Professor of Urban Economics and Social Statistics and Director of the Sheffield Methods Institute, University of Sheffield
Gwilym Pryce is Director of the Sheffield Methods Institute, an interdisciplinary research and teaching centre at the University of Sheffield. He is Co-Director of £4m ESRC AQMEN II Research Centre and leads the Urban Segregation and Inequality AQMEN research strand, investigating the measurement, causes and consequences of segregation and inequality. He is also Professor of Urban Economics and Inequality in the Department of Town and Regional Planning at the University of Sheffield, one of the leading departments of its kind in the UK. He is an Executive Committee Member of the Royal Statistics Society Social Statistics Division, a member of the UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Economic Advisory Panel, and a member of the Built Environment Statistical Advisory Committee. He was formerly Director of Quantitative Methods, University of Glasgow, Director of the £1.6m Glasgow Q-Step Centre, and Associate Director of the £10m Urban Big Data Centre (UBDC). He continues to lead the Integrated Multi-sectoral Model of Employment and Migration UBDC research strand.
He has published over 70 articles, book chapters, books and reports, and is an editorial board member of 5 international academic journals. He has been the recipient of a number of academic prizes and awards including the Literati Network Awards for Excellence Outstanding Paper Award (2012), the European Real Estate Society Award for Best Paper in Real Estate Economics (2011), and the Hypoteční Banka Award for Best European Network of Housing Research Paper (2009). He was formerly a member of the UK Government’s Expert Panel on Housing and Planning, and has previously been an Academic Advisor on a number of UK government initiatives, including the HM Treasury Barker Review of Housing Supply, the National Statisticians Review of Housing Market Statistics, the Financial Services Authority Mortgage Market Review. From 2008 to 2011 Gwilym was Principal Investigator on the EWESEM (Extreme Weather Event Socio-Economic Model) project – one of the 5 main work-streams of the £1.6m EPSRC CREW (Community Resilience to Extreme Weather) consortium.
Why do wind farms drag down house prices in some places but not others?
Oct 19, 2016 17:42 pm UTC| Insights & Views Real Estate
Two years ago, the London School of Economics delivered bad news to the renewables industry. It published a research paper that showed that house price appreciation was significantly reduced by being near wind farms in...
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