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Robert Bennett is Professor of Geography in the University of Cambridge and Fellow of St Catharine’s College. He previously held posts at UCL, LSE and Berkeley. His research is concerned with public policy, economic development (particularly human resources skills and small firms), and local economic capacity-building. Recent books include Enterprise and Human Resource Development: Local Capacity Building, with Andrew McCoshan (1993), Local and Regional Economic Development: Renegotiating Power under Labour, with Diane Payne (2000). He has acted as adviser to many organisations in the public and private sectors, including House of Commons committees. He was a Leverhulme Research Professor 1995–2000. He is chair of the British Academy’s Research Committee and chaired the Academy’s Review of Graduate Studies (2001). He is a recipient of the Royal Geographical Society Murchison Award (1982) and Founder’s Medal (1998), and is a corresponding member of the Austria Academy of Sciences.
Andrew Cliff is Professor of Theoretical Geography in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Christ’s College. With Peter Haggett, he has worked on the geographical diffusion of epidemic diseases for some 20 years, and they have cooperated on a number of research projects supported by the Leverhulme Trust, the Wellcome Trust, the World Health Organization, and the US Centers for Disease Control. Their books at the interface of geography and epidemiology include Spatial Diffusion (1981), Measles in the Pacific (1985), Spatial Aspects of Influenza Epidemics (1987), Atlas of Disease Distributions (1988), International Atlas of AIDS (1992), Measles: An Historical Geography (1993), Deciphering Epidemics (1998) and Island Epidemics (2000).
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