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Rui He

Lecturer in Education, Manchester Institute of Education, University of Manchester
Working as a cross-cultural psychologist at Manchester Institute of Education (University of Manchester), my research interests focus broadly on international and intercultural education and cross-cultural and developmental psychology, particularly on international students’ acculturation experiences, bio-ecological development, and (im)mobility; mental health and psychological wellbeing; mundane studies; social connections and interactions; Study Abroad (Exchange) Programmes (Residence/Year Abroad Programme); language, culture, and identity; and creative research methods.

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Rui Yuan

Industry PhD Candidate, School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, University of Adelaide
Rui is an industry PhD candidate at the University of Adelaide. He has a bachelor's degree in telecommunication engineering from the Harbin Institute of Technology and a master's degree in electrical engineering from the University of Melbourn. He works as a research engineer at WattsAS, Denmark.His research interests include modelling power consumers' behaviours, data mining, and smart grid flexibility.

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Ruifeng Wang

PhD Student in Supply Chain Management, University of Maryland
Ruifeng (Brett) Wang began the PhD program in Fall 2020. Prior to joining the PhD program, Brett received a Master of Science degree in Global Logistics from Arizona State University. He also holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Management Information System from Shanghai University of Finance and Economics. Previously, Brett worked as an operations specialist with Meritek Electronics Corporation. His primary research interests are digital transformation, technology innovation, and retail operation. Brett has a publication on International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management.

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Rungpaka Amy Hackley

Senior Lecturer in Marketing , Birkbeck, University of London
Dr Rungpaka Amy Hackley is Senior Lecturer in Marketing at Birkbeck, University of London. Dr Hackley is a known international authority on Asian perspectives in interpretive consumer research. Her work has generated unique insights into Asian cultures, values and contradictions from a consumer perspective, and also into digital sociology, promotional strategy, media regulation, creative production and marketing ethics in international markets. She is interested in accessing and theorising consumer experience with particular regard to how consumption (of brands, experiences, media) inflects consumers’ senses of identity and meaning.

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Ruomin Zhu

PhD student, University of Sydney
PhD in physics at USYD

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Rupert Harwood

PhD Candidate, Swansea University
I became ill with a number of systemic autoimmune diseases in 2016 which took until 2021 to get diagnosed and left me with a wish to contribute to efforts to speed-up the diagnostic process and reduce its adverse impact on patients.

I began working as a patient researcher on the Cambridge University lupus and related connective tissue disease studies in 2019 and in 2022 began a part-time PhD in Swansea University Medical School. My study is exploring the role of patient-clinician interactions, and their organisational context, in the sustained misdiagnoses of neuorologically mediated systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases.

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Russell Blackford

Conjoint Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Newcastle
I am a philosopher, legal scholar, literary critic, author, and editor, based at the University of Newcastle, Australia.

Recent books include:

* 50 Voices of Disbelief: Why We Are Atheists (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009; co-edited with Udo Schuklenk).

* Freedom of Religion and the Secular State (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012).

* 50 Great Myths About Atheism (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013; co-authored with Udo Schuklenk).

* Humanity Enhanced: Genetic Choice and the Challenge for Liberal Democracies (MIT Press, 2014).

* Intelligence Unbound: The Future of Uploaded and Machine Minds (Wiley-Blackwell, 2014; co-edited with Damien Broderick).

* The Mystery of Moral Authority (Palgrave, 2016).

* Philosophy's Future: The Problem of Philosophical Progress (Wiley-Blackwell, 2017; co-edited with Damien Broderick).

* Science Fiction and the Moral Imagination: Visions, Minds, Ethics (Springer, 2017).

* The Tyranny of Opinion: Conformity and the Future of Liberalism (Bloomsbury, 2019).

* At the Dawn of a Great Transition: The Question of Radical Enhancement (Schwabe, 2021).

* How We Became Post-Liberal: The Rise and Fall of Toleration (Bloomsbury, 2024).

I'm a prolific essayist and commentator with interests including legal and political philosophy, philosophical bioethics, philosophy of religion, and debates involving visions of the human future.

I have also had some success as a science fiction and fantasy author, including my fantasy story "The Sword of God" (which won both a Ditmar Award and Aurealis Award in 1997) and an original trilogy written for the Terminator franchise. I've won the William Atheling, Jr., Award for Criticism and Review (in the fantasy and science fiction field) on three occasions, including for my co-authored book Strange Constellations: A History of Australian Science Fiction (Greenwood Press, 1999; co-authored with Van Ikin and Sean McMullen).

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Russell Blackford

I am a philosopher, literary critic, editor, and author, based at the University of Newcastle, Australia.

My recent books include: 50 Voices of Disbelief: Why We Are Atheists (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009; co-edited with Udo Schuklenk), Freedom of Religion and the Secular State (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), 50 Great Myths About Atheism (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013; co-authored with Udo Schuklenk), Humanity Enhanced: Genetic Choice and the Challenge for Liberal Democracies (MIT Press, 2014), Intelligence Unbound: The Future of Uploaded and Machine Minds (Wiley-Blackwell, 2014; co-edited with Damien Broderick), and The Mystery of Moral Authority (Palgrave Pivot, 2016)..

I'm a prolific essayist and commentator with interests including legal and political philosophy, philosophical bioethics, philosophy of religion, and debates involving visions of the human future.

I am a Fellow with the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, a Laureate of the International Academy of Humanism, and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Evolution and Technology.

I have also had some success as a science fiction and fantasy author, including my fantasy story "The Sword of God" (which won both a Ditmar Award and Aurealis Award in 1997) and an original trilogy written for the Terminator franchise. I've won the William Atheling, Jr., Award for Criticism and Review (in the fantasy and science fiction field) on three occasions, including for my co-authored book Strange Constellations: A History of Australian Science Fiction (Greenwood Press, 1999; co-authored with Van Ikin and Sean McMullen).

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Russell Dean Covey

Russell Covey, professor of law, focuses his research on criminal law and procedure. He is the author of numerous articles on topics including the death penalty, police interrogation, crime and popular culture, jury selection, and plea bargaining. As a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Covey has filed amicus briefs and represented pro bono clients in criminal appeals in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court.

Prior to joining the College of Law, he clerked for Judge Allyne R. Ross of the U.S. District Court, E.D.N.Y., practiced law specializing in criminal and civil litigation at Williams & Connolly in Washington, D.C., and taught law at Whittier Law School in Southern California. Covey teaches courses in domestic and international criminal law and criminal procedure. He received his J.D. at Yale Law School, M.A. at Princeton University and A.B at Amherst College.

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Russell Fewster

Lecturer in Performing Arts, University of South Australia
Russell Fewster has directed, written and taught theatre for near 40 years with his work best known in the independent, youth arts and tertiary sectors. He is interested in the healing nature of theatre that addresses societal and health issues. He trained at Ecole Jacques Lecoq and emphasis on physical performance is notable in his work. His stage aesthetic combines projected imagery with live action. He is currently writing, directing and producing an original work based on Christopher Orchard’s paintings for the 2024 Adelaide Fringe, entitled Two of Them.

In 2023 he edited the translation of exiled Iranian Playwright Mammad Aidani ‘s work 'What I said to the Bird' for the 2023 season at La Mamma theatre in Melbourne. His own latest work, 'The Minister for UnAuthorised Arrival's, received a professional playreading in Sydney in early 2023.

Since 2019 and together with colleague Brad West, Russell runs Self@arts a performing arts program delivered to Australian Defence Force personnel undergoing rehabilitation for physical and psychological injuries, in both Darwin and Adelaide. This a short workshop-based program that exposes participants to a variety of theatre based creative expressions and facilitates participants to produce and perform their own original creative work. The aim of program is to broaden and strengthen participants’ self-expression and communication skills, and in doing so enhance mental and emotional well-being. See https://www.unisa.edu.au/unisanews/2019/july/story11/

Other theatre highlights include his adaptation of 'The Glass Rabbit' by Toshiko Takagi – a true story of a survivor of the wartime bombing of Tokyo premiered at the Come Out Festival and toured to Japan (1999). 'Perish The Thought' by Susan Harris Holden Street Theatre a moving stage portrayal of the effects of dementia on family life. (2012). In 2014 he wrote a promenade adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula: 'Nosferatu' which premiered in the Adelaide Cabaret Fringe. In 2015 he directed the opera 'Six Swans' in collaboration with Tutti Arts. In 2018 he wrote and directed 'Earshot' a ballad opera that dramatised the healing nature of WW1 battlefield pilgrimage.

He blends practice with research and has widely published in this area. He lectures in Performing Arts at the University of South Australia.

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Russell Q-Y Yong

PhD candidate, Marine Parasitology, The University of Queensland
Dr Russell' Yong is a taxonomist who specialises in parasitic flatworms (trematodes) of fishes, having discovered and described several new species. Russell' is a graduate of The University of Queensland, Australia and currently pursuing a post-doc in North-West University, South Africa under a Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship. He also has a decade's experience identifying freshwater and marine invertebrates while working for an environmental consultancy. Outside of work, he is an avid pursuer of natural history and compulsive iNaturalist user.

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Russell Warhurst

Associate Professor in Management, Northumbria University, Newcastle
Russell is an Associate Professor in Management at Northumbria University and Adjunct professor with Aalto University in Finland

Russell is a Chartered Member of the UK Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development and holds a Doctoral degree in Leadership and Professional Development

In addition to University research and teaching, Russell leads on business consultancy projects across a range of organisations from SMEs to MNCs and in the public and not-for-profit sectors

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Russell M. Gold

Associate Professor of Law, University of Alabama
Russell Gold is an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Alabama where he teaches courses in criminal law and criminal procedure. He previously taught at NYU Law School and Wake Forest University School of Law. Before he began teaching, Gold practiced law at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher.

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Ruth Ben-Ghiat

Professor of History and Italian, New York University

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Ruth Dalton

Professor Dalton is an alumna of University College London. As a licensed architect, she has worked for Foster and Partners (London) and Sheppard Robson Corgan Architects (London) and key projects upon which she has worked include the Carré d’Art de Nîmes, in France, the Palaçio de Congresos in Valencia, Spain, and the Kings Cross International Terminal (unbuilt). She has taught at the Architectural Association, London, the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA and the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.

Professor Dalton’s research interests are centred around the relationship between the spatial layout of buildings and environments and their effect on how people understand and interact in those spaces. Professor Dalton is an expert in space syntax analysis and is passionately interested in the use of virtual environments as a method for researching human factors in the built environment.

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Ruth Duffy

Research Fellow, School of Arts, English and Languages, Queen's University Belfast
Ruth is a historian of medical and oral history. Her expertise lies in modern British and Irish history; the Troubles, medicine, Irish society and culture. She particularly focuses on using oral history as a method to uncover hidden or sensitive histories.
Ruth's first book on the experiences of the Northern Ireland Health Service during the Troubles will be published soon by Liverpool University Press.
Ruth is currently a Research Fellow at QUB working on a project investigating 'mixed marriage' in Ireland. They are actively looking for interviewees for the project. You can find out more here: https://www.qub.ac.uk/sites/acts-of-union/

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Ruth Dunn

Senior Research Associate in Marine Ecology, Lancaster University
Ruth Dunn is a Senior Research Associate at Lancaster Environment Centre. She researches the ecology and conservation biology of marine systems with a focus on marine predators.

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Ruth Knight

Researcher, Queensland University of Technology
Dr. Ruth Knight, a researcher and lecturer at Queensland University of Technology, specialises in managing nonprofit organisations and social enterprise. Using reflective practice and strategic thinking, her research focuses on leadership, social innovation, and evaluation. She is the co-editor of the internationally recognised Handbook of Research Methods for Organizational Culture and champions well-being at work and inclusive workplace environments.

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Ruth Lightbody

Senior Lecturer in Politics, Glasgow Caledonian University
Ruth Lightbody is a senior lecturer at Glasgow Caledonian University and a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. She joined Glasgow Caledonian University in 2014 after completing an MSc in Political Research from the University of Strathclyde. She was awarded a PhD from the University of the West of Scotland in 2016 which looked at the role of public hearings in institutionalising deliberative democracy to promote environmental policy making.

Ruth's principle research interests are deliberative democracy, public participation and community engagement, and how they can be used to implement policy changes which tackle social inequalities and environmental issues. She has established a reputation as a renowned expert in the area of deliberative democracy and community engagement, providing guidance to the Scottish Government, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, What Works Scotland and other third sector organisations, policy actors and organisers of democratic innovations.

Ruth was awarded a Fellowship at the Scottish Parliament in 2023 exploring the core principles of participative democracy and developing a framework for measuring impact.

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Ruth Luzmore

Research Fellow, University of Southampton
Ruth is currently working on the Ideas-Informed Society, researching how and why people engage with information and evidence to make decisions in their daily lives. In addition she works a consortium EU Horizon funded project, MEGASKILLS, with the objective is to contribute to the development of the European Skills Agenda by bridging the gap between the educational offer and the labour market through the research and design of an innovative and affordable methodology for training and evaluating soft skills through gaming.

Ruth worked for just under twenty years in state schools in England in a variety of posts in Primary and all-through schools including teaching assistant, class teacher before eventually becoming a headteacher. Ruth has a strong interest in educational leadership in particular how school leaders design and enact continuing professional development in their settings and the nature of inter- and intra- professional learning networks in schools. After leaving full-time work in schools, she worked as a freelance researcher as well as supporting the research, writing and editing of books. She works part-time for National Institute of Teaching and Education as a part-time lecturer and mentor for school leaders on their MA in Educational Leadership

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Ruth Mottram

Climate Scientist, National Centre for Climate Research, Danish Meteorological Institute
I am a climate scientist (specialism in glaciology and ice sheet – climate interactions) in Denmark.

I’ve been working at DMI for 14 years where I mostly run high resolution regional climate models in the polar regions and work on ice sheet processes. Much of this work is focused on understanding how quickly the big ice sheets (especially Greenland) will lose their ice and contribute to global sea level rise. Living only around 10 metres above sea level focuses the mind a bit..

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Ruth Sacks

Senior Lecturer in Visual Art, University of Johannesburg
Dr Ruth Sacks is an academic and visual artist whose research interests include southern cities in the Anthropocene, decolonising design and post independence aesthetics in Africa.

Sacks’ first academic monograph, Congo Style: From Belgian Art Nouveau to African Independence, was published by Michigan University Press in 2023. Her most recent artist book, The Remaindering, launched in 2022.

Sacks is a senior lecturer at the University of Johannesburg’s Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture (Visual Art Department) and she is a research associate at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research.

Sacks was one of the co-directors of the large-scale group project Response-ability at the Joubert Park Greenhouse Project (Johannesburg, 2020-1).

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Ruth Starr

Lecturer in History of Japanese art and architecture, Trinity College Dublin
I am primarily an historian of Japanese art (including Japanese crafts) from the earliest times to the 20th century. My current research seeks to untangle the web of connections linking Japanese art and European art, following the common thread of lacquerware. My major interest is how these links were manifest in Ireland during the Japonisme movement of the late 19th Century, particularly the Japanese influence on Eileen Gray, (1878- 1976); also Japonisme in 19th and 20th century Ireland and lacquerware in Japan and Europe.

Most of my teaching is on the Arts of Japan. I devised and instigated a non-western art course for second year History of Art Students. I have taught structured support sessions for extra-mural students complimenting these Art of Japan lectures. I also lecture in Japanese ceramics. I taught in the Board of Education, Matsue, Japan, for a number of years. I have been closely associated with the Chester Beatty Library and Gallery of Oriental Art, the primary Irish resource for Asian art; and I have been guest lecturer at major cultural institutions, including the National Museum of Ireland and National College of Art and Design.

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Ruth Wallace

Director, Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University
Professor Ruth Wallace is the Director of the Northern Institute. Ruth leads the Workforce Development, Migration and Pathways to Learning theme which focuses on collaborative approaches to workforce development and engagement with community, governments and industry that are sustainable and scalable. Ruth is the former ‘Secure Futures’ Program Leader for the Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre, with a focus on building resilience through community engagement and collaborative knowledge and management systems for biosecurity surveillance. In February 2016, Ruth became the first female Australian researcher to be awarded a Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Agriculture and Life Sciences (sponsored by Kansas State University).

Research Interests

Ruth has a strong relationship and working history with Vocational Education and Training – across regional and remote WA, QLD and NT in VET. Her PhD focuses on the needs of learners in regional areas in relation to education and education systems. Her research interests relate to the links between identity, marginalised learners and the development of effective learning and workforce pathways. This work is situated in regional and remote areas of Northern Australia, and undertaken with Aboriginal people in remote and regional areas. Ruth’s research connects to mobile learning pedagogies, literacy and numeracy learning and approaches to workforce development in remote enterprises.

Her areas of expertise include:

Workforce development in regional and marginalised areas
Policy implementation in regional areas
Regional development and growth in remote areas
Mobile end technology based learning
Learning identity
Aboriginal enterprise development in remote areas
Regional development and governance in Northern Australia and neighbouring regions
Marginalised learners and access to knowledge systems
Community engagement

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Ruth Wells

Senior research fellow, Psychiatry and Mental Health, UNSW Sydney
Ruth Wells is a Senior Research Fellow in the Trauma and Mental Health Unit, in Psychiatry and Mental Health at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Their research focuses on improving MHPSS service provision in humanitarian settings globally and bringing to light how conflict and social exclusion can impact on the well-being of displaced communities.

They bring a feminist and decolonizing lens to critically evaluate mental health services towards being more person-centred, equitable and inclusive. They have a strong commitment to participatory research practices and are humbled to have the opportunity to work together with Syrian Turkish, Bangladeshi colleagues, as well as people from refugee backgrounds living in Australia.

Ruth currently leads teh Caring for Carers study, quasi-experimental study across Turkiye, Syria and Bangladesh. The program investigate the impact of a clinical supervision intervention on the wellbeing of mental health practitioners working with Syrian and Rohingya refugee communities in these areas. The project also examines the impact of supervision on the quality of services provided from the perspective of service users in these refugee communities.

https://www.c4csupervisionmhpss.com/

They were awarded a 2023 Springer Nature Inclusive Health Research award in recognition of their innovative inclusive practice in research. In particualr, this award supports their work with the Rohingya Advisory Committee in Bangladesh which aims to provide avenues for Rohingya people to contribute to public debate about their communities health needs.

https://www.nature.com/immersive/inclusivehealthresearch/winners/index.html

https://figshare.com/articles/online_resource/Caring_for_Carers_A_psychosocial_supervision_intervention_for_mental_health_practitioners/23703636?file=42262866

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Ruth Gutiérrez Delgado

Profesora titular de Guion, Epistemología y Poética audiovisual, Universidad de Navarra
Ruth Gutiérrez Delgado es profesora titular de Guion y de Epistemología en la Facultad de Comunicación de la Universidad de Navarra. Ha impartido clases de Storytelling y Poética en el Máster de Investigación en Comunicación, en el Máster Ejecutivo de Reputación Corporativa y en el Máster de Guion audiovisual de dicha universidad. En la actualidad también es Profesora Visitante del Programa de Doctorado en Comunicación de la Universidad de Los Andes (Chile) e Investigadora Colaboradora de la Línea de Investigación Mito, conocimiento y acción de la Universidad Panamericana de México (campus Aguascalientes). Obtuvo su doctorado con una tesis sobre Lo heroico en el cine de John Ford (2004). Su investigación está centrada en la Poética y retórica audiovisuales, el mito y el héroe. Ha realizado estancias de investigación en Reino Unido, Irlanda, Alemania e Italia, así como estancias docentes en Polonia, Colombia y Chile.

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Ruth K. Hansen

Assistant Professor of Nonprofit Management, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Ruth K. Hansen is an assistant professor at University of Wisconsin-Whitewater’s College of Business and Economics, and director of the Institute for Nonprofit Management Studies. She teaches classes in nonprofit organizations, fundraising, organizational behavior, and research methods. Her research focuses on the theory & practice of fundraising, and equity and inclusion in resource mobilization. Dr. Hansen has more than 20 years’ professional experience as a fundraiser, and is a former board member of AFP-Chicago.​

Recent publications include “Applying a stakeholder management approach to ethics in charitable fundraising,” and “Researching fundraising relations: Interpretivist research practices and practitioner researchers in fundraising and nonprofit studies” with Lesley Alborough, both in the Journal of Philanthropy and Marketing. She contributed the chapter, “Theory in Fundraising,” to the new edition of Achieving Excellence in Fundraising. A chapter with with Gregory Witkowski introducing the Cross Sectoral Bias Theory is included in the book Reimagining Nonprofits: Sector Theory for the 21st Century, edited by Eva Witesman and Curtis Child, coming in early 2024. Her work with Lauren Dula, supported in part by a grant from the AFP Foundation for Philanthropy, focuses on charitable giving appeal letters and giving on impulse.

She holds a BA in Music (Rutgers College), an MJ in Business Law (Loyola University Chicago), and a Ph.D. in Philanthropic Studies (Indiana University).

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Ruth Uwaifo Oyelere

Associate Professor of Economics, Agnes Scott College
Ruth Uwaifo Oyelere holds a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley and was a pre-doctoral fellow at Yale University. She is currently an Associate Professor at Agnes Scott College. Professor Oyelere’s research interests include education, conflict, housing, social networks, inequality and poverty. Her past research is published in leading economic journals.

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Ruthann Rudel

Visiting Scholar, Social Science Environmental Health Research Institute, Northeastern University, Northeastern University
Rudel’s research has been conducted in collaboration with co-investigators at Harvard University, Brown University, Tufts University, University of California, Berkeley, University of Florida, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. She has an appointment as a Research Associate in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Brown and is currently serving on the US EPA’s Scientific Advisory Committee on Chemicals for TSCA.

Rudel leads the Silent Spring Institute’s exposure and toxicology research programs focusing on endocrine active chemicals and on mechanisms by which chemicals may influence breast cancer risk. Her work in toxicology includes a review of early life exposure to chemicals that alter mammary gland development and implications for testing protocols and risk assessment, published in Environmental Health Perspectives. She also directed a major review of animal mammary gland carcinogens—published in Cancer in 2007—that compiled existing research on these carcinogens, reviewed key issues in study design and animal models, and synthesized information on exposure opportunities. Building on these findings, her 2014 review in Environmental Health Perspectives identifies methods for detecting metabolites of 100 prevalent mammary carcinogens, for use in biomonitoring and in breast cancer cohort studies. She has published on toxicology and risk assessment for metals, indoor air pollutants, and endocrine disruptors.

Rudel earned her B.A. in chemistry and neuroscience from Oberlin College, and an M.S. in environmental management and policy from Tufts.

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Ryan Atkinson

Postdoctoral Fellow, Defence Policy, Carleton University
Ryan Atkinson is Postdoctoral Fellow at Carleton University where his research focuses on defence policy. He previously worked at NATO and has experience in the private sector as a cybersecurity consultant. Ryan completed a PhD from Western University and an MA from the University of Toronto.

