- The one-day event will bring together academics, practitioners and policymakers across the personal finance industry
- Researchers will be able to showcase their new and emerging research related to financial wellbeing in the form of poster sessions
- The free event will take place on Wednesday 13 November at Aston Business School in Birmingham.
Aston University’s Centre for Personal Financial Wellbeing (CPFW) will host its third joint annual conference with the UK's Money and Pension Service (MaPS) in November.
The Personal Financial Wellbeing Research Conference 2024 is a one-day event that will bring together academics, practitioners, policymakers and other stakeholders to discuss the latest findings and implications of research on personal financial wellbeing.
The conference will feature three panel discussions. The first will focus on CPFW’s two-year poverty alleviation work across three districts of Worcestershire in partnership with the local authorities, University of Warwick and University of Bristol. The second will look at various types of frauds that affect personal and financial wellbeing and the innovative strategies being implemented to combat them. The third will focus on the Nest Insight-led 10-month Real Accounts financial diaries project which studied how low-to-medium income UK households have been managing their debt and credit on a daily basis, with CPFW and Glasgow Caledonian University as partners.
During an extended lunch period there will be an opportunity for researchers to showcase their new and emerging research related to financial wellbeing in the form of poster sessions.
The conference will provide an opportunity for networking and collaboration among researchers and practitioners who share a common interest in improving personal financial wellbeing.
The conference is organised by the CPFW in partnership with the Money and Pensions Service (MaPS). MaPS is a public body that provides free and impartial money and pensions guidance and works to improve people's financial wellbeing.
Professor Andy Lymer, director of the CPFW at Aston University, said:
“We will be showing off the results of the first two years of our work with several District Council level partnerships exploring how collective action can best be harnessed to aid local approaches to poverty alleviation on the ground. The audience will get a chance to review the outcomes of this work and feed further into the refining processes as we roll this out to several new project partners going into 2025.”
Dixon Wong, manager of the CPFW at Aston University, added:
“The extended poster sessions will feature as a key element of our conference. Ahead of the conference we have engaged research communications experts from Research Retold to share the latest best practice in using visuals to capture the essence of research results in an accessible and engaging way in an online workshop. We look forward to welcoming the team at our conference and seeing the final posters.”
The free event will take place on Wednesday 13 November at Aston Business School in Birmingham. To see how the conference went last year, click here.
To register, click here.
- Notes to Editors
More about the Conference
If you would like to submit a poster to showcase your research work, please get in touch via cpfw@aston.ac.uk by Friday 11 October and the team will follow up with you.
About the Centre for Personal Financial Wellbeing at Aston University
The Centre for Personal Financial Wellbeing at Aston University is an interdisciplinary, academic, research centre that seeks to get to the heart of the causes and consequences of personal and household financial insecurity.
It focuses on providing accessible and timely insights to support a wide range of leaders and decision makers including those in the financial service industry, third sector organisations, academics as well as the general public.
For more information, click here.
About Aston University
For over a century, Aston University’s enduring purpose has been to make our world a better place through education, research and innovation, by enabling our students to succeed in work and life, and by supporting our communities to thrive economically, socially and culturally.
Aston University’s history has been intertwined with the history of Birmingham, a remarkable city that once was the heartland of the Industrial Revolution and the manufacturing powerhouse of the world.
Born out of the First Industrial Revolution, Aston University has a proud and distinct heritage dating back to our formation as the School of Metallurgy in 1875, the first UK College of Technology in 1951, gaining university status by Royal Charter in 1966, and becoming The Guardian University of the Year in 2020.
Building on our outstanding past, we are now defining our place and role in the Fourth Industrial Revolution (and beyond) within a rapidly changing world.
For media inquiries in relation to this release, contact Sam Cook, Press and Communications Manager, on (+44) 7446 910063 or email: s.cook2@aston.ac.uk
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