pdf (accessed 22 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  46. Kaika M (2011) Autistic Architecture: The Fall of the Icon and the Rise of the Serial Object of Architecture. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 29(6): 968–992.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  47. Kincaid A (2006) Postcolonial Dublin: imperial legacies and the built environment. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  48. Kitchin R (2014) The real-time city? Big data and smart urbanism. GeoJournal 79(1): 1–14.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  49. Kitchin R and Lauriault TP (2014) Towards Critical Data Studies: Charting and Unpacking Data Assemblages and Their Work. SSRN Scholarly Paper, Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network. Available from: http://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=2474112 (accessed 12 January 2016).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  50. Kitchin R, Coletta C, Evans L, et al. (2017) Smart cities, epistemic communities, advocacy coalitions and the ‘last mile’ problem. it - Information Technology 0(0). Available from: https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/itit.ahead-of-print/itit-2017-0004/itit-2017-0004.xml (accessed 29 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  51. Kitchin R, O’Callaghan C, Boyle M, et al. (2012) Placing Neoliberalism: The Rise and Fall of Ireland’s Celtic Tiger. Environment and Planning A 44(6): 1302–1326.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  52. Latour B (2005) Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory. Clarendon lectures in management studies, Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  53. Latour B (2013) An inquiry into modes of existence: an anthropology of the moderns. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  54. Lawton P and Punch M (2014) Urban governance and the ‘European City’: ideals and realities in Dublin, Ireland. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 38(3): 864–885.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  55. Lynch M (2012) Self-exemplifying revolutions? Notes on Kuhn and Latour. Social Studies of Science 42(3): 449–455.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  56. MacLaren A, Kelly S and MacLaran A (2014) Neoliberal urban policy and the transformation of the city: Reshaping Dublin. Springer.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  57. Maguire M (1993) A Socio-Economic Analysis of the Dublin Protestant Working Class, 1870–1926. Irish Economic and Social History 20(1): 35–61.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  58. March H and Ribera-Fumaz R (2016) Smart contradictions: The politics of making Barcelona a Self-sufficient city. European Urban and Regional Studies 23(4): 816–830.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  59. Marvin S, Luque-Ayala A and McFarlane C (eds) (2016) Smart urbanism: utopian vision or false dawn? London; New York: Routledge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  60. McDonald F (2017) Renovated crane a major part of Dublin’s ‘port-city integration’. The Irish Times. Available from: https://www.irishtimes.com/business/commercial-property/renovated-crane-a-major-part-ofdublin -s-port-city-integration-1.3265603 (accessed 21 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  61. McFarlane C and Söderström O (2017) On alternative smart cities. City 0(0): 1–17.

  62. McGuirk PM and MacLaran A (2001) Changing approaches to urban planning in an ‘entrepreneurial city’: the case of Dublin. European Planning Studies 9(4): 437–457.

  63. Mehlman J (1972) The ‘floating signifier’: from Lévi-Strauss to Lacan. Yale French Studies: 10–37.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  64. Mizouka F (2013) Capitalist Regulation of Public Transport. In: Low N (ed.), Transforming urban transport: the ethics, politics and practices of sustainable mobility, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY: Routledge, pp. 85–110.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  65. Moore N (2008) Dublin docklands reinvented: the post-industrial regeneration of a European city quarter. Dublin: Four Courts Pr Ltd.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  66. Moore N (2012) Dublin Docklands Development Authority: A wind-up? Ireland after NAMA. Available from: https://irelandafternama.wordpress.com/2012/05/31/dublin-docklands-development-authority-a-windup / (accessed 20 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  67. Murtagh B (2011) Desegregation and Place Restructuring in the New Belfast. Urban Studies 48(6): 1119–1135.

  68. O’Carroll A and Bennett D (2017) The Dublin Docker: The Working Lives of Dublin’s Deep-Sea Port. Newbridge, Ireland: Irish Academic Press Ltd.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  69. O’Leary S (2014) Sense of Place: A History of Irish Planning. Dublin: The History Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  70. Petty J (2016) The London Spikes Controversy: Homelessness, Urban Securitisation and the Question of ‘Hostile Architecture’. International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy 5(1): 67.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  71. Picon A (2015) Smart cities: a spatialised intelligence. Ad primers, Chicester: John Wiley.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  72. Punch M (2006) The politics of memory: The socio-cultural contradictions of globalisation and urban regeneration in Dublin. Irish Geography 39(2): 194–198.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  73. Rialtas na hÉireann (1997) Dublin Docklands Development Authority Act, 1997. 7. Available from: http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1997/act/7/enacted/en/print (accessed 19 September 2016).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  74. Rossi A (1982) The architecture of the city. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  75. Sheffield. Available from: https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/media/livacuk/publicpolicypractice/images/9012_COMPETE.pdf (accessed 22 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  76. Shelton T, Zook M and Wiig A (2015) The ‘actually existing smart city’. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 8(1): 13–25.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  77. Stengers I (2005) The cosmopolitical proposal. In: Latour B and Weibel P (eds), Making things public: Atmospheres of democracy, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 994–1003.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  78. Verhoeven P (2010) A review of port authority functions: towards a renaissance? Maritime Policy & Management 37(3): 247–270.

