Professor Don Webber
FeRSA FHEA BSc(Hons.) PG(Cert.)TLHE MA PhD
Management School
Head of Entrepreneurship, Strategy and International Business Subject Group
Chair in Managerial Economics
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Full contact details
Management School
91Ö±²¥ University Management School
Conduit Road
91Ö±²¥
S10 1FL
- Profile
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Look out for Don's third book:
Bennett, L., Webber, D.J. and Brooks, C. (forthcoming) Developing Entrepreneurial Ecosystems: Place, Processes, People. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham
Don’s research focuses on two main areas:
- Productivity and economic growth as understood under the two-dimensional perspective – i.e. economic growth and productivity figures measure the change in the financial value of output created and not the ratio of physical inputs to physical outputs (see Don's paper with Gissell Huaccha below). Research is needed to explore the extent that productivity and growth – as measured in terms of GVA or GDP – are related to productivity efficiency, productive effectiveness, or technology. The standard view of productivity and growth is that this is of course the case, but the two-dimensional perspective strongly questions how much of this is true. Instead, market power, persuasive advertising, and in particular demand management techniques may be the dominant determining forces driving growth and productivity.
- The academic research ecosystem – i.e. how universities and the people within and outside of them enable, enhance, constrain, or belittle, etc. each other’s academic research activities and the prominence of their findings. This has huge implications for our ability to produce research output for the benefit of society and the measured performance of academic researchers.
Both of these research areas are novel and have the potential to change the way we look at the economy and our ability to create new knowledge.
Don is very interested in supporting our next generation of academic researchers and working with them to achieve their potential, including PhD students. Prospective PhD students researching the above or closely connected topics are encouraged to contact him for further discussion. He is very open to quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods research.
Don has written over 100 academic peer-reviewed articles and led or collaborated on £2.3m of externally funded research. His work has been discussed at the United Nation's International Labor Organization (ILO) in Geneva, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Welsh Government and elsewhere.
- Research interests
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- Productivity
- Health
- Education
- Regions
- Heterodoxy
- Publications
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Books
Journal articles
Chapters
Conference proceedings papers
Preprints
- Research group
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Entrepreneurship, Strategy and International Business
- Grants
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- (2016 - 2018) Welsh Government ‘Understanding productivity variations between England and Wales: A Reassessment’ with Anthony Plumridge and Michael Horswell)
- (2015 - 2016) Welsh Government ‘Understanding productivity variations between England and Wales’ (with Anthony Plumridge and Michael Horswell)
- (2014 - 2016) Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Bristol and Bath by Design (with Hoskins, S., C. McMahon, A. Noonan, G. Parry, G. Morton and A. Taylor) http://eprints.uwe.ac.uk/30375/1/2016%20BBxD_FinalReport_.pdf
- (2012 - 2014) Joseph Rowntree Foundation ‘'How can employment and skills policy or practice reduce poverty?’ (with Page, D., Veliziotis, M. and Johnson, S.) http://www.jrf.org.uk/publications/does-poor-health-affect-employment-transitions
- Teaching interests
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I believe in research-led teaching and incorporate this into my teaching practice through, for example, the use of contemporary case studies and findings from my own research.
- PhD supervision
Prospective PhD students who wish to study productivity (very broadly defined), health, education and/or geographically-related issues are encouraged to contact Don for further discussion. He is very open to qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods research.
Professor Don Webber supervises:
He has previously supervised:
Name Thesis title Year of completion Laura Bennett Understanding the mechanisms of entrepreneurial ecosystems: An examination of place, processes, people, and perspectives. 2023 Are you interested in applying for a PhD?