 Finance and management also is very special and actually, as I say, different from finance and management in any university I have worked at. The students, the faculty here at SOAS offer a unique experience to draw down on each of our unique and individual experiences. I teach a master's class and there are about 25 students in the class and they come from 20 different countries. So a real kind of breadth of perspective and engaging with some of the difficult development issues of the day. The main benefit that the students get from the research we conducted at SOAS is that they are part and parcel of that research. They participate, they engage, they question the research, they come to seminars. We've got this sort of eastern and southern focus which actually leads us to some interesting places. I feel the most unique opportunity that SOAS offers is the diversity of its faculty and students. They bring in all the different case studies from all around the world and that's the best thing about SOAS. So when I ask them a question they say, well in my country we do it like that and that offers a great learning opportunity for everyone. We do not only teach the standard theories in management and finance but also we focus on the regional aspects. I get to study the language while all the time, all the same time it's kind of embedded into this context of management and finance in a way combines the best of two worlds and that's what makes it really special in my opinion. We give a truly global perspective that comes from our depth of understanding of the economies in Asia and Africa and that's what makes our programs unique. We get to learn different perspectives, how the policies are implemented in developing nations. So in other words actually this research is designed not only for policymakers and practitioners but for students who are actually being mentored to go out into the world of financial management.