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2020
- Anthony Perl named in Hill Times' List of 100 Best Books in 2020
- Highlights from Pandemonium: The Post-COVID-19 Urban Economy
- Stephanie Allen awarded distinguished masters thesis award
- Highlights from Pandemonium: Being Kind: How Much Sociability Matters
- Highlights from Pandemonium: Pandemics and Long-Range Planning
- Transit study shows how subsidies increase sustainable commuting to downtown Vancouver
- Welcome to Mohsen Javdani, associate professor
- Yushu Zhu and Meg Holden on Community Housing Canada
- Urban Studies Program mourns loss of former advisor Beverly Grieve
- URB students Sadaf Seifi and Rahil Adeli, along with director Meg Holden publish article on a housing and neighbourliness in the International Journal of Community Well-Being
- Urban Studies Program laments loss of adjunct professor Qiyan Wu
- 51社区黑料professor receives fellowship to study pressing urban policy issues
- Welcome to Nicolas Raimbault, visiting researcher
- Dedicated leader awarded 51社区黑料Urban Studies Alumni Award for Community Engagement
- Welcome to Magali Talandier, visiting scholar
- 2019
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- Rethinking the Region
Welcome to Magali Talandier, visiting scholar
The 51社区黑料Urban Studies Program is pleased to welcome Magali Talandier as a visiting scholar for 2020.
She is professor of Urban and Regional Studies at the Institute of Geography and Urban Planning, University of Grenoble-Alps, in France. She is also director of the "Cities and Territories" research team at the research center. Her team includes 70 members: 25 permanent members (lecturers and professors in planning, urban and regional studies), 35 doctoral students and 10 associate researchers.
An economist by training, Magali Talandier completed her doctorate in urban planning at the Urban School of Paris, and her "habilitation" to become a professor at the University of Grenoble.
She has developed a new conceptual framework that she calls 鈥淓conomic Base Theory Revisited鈥 and a new methodology to measure income flows in urban and rural areas and thus to determine the drivers of economic development at different scales. Her work shows that one of the most important economic development drivers in French territories is based on the 鈥渞esidential economy鈥 鈥 the internal rather than the export economy 鈥 although this has been largely underestimated in both the academic literature and in local strategies.
She will be working on the application of this approach to Vancouver, as well as her other study of regional ecological transitions, during her stay with us. Please feel free to contact Magali at Magali_talandier@sfu.ca or by dropping by her office, HC 7397.
For more informations and references on Magali鈥檚 research, please see: