Date: Monday 7 March
Time: 6:30pm
The local economy will be the subject of an inaugural public lecture delivered by Bournemouth University’s Professor Nigel Jump, Professor in Regional Economic Development.
Professor Nigel Jump will present the third in a series of inaugural lectures taking place at Bournemouth University. The focus of the lecture – ‘Economy in development: It’s the local economy, stupid!’ will explore economics in a local context. The title, derived from Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential election campaign, emphasises the point Professor Jump will be making about intervention, influence and the local economy.
Professor Jump will explain how economists are often split into those who look at ‘macro’ factors – the economy as a whole, including growth, inflation, financial markets and international trade – and those who look at ‘micro’ factors – such as the behaviour of firms, workers and consumers.
He will base his talk on an extensive career spent studying how macro and micro economics interact. In particular, he will consider how the current economic context and the growth chain work together to influence economic development at a regional or local level.
Refreshments will be available at the event which is free to attend.
Inaugural lecture: how supermarket scanner data reveals the secrets of the checkout
Inaugural lecture: how supermarket scanner data reveals the secrets of the checkout – next week
BU’s Fusion Inaugural Lecture Series: free event explores how monkey and ape behaviours are shaped by the environment and human activity
Next inaugural lecture – Nutrition, new view on health, ageing and practice










The significance of Rights and Protocols in Disaster Response
Celebrate World Wellbeing Week This June
Official book launch at Bournemouth University
Take a Break: Join the Creative Wellbeing Event
Psychology, Psychiatry and Neuroscience academics – would you like to get more involved in preparing our next REF submission?
Horizon Europe Cluster 3 (Civil Security for Society) 2026 Calls Now Open
MSCA Doctoral Networks 2026 Call Information Webinar
ESRC Festival of Social Science 2026: Application Deadline Extended to Thursday 25 June 2026
Reminder: Register for the ESRC Festival of Social Science 2026 Information Session
ECR Funding Open Call: Research Culture & Community Grant – Apply now
ERC Advanced Grant 2025 Webinar
Update on UKRO services
European research project exploring use of ‘virtual twins’ to better manage metabolic associated fatty liver disease