The new government wellbeing statistics suggest that London is the most miserable place in the country. Worse, from a personal perspective, in 4 years time I'll sit in the late 40s age group which will make me part of the unhappiest group in the the UK (men 45-49 living in London). Time to move, perhaps
There is an overall continuing disparity of economic performance between London’s growth and slower ...
In contrast to London’s image as a global city and its position as the most affluent region in Europ...
The proposition that living in the largest urban agglomerations of an advanced economy reduces the a...
When the latest 'happiness maps' show that the happiest people live in the least populated places (O...
The BBC are focusing on geographical segregation. Lots of pretty maps show how areas of the UK diffe...
In an article in the Evening Standard, Ben Rogers (who directs the new Centre for London) argues tha...
There are persistent differences in self-reported subjective well-being across US metropolitan areas...
Policymakers are generally most concerned about improving the lives of the worst-off members of soci...
[Posted by Prof Henry G. Overman] Great to see Centre for Cities latest 'Cities Outlook' report publ...
A busy day today - politics in the morning (talking at HMT about planning reforms) and research all ...
An interesting Centre for Cities report published yesterday suggests that jobs for the unskilled are...
Recent progress in economics has moved subjective well-being towards the centre of the discourse on ...
Centre for Cities published their latest City Outlook yesterday. As usual, it make for an interestin...
Research looking at brain activity suggests that brains of city dwellers react differently to those ...
A report from the Business of Cities discusses city indexes. They identify 107 separate rankings
There is an overall continuing disparity of economic performance between London’s growth and slower ...
In contrast to London’s image as a global city and its position as the most affluent region in Europ...
The proposition that living in the largest urban agglomerations of an advanced economy reduces the a...
When the latest 'happiness maps' show that the happiest people live in the least populated places (O...
The BBC are focusing on geographical segregation. Lots of pretty maps show how areas of the UK diffe...
In an article in the Evening Standard, Ben Rogers (who directs the new Centre for London) argues tha...
There are persistent differences in self-reported subjective well-being across US metropolitan areas...
Policymakers are generally most concerned about improving the lives of the worst-off members of soci...
[Posted by Prof Henry G. Overman] Great to see Centre for Cities latest 'Cities Outlook' report publ...
A busy day today - politics in the morning (talking at HMT about planning reforms) and research all ...
An interesting Centre for Cities report published yesterday suggests that jobs for the unskilled are...
Recent progress in economics has moved subjective well-being towards the centre of the discourse on ...
Centre for Cities published their latest City Outlook yesterday. As usual, it make for an interestin...
Research looking at brain activity suggests that brains of city dwellers react differently to those ...
A report from the Business of Cities discusses city indexes. They identify 107 separate rankings
There is an overall continuing disparity of economic performance between London’s growth and slower ...
In contrast to London’s image as a global city and its position as the most affluent region in Europ...
The proposition that living in the largest urban agglomerations of an advanced economy reduces the a...