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Welcome to Edinburgh Napier Research Repository

The ‘Research Repository’ is the open access institutional repository of Edinburgh Napier University. It contains examples of research outputs produced by staff and research students, as well as related information about the university's funded projects and staff research interests.

Whenever possible, refereed documents accepted for publication, or finished artistic compositions presented in public, will be made available here in full digital format, and hyperlinks to standard published versions will be provided. Any questions about submissions to the repository or problems with access to any of its content should be sent to the Repository Team at repository@napier.ac.uk



Latest Additions

Mary Louisa Gordon 1861-1941 (2024)
Digital Artefact
Schwan, A. (2024). Mary Louisa Gordon 1861-1941. [Online biography]

A tribute to Mary Louisa Gordon by Anne Schwan.

Shock Resistors or Transmitters? Contagion across Industries and Countries during the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Global Financial Crisis (2024)
Journal Article
Harb, H., & Umutlu, M. (online). Shock Resistors or Transmitters? Contagion across Industries and Countries during the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Global Financial Crisis. Economics Letters, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.2024.112026

We examine how global shocks from various sources propagate across industries and countries. Financial contagion is measured using residual-based and volatility-adjusted correlation. Specific industries and countries were resilient during both global... Read More about Shock Resistors or Transmitters? Contagion across Industries and Countries during the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Global Financial Crisis.

Towards sustainable agricultural development and food security in East Asia: The role of broad money and banking credits (2024)
Journal Article
Chandio, A. A., Ozdemir, D., Vigne, S. A., & Du, A. M. (online). Towards sustainable agricultural development and food security in East Asia: The role of broad money and banking credits. International Review of Economics and Finance, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iref.2024.103677

The existing literature has extensively explored the role of financial development in boosting agricultural output. However, there is a lack of empirical research on the effects of broad money and banking credits on food production in East Asian coun... Read More about Towards sustainable agricultural development and food security in East Asia: The role of broad money and banking credits.

Influence of green ICT and socioeconomic factors on sustainable development: Evidence from Chinese provinces (2024)
Journal Article
Chishti, M. Z., Salam, M., Xaisongkham, S., & Du, A. M. (2025). Influence of green ICT and socioeconomic factors on sustainable development: Evidence from Chinese provinces. Research in International Business and Finance, 73(Part A), Article 102624. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ribaf.2024.102624

We examine the impact of green information communication technology, while considering the conditioning role of other seminal factors. Using panel quantile-quantile granger causality testing and method of moments quantile regression for Chinese provi... Read More about Influence of green ICT and socioeconomic factors on sustainable development: Evidence from Chinese provinces.

Characterising the application of the “progressive overload” principle of exercise training within cardiac rehabilitation: A United Kingdom-based community programme (2020)
Journal Article
Khushhal, A., Nichols, S., Carroll, S., Abt, G., & Lee, I. (2020). Characterising the application of the “progressive overload” principle of exercise training within cardiac rehabilitation: A United Kingdom-based community programme. PLOS ONE, 15(8), Article e0237197. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237197

Background

Recent concerns have cast doubt over the effectiveness of cardiac rehabilitation [CR] programmes for improving cardiorespiratory fitness [CRF] in patients with a history of cardiac disease in the United Kingdom [UK]. We aimed to charact... Read More about Characterising the application of the “progressive overload” principle of exercise training within cardiac rehabilitation: A United Kingdom-based community programme.