John P. Small
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John P. Small
Summary
John P. Small is a human[1]. He worked as an economist[2] and university teacher[3].
Key Facts
- John P. Small worked as an economist[2].
- John P. Small's professions included university teacher[3].
- John P. Small was employed by Commerce Commission[4].
- Among John P. Small's employers was University of Auckland[5].
- John P. Small's education included a stint at University of Canterbury[6].
- John P. Small is recorded as male[7].
- John P. Small's instance of is recorded as human[8].
- John P. Small supervised Steve Poletti as a doctoral student[9].
- John P. Small supervised Rhema Vaithianathan as a doctoral student[10].
- John P. Small supervised Ryan Greenaway-McGrevy as a doctoral student[11].
- John P. Small earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[12].
- John P. Small's family name is recorded as Small[13].
- John P. Small's given name is recorded as John[14].
- John P. Small's academic thesis is recorded as Sampling properties of some econometric tests in the presense of model mis-specification[15].
- John P. Small's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as NZThesisProject[16].
Body
Education
John P. Small's education included a stint at University of Canterbury[6]. He earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[12].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include economist[2] and university teacher[3]. Employers include Commerce Commission[4], a commission[17], in New Zealand[18], founded in 1986[19] and University of Auckland[5], a public university[20], in New Zealand[21], founded in 1883[22], headquartered in Auckland City[23]. Doctoral students include Steve Poletti[9], a university teacher[24]; Rhema Vaithianathan[10], an academic[25], of New Zealand[26], specialised in health economics[27]; and Ryan Greenaway-McGrevy[11], a researcher[28].
FAQs
What did John P. Small do for work?
John P. Small worked as economist[2] and university teacher[3].
Where did John P. Small go to school?
John P. Small was educated at University of Canterbury[6].