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Will McCallum

PhD Candidate - School of Communication and Creative Arts, Deakin University
Will McCallum is Naarm/Melbourne-based documentary producer and director that has spent much of his career producing video from a base in China and then Hong Kong. He produced and directed the series - Pioneers: ASEAN Women of 2018 for the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, which won the 2018 Asia Public Affairs Awards. He studied politics and Chinese at the University of Melbourne, and then earned a Masters degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong. He is now in the final year of a PhD at the School of Communication and Creative Arts at Deakin University. Waŋgany Mala is his first feature-length documentary.

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Will Thomas

Assistant Professor of Business Law, University of Michigan
Will Thomas is an Assistant Professor of Business Law at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, and an expert on corporate and white-collar crime. He earned his both his JD and Phd in philosophy from the University of Michigan, and his BA from Columbia University.

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Will Visconti

Teaching staff, Art History, University of Sydney
Will Visconti's teaching and research span French Studies, Italian Studies, History, Art History, Fashion, Gender & Sexuality, and Cultural Studies. His first book, "Beyond the Moulin Rouge: The Life & Legacy of La Goulue" (2022) was published by the University of Virginia Press. He is currently working on the four-volume "Comedy, Humour, and Laughter: A Documentary History, 1800-1920" with Prof. Matthew Kaiser (UC Merced).

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William Bertsche

Lecturer in Particle Physics, Manchester University
I am a lecturer with the Accelerator Physics group of the University of Manchester School of Physics and Astronomy and the Cockcroft Institute. I currently work on plasma physics and accelerator topics associated with the study of fundamental properties of antimatter in the ALPHA experiment at CERN. I also conduct research on novel low energy sources for accelerators.

One of my research topics involves comparing matter and antimatter through precision measurements with trapped antihydrogen. The ALPHA experiment at CERN routinely synthesizes and traps antihydrogen atoms. With this unique source of pure antimatter systems, we are able to perform precise measurements of its proerties, from its spectral signature in various energies ranges to its behaviour in a gravitational field. This research is aimed at addressing the question of observed baryon asymmetry in the universe today: why is antimatter so much more rare than matter.

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William Brady

Assistant Professor of Management and Organizations, Northwestern University
William Brady is an Assistant Professor of Management and Organizations. His research examines the dynamics of emotion at the social network level and their consequences for group behavior. His recent work studies how human psychology and technology-mediated social contexts interact to shape our emotions and intergroup attitudes. Combining tools of behavioral science and computational social science, his research aims to develop person-centered and design-centered interventions to improve our digital social interactions.

Professor Brady’s research has been published in leading journals such as PNAS, Science Advances, and Perspectives on Psychological Science. His work has also been featured in popular press outlets, including The New York Times, BBC, Wired, and The Wall Street Journal. In recognition of his contributions, he has been selected for the SAGE Emerging Scholar award.

Professor Brady earned his BA in Psychology and Philosophy, with distinction, from UNC-Chapel Hill, his Ph.D. in Social Psychology at New York University, and was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship from the National Science Foundation where he worked at Yale University.

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William Brink

After obtaining an undergraduate degree from Appalachian State University in Boone, NC and then a masters degree from the University of North Carolina Wilmington, Dr. William Brink, CPA, CFP began his career in public accounting working for McGladrey in Wilmington, NC. These years of professional experience would prove to be helpful as Dr. Brink attended the University of South Carolina for his doctoral degree in Accountancy. Today, Dr. Brink lives in Oxford Ohio and is an Assistant Professor of Accountancy at Miami University.

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William Butler

Associate Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, Florida State University
My teaching and research are primarily in the field of collaborative environmental planning and management. I teach courses in environmental planning, food systems planning, collaborative governance, and planning theory. My research explores how to enhance social-ecological resilience of human-natural systems through collaborative governance. In the realm of natural resources, I have focused on how to engage in collaborative planning and management at multiple spatial scales and levels of governance to enhance social-ecological resilience through ecological restoration. Since my arrival in Florida, I have been examining planning responses to climate adaptation in the face of sea level rise. Finally, I seek to identify effective ways to navigate transitions toward more locally oriented food systems and to explore how such systems contribute to community resilience.

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William Campbell

Deputy Head of School, leading Music and Music Technology, Anglia Ruskin University
Dr Campbell holds a first-class BSc (Hons) degree in Audio and Music Technology since 2008 and a PhD in 'The Effect of Dynamic Range Compression on the Quality and Loudness of Commercial Music' since 2019. His research has an international profile, with conference presentations and published journal articles.

Dr Campbell began his career as a touring live sound engineer. He currently manages the Music and Music Technology department at ARU and freelances as a music engineer, producer, and post-production filmmaker. He is also a certified Wwise instructor, teaching sound design and music implementation for games.

Dr Campbell is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, a Member of the Music Producers Guild, and a Member of the Audio Engineering Society.

His research interests include Dynamic Range Compression, Psychoacoustics, Noise-related Fatigue, Technology, and Pro Audio. He has published several articles, including "Listener preferences for alternative dynamic-range-compressed audio configurations" in the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society in 2017.

