Staff Profile
Emeritus Professor David Harvey
Professor Emeritus
- Personal Website: http://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/david.harvey
• Email: david.harvey@ncl.ac.uk • Fax: +44 (0) 191 208 6720 • Personal Website: http://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/david.harvey Address: CRE, School of Agriculture,Food and Rural Development Agriculture Building University of Newcastle Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
David Harvey is now retired, as Emeritus Professor of Agricultural Economics. He has a BSc (Agriculture with Agricultural Economics), Newcastle (1969), and an MA (1971) and PhD (1974) in Agricultural Economics from Manchester. Between 1974 and 1979 he was a research economist with the Canadian Department of Agriculture in Ottawa. He returned to Newcastle as a lecturer in 1979, where he was complicit in a major effort to establish the costs and benefits of the CAP, modelling the economic flows between member states and their farmers and citizens with Profs. Alan Buckwell and Ken Thomson. This work culminated in the production of The Costs and Benefits of the Common Agricultural Policy, Croom Helm, 1982. He moved to a Professorship at Reading University in 1985, where he was involved with the ‘Land Use Allocation Model (LUAM) and also with providing economic contextual analysis to the AFRC (as was then).
He returned to Newcastle for a third time in 1987 to take up the Chair of Agricultural Economics, and was involved with, inter alia, the NERC/ESRC Land Use Programme (NELUP), the ESRC’s Countryside Change Programme, the Rural Economy and Land Use Programme, and the Centre for Rural Economy. With Prof. Chris Ritson, he edited two editions of The Common Agricultural Policy and the World Economy (CABI, 1991 and 1997).
He was President of the Agricultural Economics Society in 2004/5, is a Fellow of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, and was Editor of the Journal of Agricultural Economics from 2005 to 2022. He received an award for excellence from the Agricultural Economics Society in 2012, for ‘outstanding contribution to public policy, industry and the profession’. He currently worries a lot about the conceptual frameworks necessary to do genuinely interdisciplinary research and to provide sensible and practical policy advice and assessment, but is now retired from teaching and administrative duties.
Continuing Research Interest: Conceptual synthesising frameworks for Social Science - how does the social world work, and how might we improve its culture?
'Recent' publications:
“What does the history of the Common Agricultural Policy tell us?” Chapter 1, (3-40), Joseph McMahon & Michael Cardwell (Eds.), Research Handbook on EU Agricultural Law, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2015
“Reconsidering the Economics of Animal Welfare: An anatomy of market failure”, with Carmen Hubbard, Food Policy, 38, 2013, 105-114, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2012.11.006.
“The Supply chain’s role in improving animal welfare”, (with Carmen Hubbard), Animals 2013, 3, 745-763; doi:10.3390/ani3030745
“The European Market for Animal-Friendly Products in a Societal Context.” (with Ingenbleek PTM, Ilieski V, Immink VM, de Roest K, Schmid O.) Animals 2013, 3(3), 808-829.
"Analysis of Rural Development Policy Networks in Greece: Is LEADER really different?", (with E.Papadopolu and N. Hasanagas), Land Use Policy, 28, 2011, 663-73 doi:10.1016/j.landusepol.2010.11.005)
“A Conjecture on the Nature of Social Systems”, 21st Century Society, 3 (1), 2008, 87–108, Feb.
“How does Economics Fit the Social World?”, J. Agric. Econ. (Presidential Address), 55, 2, 2004, 313 – 338
“Policy Dependency and Reform”, Agricultural Economics, 31, 2004, 265 – 275
“Agri-environmental relationships and multi-functionality”, The World Economy, 26 (5), 2003, 705 – 725
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Articles
- Harvey DR. Agricultural Economics in the JAE: Some Editorial Reflections. Journal of Agricultural Economics 2024, 75(1), 3-12.