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Ryan Blumenthal

Blumenthal. Ryan, MBChB (Pret), MMed (Med Forens) Pret, FC For Path (SA) Dip For Med (SA) PhD (Wits) Senior specialist forensic pathologist at the University of Pretoria’s Department of Forensic Medicine. His chief field of interest is the pathology of trauma of lightning (keraunopathology). He has been involved in the publication of numerous articles and textbooks on lightning and electrothermal injuries and has helped generate international standard operating procedures and guidelines for lightning strike fatality and electrocution victims. He has published widely in the fields of suicide and other areas involving the pathology of trauma. His chief mission in life is to advance Forensic Pathology Services both nationally and internationally. Interests outside of forensic pathology include sleight-of-hand-magic, mountain-biking, bird-watching, squash, running and novel writing. He also has a personal interest in innovative strategies and techniques in conflict resolution.

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Ryan Borrett

Science Communications Coordinator, Murdoch University
I completed a Bachelor of Molecular Genetics & Biotechnology at Curtin University from 2017-2019, then completed Honours in Environmental Science at Murdoch University in 2020 in partnership with the WA Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions - my thesis investigated the recovery and impacts of soil microorganisms in mine site rehabilitation. In 2021 I worked as a Research Assistant at Murdoch University on a carbon storage in woodland restoration project. I also worked as a Communications Officer at Carbon Neutral, before moving to my current role as Science Communications Coordinator for SoilsWest at Murdoch University. In this role I undertake both research and science extension duties.

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Ryan Burns

Associate Professor of Geography, University of Calgary
I am Associate Professor in University of Calgary’s Department of Geography, a Fellow with the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, and a AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellow at the National Science Foundation's National AI Research Institutes. My research interests are in the social, institutional, and urban transformations of big and open data, smart cities, digital humanitarianism, and related digital spatial phenomena. My research program interrogates the social and institutional struggles around knowledge production emerging in the context of these new spatial-technological developments.

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Ryan Causby

Dean of Programs (Allied Health), University of South Australia
I am a lecturer, researcher and practicing podiatrist with an interest in Clinical Biomechanics, Motor Control and Musculoskeletal disorders. I have worked in both rural and urban settings including: the Northern Far Western Regional Health Service (covering regions from Ceduna to Roxby Downs), the Royal Adelaide Hospital and The Queen Elizabeth Hospital. I completed my PhD thesis investigating the role of dexterity in scalpel skill learning amongst podiatrists.

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Ryan Day

Senior research fellow, University of Tasmania
Ryan Day is one of the Animal Ethics committee Chairs and a Research Fellow in Marine Animal Physiology and Biochemistry at University of Tasmania’s Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies. One of his primary research areas are in measuring the impact of seismic surveys on marine invertebrates. In this field, his research has used quantification of acid-base physiology, haemolymph electrolyte and mineral homeostasis, immune function and oxidative stress to assess the health status of marine invertebrates including lobster, scallops to evaluate the impact of exposure to seismic air gun signals. The outcomes of this research have been incorporated by the federal regulatory body (NOPSEMA) for impact assessments to minimise harm to marine life. In his second primary research area, Ryan investigates approaches for reducing post-harvest loss in marine fisheries, with a current focus on the live export southern rock lobster fishery. This research developed in response to reports of large-scale mortalities within the lobster processing industry. In conducting an assessment of haemolymph physiology, including biochemistry and immune function, his research in collaboration with a veterinary epidemiology team, determined the cause of mortality was sub-optimal holding and handling conditions, rather than a pathogen as was initially feared. In response, Ryan authored an industry best practices guide with recommendations on handling and water quality management. Implementation of these recommendations has been attributed to eliminating mass mortality events and halving mortality rates by industry partners. This work has recently been extended to the fishing vessel component of the industry and projects to apply this research to other marine invertebrate fisheries are in development. In addition to his recent work with invertebrates, Ryan’s PhD research focused on digestive physiology in marine fishes, in which he characterised digestive strategies in fishes that lack a stomach.

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