Edward Dooley
Management and Business Studies
University of Exeter
Business school
September 2024
Valuing the Future: How Blockchain Technology Can Aid in Valuation of FinTechs
Using the context of the FinTech sector, my research aims to investigate how blockchain technology contributes to value creation, considering the regulatory framework that shapes this process. It also aspires to extend beyond FinTech to enhance our understanding of how digitalisation impacts value creation through evolving business models and the implications of relevant regulations, including accounting standards.
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Michelle Tjahjono

Management and Business Studies
University of Bristol
Business School
September 2024
Unravelling Social Commerce’s Design Elements and Its Role in the Cycle of Fashion Overconsumption
My research explores how social commerce (an integration of social media and e-commerce) contributes to the overconsumption of fast fashion, despite growing awareness of its environmental impact. Platforms like Instagram and TikTok integrate entertainment with shopping, driving impulsive, trend-focused purchases among young consumers. This sociocultural phenomena highlights a disconnect between environmental concerns and actual behaviors, rooted in societal pressures and normalised fast fashion consumption. By investigating social commerce’s design elements, I aim to understand how social commerce perpetuates fast fashion and identify what these ingrained consumption norms are that inhibit more sustainable shopping practices.
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Billy Greville

Management and Business Studies
University of Bristol
Business School
September 2022
Investing or Gambling? Understanding online retail investor culture in the UK.
My research will explore recent changes to consumer behaviour, technology and online culture related to retail investing, to reopen fundamental questions about the nature and meaning of investing in light of increased participation in the financial markets since the pandemic. Specifically, I will examine if this has become more speculative and high-risk, and thus, showing evidence of an evolving relationship with gambling culture.
As a Consumer Culture Theory scholar, I will investigate the area holistically, meaning a view from both production (Industry/state) and consumption (consumers) will be pursued, principally using qualitative digital methods (i.e Netnography; WalkThrough Method; interviews).
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Di Liu

Management and Business Studies
University of Bristol
Business School
September 2022
Estimating the Effectiveness of Internal Carbon Pricing: Evidence from Companies and Higher Education Organizations
My research intends to explore the impact of different types of internal carbon pricing methods on different types of organizations, such as companies in different industries and higher education organizations. The research will support the decision-making process for the selection of internal carbon pricing methods and provide target references for different types of organizations to maximize the benefits of internal carbon pricing.
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Marta Staff

Management and Business Studies
University of Exeter
Business School
October 2020
An Investigation into Operations Research (OR) Methods for the Demand and Supply-side Modelling of Donor Human Milk Banks
I will be looking into Operations Research in the healthcare setting, using the field of human milk banking as a case study, which is an area of particular interest to me. This will include examining the full-cycle of human milk donation, milk banking, and hospital use in the UK.
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OR Society Student Member
SWDTP Student Rep
Violet Broadhead

Management and Business Studies
University of Bristol
School of Economics, Finance and Management
October 2019
The role of UK charity shops within sustainable retailing and consumption
My research interests include sustainable consumption and second-hand economies, with a specific focus on the charity retail sector. With the growth of public awareness of sustainability issues, charity shops are increasingly identified with sustainable consumption, while changing legislation puts pressure on the sector to engage with the issue directly. My doctoral research explores how sustainability is interpreted and put into practice by stakeholders in the UK charity retail sector, how understandings of sustainability interact with the other values, goals and priorities of charity retailers (for example, fundraising imperatives), and the consequences of this interaction for material flows. I favour qualitative methods, particularly ethnographic ones, and am interested in approaches which allow close attention to the material and its interplay in social relations.
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Clodagh Murphy

Management and Business Studies
University of Exeter
Business School
October 2019
Corporate Governance and Gender Diversity
Looking to better understand, through research, the role that stakeholders play in creating and sustaining gender diversity in the boardroom. In addition, seeking to contribute to the research on the impact gender diversity has on a firms’ financial and non-financial performance metrics.
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Joseph Harrison

Management and Business Studies
University of Bath
School of Management
October 2019
An assessment of the impact of front end project initiation activities on the long-term deliverability of major projects.
Since the evolution of project management as a research discipline, the field has suffered from chronic lack of understanding surrounding the complexity and challenges facing the initiating phase (i.e. project front-end) of major projects. This research addresses that gap through an investigation into the activities completed at the front-end of large-scale projects in order to help better understand, and provide reasoning behind, why this under-researched stage in the project life-cycle can have such a significant impact upon a projects end result.
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Katherine Wall

Management and Business Studies
University of Bristol
School of Economics, Finance and Management
September 2018
Organising for change: Understanding the relationship between prefigurative practice and strategic focus in social movement organisations’ theorisation of social change.
My name is Katherine Wall. I am a PhD student at the University of Bristol exploring the relationship between land and racial justice in England. I am interested in uncovering the interconnected histories of land and racial injustice; desires and imaginings of a more just future; and questions of what can be done in the present that takes into account these histories and builds towards reparative futures.
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Social movement facilitator with Resist+Renew and Organising for Change.
Michael Rogerson

Management and Business Studies, Student Rep
University of Bath
School of Management
September 2018
Modern slavery, the Modern Slavery Act, organizations, and supply chains
My research centres on how institutions affect firm behaviours around modern slavery in the UK and Russia, with a particular focus on the UK Modern Slavery Act 2015. Why have so many companies not yet reported as legally required by the law? Why is modern slavery so prevalent in modern business?
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