
I have been a Professor in the Vancouver School of Economics of the University of British Columbia since 1970. Most of my areas of research involve duality theory. I obtained my Ph.D. from the University of California in Berkeley, California, USA.

My research interests are in the application of economic theory to understand economic phenomena. Primary areas of my interest are economic development and the economics of gender. I obtained my Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia.

Robert Evans is a Professor Emeritus of the Vancouver School of Economics and is currently a Professor of Economics and Health Care and Epidemiology in the Faculty of Medicine at UBC.

My research focuses on the economics of intellectual property, competition policy, strategic alliances, licensing, and optimal patent policy. I obtained my Ph.D. from the University of California in Berkeley, CA, USA.

My fields of interest include social capital, applied macroeconomics, international economics, and comparative economic growth. I obtained my Ph.D. from Nuttfield College in Oxford, United Kingdom.

I am a Professor Emeritus, Vancouver School of Economics, and my main research interest is in the economics management of world fishery resources, which has led me to do work for the FAO of the UN, the OECD and the World Bank.

My current research is focused on evolutionary approaches to property rights. I obtained my Ph.D. from the University of California in Berkeley, California, USA.

My teaching and research interests are in labour economics, labour relations and public policy, with focuses on education, skills formation, and immigration. I obtained my Ph.D. from Queens University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

My research areas consist of empirical industrial organization, economics of Exhaustible Resources, and applied econometrics. I obtained my Ph.D. from The George Washington University in Washington, DC, USA.