- Ojo O.M, Hubbard C, Wallace M, Moxey A, Patton M, Harvey D, Shrestha S, Feng S, Scott C, Philippidis G, Davis J, Liddon A. Brexit: Potential impacts on the economic welfare of UK farm households. Regional Studies 2021, 55(9), 1583-1595.
- Acevedo MF, Harvey DR, Palis FG. Food security and the environment: Interdisciplinary research to increase productivity while exercising environmental conservation. Global Food Security 2018, 16, 127-132.
- Hubbard C, Davis J, Feng S, Harvey D, Liddon A, Moxey A, Ojo M, Patton M, Philippidis G, Scott C, Shrestha S, Wallace M. Brexit: How will UK Agriculture Fare?. EuroChoices 2018, 17(2), 19-26.
- Harvey D, Hubbard C, Gorton M, Tocco B. How Competitive is the EU’s Agri-Food Sector? An Introduction to a Special Feature on EU Agri-Food Competitiveness. Journal of Agricultural Economics 2017, 68(1), 199-205.
- Harvey DR, Hubbard C. The Supply Chain’s Role in Improving Animal Welfare. Animals 2013, 3(3), 767-785.
- Ingenbleek PTM, Harvey DR, Ilieski V, Immink VM, de Roest K, Schmid O. The European Market for Animal-Friendly Products in a Societal Context. Animals 2013, 3(3), 808-829.
- Harvey DR, Hubbard C. Reconsidering the political economy of farm animal welfare: An anatomy of market failure. Food Policy 2013, 38, 105-114.
- Harvey D, Jambor A. The CAP Bond Revisited: A Serious Option for Reform?. EuroChoices 2011, 10(1), 17-22.
- Papadopoulou E, Hasanagas N, Harvey D. Analysis of rural development policy networks in Greece: Is LEADER really different?. Land Use Policy 2011, 28(4), 663-673.
- Harvey D. A conjecture on the nature of social systems. Twenty-First Century Society 2008, 3(1), 87-108.
- Harvey DR. Presidential Address How Does Economics Fit the Social World?. Journal of Agricultural Economics 2004, 55(2), 313-337.
- Harvey DR. Policy dependency and reform: economic gains versus political pains. Agricultural Economics 2004, 31(2-3), 265-275.
- Harvey DR. Agri-environmental relationships and multi-functionality: Further considerations. World Economy 2003, 26(5), 705-725.
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Book Chapters
- Hubbard C, Clark B, Harvey D. Farm animal welfare: Do free markets fail to provide it?. In: Ahmadi, BV; Moran, D; D’Eath, R, ed. The Economics of Farm Animal Welfare: Theory, Evidence and Policy. CABI Press, 2020.
- Harvey DR. What does the history of the Common Agricultural Policy tell us?. In: McMahon,JA and Cardwell, MN, ed. Research Handbook on EU Agriculture Law. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2015, pp.3-40.
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Reports
- Scott CR. Organic farming in England 2020/21. Newcastle upon Tyne: School of Natural & Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, 2022. Farm Business Survey.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill Farming in England 2020/21. Newcastle upon Tyne: School of Natural & Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, 2022.
- Scott CR. Organic farming in England 2019/20. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle Univesity, 2021.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill Farming in England 2019/20. Newcastle upon Tyne: School of Natural & Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, 2021.
- Scott CR. Organic Farming in England 2018/19. Newcastle University, 2020.
- Scott CR. Organic Farming in England 2017/18. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2019.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill Farming in England 2017/18. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2019.
- Scott CR. Organic Farming in England 2016/17. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2018.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill Farming in England 2016-2017. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2018. Farm Business Survey.
- Scott CR. Organic Farming in England 2015/16. 2017.
- Scott CR. Organic farming in England 2014/15. Newcastle University, 2016.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill Farming in England 2014/15. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2016.
- Scott CR. Organic farming in England 2013/14. 2015.
- Harvey DRH, Scott CR. Hill farming in England 2013/14. 2015.
- Scott CR, Pexton M. Organic farming in England 2012/13. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2014.