  79. Wallace C (2017) Civil society in search of a state: Dublin 1898–1922. Urban History 0(0): 1–27.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  80. Waters R (2017) The great Silicon Valley land grab. Financial Times. Available from: https://www.ft.com/content/82bc282e-8790-11e7-bf50-e1c239b45787 (accessed 24 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  81. Wiig A (2015) IBM’s smart city as techno-utopian policy mobility. City 19(2–3): 258–273.

  82. Wilkinson A (2017) Uber’s ‘disruption’ is far from benign - but it’s not too big to ban. The Guardian, 22nd November. Available from: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/nov/22/uber-disruptionban -london-sadiq-khan (accessed 25 November 2017).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  83. Witte P, Slack B, Keesman M, et al. (2017) Facilitating start-ups in port-city innovation ecosystems: A case study of Montreal and Rotterdam. Journal of Transport Geography 0(0): 1–11.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  84. Yaneva A (2009) Made by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture: an ethnography of design. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  85. Yaneva A (2017) Five Ways to Make Architecture Political: An Introduction to the Politics of Design Practice. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  86. Zammito JH (2004) A Nice Derangement of Epistemes: Post-positivism in the Study of Science from Quine to Latour. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  87. Zygiaris S (2013) Smart City Reference Model: Assisting Planners to Conceptualize the Building of Smart City Innovation Ecosystems. Journal of the Knowledge Economy 4(2): 217–231.

