Professor Darryl S. L. Jarvis
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Contact Details
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Biography
Darryl S. L. Jarvis
BA Hons (First Class) MA Flin. PhD Br.Col.
Darryl S. L. Jarvis is Professor in the College of Public Policy, HBKU. He has held previous positions at the Education University of Hong Kong, National University of Singapore, and the University of Sydney, Australia. His research and teaching interests focus on comparative political economy and comparative public policy with a particular interest in the politics of regulation, marketisation and development in Asia.
He has published widely in the areas of international relations, regulatory politics, and the comparative political economy of development. His recent publications include Convergence and Diversity in the Governance of Higher Education: Comparative Perspectives. Cambridge University Press (with Giliberto Capano); Transformation in Higher Education Governance in Asia: Policy, Politics and Progress. Springer (With Ka Ho Mok); Institutional Entrepreneurship and Policy Change: Theoretical and Empirical Explorations. Palgrave Macmillan (with Caner Bakir); Asia After the Developmental State: Disembedding Autonomy. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press (with Toby Carroll); Markets and Development: Civil Society, Citizens and the Politics of Neoliberalism. Routledge (with Toby Carroll); Financialisation and Development. Routledge (with Toby Carroll); The Politics of Marketizing Asia. Palgrave Macmillan (with Toby Carroll); ASEAN Industries and the Challenge from China. Palgrave Macmillan (with Anthony Welch); Infrastructure Regulation: What Works, Why, and How do we Know? Lessons from Asia and Beyond, World Scientific (with Ed Araral, M. Ramesh & Wu Xun); Handbook of International Business Risk: The Asia Pacific. Cambridge University Press; International Relations and the Challenge of Postmodernism: Defending the Discipline, University of South Carolina Press; International Relations. Still an American Social Science? Toward Diversity in International Thought, State University of New York Press (with R. M. Crawford); and Post-modernism and its Critics: International Relations and the Third Debate, Greenwood / Praeger.
He has also contributed articles to journals such as Public Administration and Development; Development and Change; Journal of Contemporary Asia; Asian Studies Review; Globalisations; Journal of Asian Public Policy; European Journal of Law and Technology; Regulation & Governance; International Relations; Technology in Society; Energy, Politics and Society; Journal of International Relations & Development; Energy; Asian Survey; Policy and Society; Global Society: Journal of Interdisciplinary International Relations; Contemporary Politics; The Australian Journal of International Affairs, as well as authoring various invited papers.
Professor Jarvis serves as the co-editor of Policy & Society: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Policy Research (Oxford University Press), co-editor of the series Studies in the Political Economy of Public Policy (Palgrave), co-editor of the series Policy and Power (Routledge), and is the recipient of various grants from the Australian Research Council (ARC), Ministry of Education in Singapore, the Rockefeller Foundation, New York, the General Research Fund (GRF), University Grants Committee (UGC), Hong Kong, and the Global Public Policy Network (GPPN). He has also served as chief researcher for the Ministry of Finance, Japan, on the Building Institutional Capacity in Asia (BICA) project, and as a consultant for organizations in Asia.
Born in the United Kingdom, Professor Jarvis was educated in Australia and Canada where he received his doctorate in 1995 from the University of British Columbia. He holds Australian, Canadian and British citizenships.
Darryl S. L. Jarvis
BA Hons (First Class) MA Flin. PhD Br.Col.
Darryl S. L. Jarvis is Professor in the College of Public Policy, HBKU. He has held previous positions at the Education University of Hong Kong, National University of Singapore, and the University of Sydney, Australia. His research and teaching interests focus on comparative political economy and comparative public policy with a particular interest in the politics of regulation, marketisation and development in Asia.
He has published widely in the areas of international relations, regulatory politics, and the comparative political economy of development. His recent publications include Convergence and Diversity in the Governance of Higher Education: Comparative Perspectives. Cambridge University Press (with Giliberto Capano); Transformation in Higher Education Governance in Asia: Policy, Politics and Progress. Springer (With Ka Ho Mok); Institutional Entrepreneurship and Policy Change: Theoretical and Empirical Explorations. Palgrave Macmillan (with Caner Bakir); Asia After the Developmental State: Disembedding Autonomy. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press (with Toby Carroll); Markets and Development: Civil Society, Citizens and the Politics of Neoliberalism. Routledge (with Toby Carroll); Financialisation and Development. Routledge (with Toby Carroll); The Politics of Marketizing Asia. Palgrave Macmillan (with Toby Carroll); ASEAN Industries and the Challenge from China. Palgrave Macmillan (with Anthony Welch); Infrastructure Regulation: What Works, Why, and How do we Know? Lessons from Asia and Beyond, World Scientific (with Ed Araral, M. Ramesh & Wu Xun); Handbook of International Business Risk: The Asia Pacific. Cambridge University Press; International Relations and the Challenge of Postmodernism: Defending the Discipline, University of South Carolina Press; International Relations. Still an American Social Science? Toward Diversity in International Thought, State University of New York Press (with R. M. Crawford); and Post-modernism and its Critics: International Relations and the Third Debate, Greenwood / Praeger.
He has also contributed articles to journals such as Public Administration and Development; Development and Change; Journal of Contemporary Asia; Asian Studies Review; Globalisations; Journal of Asian Public Policy; European Journal of Law and Technology; Regulation & Governance; International Relations; Technology in Society; Energy, Politics and Society; Journal of International Relations & Development; Energy; Asian Survey; Policy and Society; Global Society: Journal of Interdisciplinary International Relations; Contemporary Politics; The Australian Journal of International Affairs, as well as authoring various invited papers.
Professor Jarvis serves as the co-editor of Policy & Society: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Policy Research (Oxford University Press), co-editor of the series Studies in the Political Economy of Public Policy (Palgrave), co-editor of the series Policy and Power (Routledge), and is the recipient of various grants from the Australian Research Council (ARC), Ministry of Education in Singapore, the Rockefeller Foundation, New York, the General Research Fund (GRF), University Grants Committee (UGC), Hong Kong, and the Global Public Policy Network (GPPN). He has also served as chief researcher for the Ministry of Finance, Japan, on the Building Institutional Capacity in Asia (BICA) project, and as a consultant for organizations in Asia.
Born in the United Kingdom, Professor Jarvis was educated in Australia and Canada where he received his doctorate in 1995 from the University of British Columbia. He holds Australian, Canadian and British citizenships.