Browsing School of Business and Management by Author "Kemeny, T"
Now showing items 1-15 of 15
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Are mixed neighborhoods more socially cohesive? Evidence from Nanjing, China
Wang, Y; Kemeny, T (2023) -
Creative differences? Measuring creative economy employment in the United States and the UK
Kemeny, T; Nathan, M; O'Brien, D (2019-07-05) -
Does assimilation shape the economic value of immigrant diversity?
Kemeny, T; Haus-Reve, S; Dahl-Fitjar, R; Cooke, A -
The economic geography of immigrant diversity: Disparate impacts and new directions
Cooke, A; Kemeny, T (2017-11) -
The economic value of local social networks
Kemeny, T; Feldman, M; Ethridge, F; Zoller, T (2016-10-01)The idea that local social capital yields economic benefits is fundamental to theories of agglomeration, and central to claims about the virtues of cities. However, this relationship has not been evaluated using methods ... -
The Fall and Rise of Interregional Inequality: Explaining Shifts from Convergence to Divergence
Kemeny, T; Storper, M (Il Mulino, 2020-05-01)This paper presents new evidence on long-run patterns of interregional inequality in the United States. The evidence points to a fundamental shift from convergence to divergence, prompting a reconsideration of theory. The ... -
Global reversal, regional revival?
Turok, I; Bailey, D; Clark, J; Du, J; Fratesi, U; Fritsch, M; Harrison, J; Kemeny, T; Kogler, D; Lagendijk, A (2017-01) -
Immobility and the Brexit vote
Lee, N; Morris, K; Kemeny, T (2018-03) -
Immobility and the Brexit vote
Lee, N; Morris, K; Kemeny, T (2018-03) -
Plant exit and U.S. imports from low-wage countries
Rigby, DL; Kemeny, T; Cooke, A (2017)Over the past twenty years, imports to the U.S. from low-wage countries have increased dramatically. In this paper we examine how low-wage country import competition in the U.S. influences the probability of manufacturing ... -
Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
Kemeny, T; Cooke, A (2018-01) -
Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
Kemeny, T; Cooke, A (2018)Theory and evidence suggest that people born in different countries complement each other in the labor market. Immigrant diversity could augment productivity by enabling the combination of different skills, ideas and ... -
Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
Kemeny, T; Cooke, A (2018-01) -
Vulnerable Jobs and the Wage Effects of Import Competition
Cooke, A; Kemeny, T; Rigby, D (2019-07) -
The wider impacts of high-technology employment: Evidence from US cities
Kemeny, T; Osman, T (2018-11)