Cocites

Documents in RePEc which have cited the same bibliography

  1. Decomposing the growth of the high-skilled wage premium in an advanced economy open to trade. (2021). Lücke, Matthias ; Lucke, Matthias ; Edwards, Huw T.
    In: The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance.
    RePEc:eee:quaeco:v:80:y:2021:i:c:p:766-784.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  2. Growing up under Mao and Deng: On the ideological determinants of corporate policies. (2020). Wang, Rong ; Liang, Hao ; Zhu, Haikun.
    In: BOFIT Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:zbw:bofitp:bdp2020_020.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  3. Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail: Did Immigration Cause Brexit?. (2020). Viskanic, Max.
    In: Sciences Po publications.
    RePEc:spo:wpmain:info:hdl:2441/7qh1ffjmcs94eag0i47p8t150j.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  4. Regionally-structured explanations behind area-level populism: An update to recent ecological analyses. (2020). Beecham, Roger ; Williams, Nick ; Comber, Alexis.
    In: PLOS ONE.
    RePEc:plo:pone00:0229974.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  5. Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail: Did Immigration Cause Brexit?. (2020). Viskanic, Max.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:hal:wpaper:hal-03471315.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  6. Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail: Did Immigration Cause Brexit?. (2020). Viskanic, Max.
    In: SciencePo Working papers Main.
    RePEc:hal:spmain:hal-03471315.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  7. Credit and social unrest: Evidence from 1930s China. (2020). Manconi, Alberto ; Braggion, Fabio ; Zhu, Haikun.
    In: Journal of Financial Economics.
    RePEc:eee:jfinec:v:138:y:2020:i:2:p:295-315.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  8. Growing up under Mao and Deng : On the ideological determinants of corporate policies. (2020). Haikun, Zhu ; Rong, Wang ; Hao, Liang.
    In: BOFIT Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:bof:bofitp:2020_020.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  9. Why did Cornwall vote for Brexit? Assessing the implications for EU structural funding programmes. (2019). Tidy, Rebecca ; Passmore, Philip ; Willett, Joanie ; Tregidga, Garry.
    In: Environment and Planning C.
    RePEc:sae:envirc:v:37:y:2019:i:8:p:1343-1360.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  10. Labor Market Shocks and the Demand for Trade Protection: Evidence from Online Surveys. (2019). Rodrik, Dani ; Di Tella, Rafael.
    In: NBER Working Papers.
    RePEc:nbr:nberwo:25705.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  11. Challenges and opportunities for European Union in the XXIst century. (2019). Bosoanc, Ionelia Bianca.
    In: CES Working Papers.
    RePEc:jes:wpaper:y:2019:v:11:i:1:p:1-21.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  12. Labour Market Shocks and the Demand for Trade Protection: Evidence from Online Surveys. (2019). Rodrik, Dani ; di Tella, Rafael.
    In: CEPR Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:cpr:ceprdp:14175.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  13. Essays on political economy of finance and fintech. (2018). Zhu, Haikun.
    In: Other publications TiSEM.
    RePEc:tiu:tiutis:93f94423-e671-4041-bb24-8e5ab6f2192e.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  14. Local-level immigration and life satisfaction: The EU enlargement experience in England and Wales. (2018). Veliziotis, Michail ; Ivlevs, Artjoms.
    In: Environment and Planning A.
    RePEc:sae:envira:v:50:y:2018:i:1:p:175-193.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  15. Populism and the economics of globalization. (2018). Rodrik, Dani.
    In: Journal of International Business Policy.
    RePEc:pal:joibpo:v:1:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1057_s42214-018-0001-4.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  16. Interfaces and divisions in the Dublin Docklands Smart District. (2018). Heaphy, Liam James.
    In: SocArXiv.
    RePEc:osf:socarx:z2afc.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  17. Interfaces and divisions in the Dublin Docklands Smart District. (2018). Heaphy, Liam James.
    In: OSF Preprints.
    RePEc:osf:osfxxx:xbrgt_v1.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  18. Interfaces and divisions in the Dublin Docklands Smart District. (2018). Heaphy, Liam James.
    In: OSF Preprints.
    RePEc:osf:osfxxx:xbrgt.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  19. Understanding the Social and Cultural Bases of Brexit. (2017). Sironi, Maria ; Chan, Tak Wing ; Henderson, Morag ; Kawalerowicz, Juta.
    In: DoQSS Working Papers.
    RePEc:qss:dqsswp:1715.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  20. Local economic effects of Brexit. (2017). Overman, Henry ; Machin, Stephen ; Dhingra, Swati.
    In: LSE Research Online Documents on Economics.
    RePEc:ehl:lserod:85602.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  21. Making sense of the costs and benefits of Brexit: challenges for economists. (2017). Begg, Iain.
    In: LSE Research Online Documents on Economics.
    RePEc:ehl:lserod:83587.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  22. Who Voted for Brexit? A Comprehensive District-Level Analysis. (2017). Novy, Dennis ; Fetzer, Thiemo ; Becker, Sascha.
    In: CEPR Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:cpr:ceprdp:11954.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  23. How Distributional Conflict over Public Spending Drives Support for Anti-Immigrant Parties. (2017). Ferwerda, Jeremy ; Cavaille, Charlotte.
    In: CAGE Online Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:cge:wacage:328.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  24. Das Phänomen »Populismus«: Ursachen und Gegenrezepte. (2017). Winkler, Adalbert ; Novy, Dennis ; Fetzer, Thiemo ; Becker, Sascha ; Berthold, Norbert ; Kowall, Nikolaus ; Kneuer, Marianne.
    In: ifo Schnelldienst.
    RePEc:ces:ifosdt:v:70:y:2017:i:12:p:03-21.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  25. Brexit – Theory and Empirics. (2017). Poutvaara, Panu ; Nikolka, Till.
    In: CESifo Forum.
    RePEc:ces:ifofor:v:17:y:2017:i:04:p:68-75.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  26. Chapter 2: Economic Policy and the Rise of Populism – It’s Not So Simple. (2017). Sturm, Jan-Egbert ; James, Harold ; Fuest, Clemens ; Driffill, Edward ; Bertola, Giuseppe ; Uroevic, Branko ; Andersen, Torben M.
    In: EEAG Report on the European Economy.
    RePEc:ces:eeagre:v::y:2017:i::p:50-66.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  27. Who Voted for Brexit? A Comprehensive District-Level Analysis. (2017). Novy, Dennis ; Fetzer, Thiemo ; Becker, Sascha.
    In: CESifo Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6438.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  28. Who voted for Brexit? A comprehensive district-Level analysis. (2017). Novy, Dennis ; Fetzer, Thiemo ; Becker, Sascha.
    In: CEP Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:cep:cepdps:dp1480.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  29. Brexit: The Economics of International Disintegration. (2017). Sampson, Thomas.
    In: Journal of Economic Perspectives.
    RePEc:aea:jecper:v:31:y:2017:i:4:p:163-84.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  30. Does Migration Cause Extreme Voting?. (2016). Fetzer, Thiemo ; Becker, Sascha.
    In: CAGE Online Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:cge:wacage:306.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Coauthors

Authors registered in RePEc who have wrote about the same topic

Report date: 2025-10-04 10:28:11 || Missing content? Let us know

CitEc is a RePEc service, providing citation data for Economics since 2001. Last updated August, 3 2024. Contact: Jose Manuel Barrueco.