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William Cheung

Senior Lecturer, Business School, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
Dr William K.S. Cheung is a Senior Lecturer in Property at the University of Auckland Business School. He obtained his PhD from The University of Hong Kong (HKU). His research primarily focuses on property markets, including understanding the roles governments and institutions can play in shaping sustainable housing markets. To complete his research agenda and to understand the role of urban real estate market dynamics in the context of the broader economy, he has adopted a uniquely transdisciplinary approach. The significant funding from various research grants that he garnered since his arrival at the University has assured his initial success in adopting transdisciplinary approaches to understanding the role of urban property market dynamics in the context of sustainability and well-being. The roles that he is taking in the National Science Challenges (BBHTC) and other international contestable funded-research projects empower him to contribute to government policy discourses on housing policies. Prior to his PhD study, Dr Cheung served as an economist at the HKSAR Government and worked as an assistant manager in the Asia Pacific Research Department at CBRE, a globally renowned real estate company. He is a chartered surveyor at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (MRICS) and a full member of the Property Institute of New Zealand (PINZ). Having been a U.S. Fulbright scholar, Australian Endeavour fellow, Ronald Coase Institute alumnus, and having received other international accolades in recognition of his outstanding scholarship, he has been invited to be the journal editor, reviewer for international grant proposals, organise conferences, deliver invited lectures, and serve as journal editorial board member.

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William Clark2

Research Professor of Geography, University of California, Los Angeles
William Clark is Research Professor of Geography at UCLA and an active affiliate of the California Population Center. He was born in New Zealand and earned BA and MA degrees from the University of New Zealand and a PhD in Geography from the University of Illinois. He was a fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences in 1993, and held a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1994-95. In 1994 he was awarded a D.Sc. by the University of Auckland, New Zealand.

He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and in 2003 he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2005 he was elected to the US National Academy of Sciences and in that year he also received the Decade of Behavior Research Award for research that influences public policy. In the past ten years he has lectured and taught in Europe, New Zealand and Canada and in 2011 held an UK Economic and Social Research Council Fellowship at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. He was a Benjamin Meaker Research Fellow, at Bristol University, United Kingdom in 2014. At the Association of American Geographers meetings in 2018 he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award.

His research focuses on mobility, migration and housing choice and housing outcomes. Each of these areas continues his long term interest in demographic change in large urban areas. He has published extensively on models of residential mobility and the sorting processes that bring about residential segregation in the urban mosaic His research is focused on how demographic changes and specifically the spatial outcomes of both internal and international population migration change neighborhoods. The edited volume, with David Clapham and Ken Gibb (The Sage Handbook of Housing, 2012) brings together work on residential change, housing choice, housing markets and policy issues on the future of housing. A forthcoming book reviews recent research in Housing Studies.

His studies of immigration and its impacts both on places and on the immigrants themselves are set out in two books, The California Cauldron: Immigration and the Fortunes of Local Communities and Immigrants and the American Dream: Remaking the Middle Class. The California Cauldron focuses on the impact of immigration on California, and Immigrants and the American Dream examines how immigrants have transformed themselves as their life courses intersect with the American mainstream. Both examine the way in which immigrants change local communities and how they succeed in their life course trajectories.

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William Cornwell

Associate Professor of Cardiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
My clinical interests include caring for individuals across the entire spectrum of disease, from professional athletes with cardiovascular-related issues, to patients with mild ambulatory heart failure, and those with end-stage, advanced heart failure requiring mechanical pumps (left ventricular assist devices, "LVADs") and heart transplants. I treat patients with a variety of types of cardiomyopathies, and patients suffering from heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. I have a strong interest in the athletic heart and provide care for all types of athletes, including professional athletes at all levels, tactical/occupational athletes (police, firefighters, paramedics, military) and recreational athletes. In addition, many individuals living in Colorado participate in a variety of sports in the mountains, and experience symptoms related to hypoxia (low oxygen) at higher altitudes. I work closely with Wilderness and Environmental Medicine, as well as the Altitude Research Center, to care for individuals who suffer from heart and lung-related symptoms related to altitude/environment. Finally, I also provide guidance/counseling to individuals on best practices for heart screening prior to participation in sports, whether it is pre-season assessments, or sedentary individuals with cardiac risk factors, who are interested in beginning an exercise program. I also serve as the director of cardiac rehabilitation at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and facilitate referrals to our rehab center.

My research interests include exercise physiology of patients across the spectrum of health, ranging from elite/professional athletes, to individuals mild ambulatory heart failure, and those suffering from severe, end-stage heart failure who require mechanical pumps (left ventricular assist devices, "LVADs"). In all of these populations, we have protocols to study cardiopulmonary function at rest and during exercise, as well as cerebrovascular physiology and vascular biology, and keep a bloodbank repository to understand how different disease processes impact the body on a cellular and subcellular level. My current research is supported by the NIH/NHLBI and industry.

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William Donaruma

Professor of the Practice in Filmmaking, University of Notre Dame
By day, William (a.k.a. Bill) is currently a professor of the practice in filmmaking at the University of Notre Dame and also serves as creative director for the Office of Digital Learning. Beginning as a grip and a stuntman at Universal Studios, he moved into production management, camera, editing, and now teaching. He continues to make narrative and documentary films primarily using the RED cameras in his arsenal.

During his off time he seeks action, energy, and purpose through military-led endurance events, which keeps him ready for production field work of any kind. Keeping him in line are his wife, four kids, and golden retriever.

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William Emond

Doctorant sur le thème de la réduction du mal des transports en voiture, Université de Technologie de Belfort-Montbéliard
Doctorant sur le thème de la réduction du mal des transports en voiture.
Thèse en cours, élaborée au centre de R&D de Mercedes-Benz (Sindelfingen, Allemagne) et tutorée au laboratoire ELLIADD-ERCOS de l'UTBM (Montbéliard, France).

Ingénieur en mécanique et ergonomie de formation, j'ai orienté mon parcours professionnel dans l'ingénierie automobile au travers de mon cursus "Architecture véhicule et produits de mobilité" ainsi qu'au travers d'expériences professionnelles au sein de constructeurs automobiles.

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William Fajzel

PhD student, Earth and Planetary Science, McGill University
William is a PhD student in Earth and Planetary Sciences at McGill University, Montreal. His research is interdisciplinary, focusing on better understanding and quantifying how the human system works. His background is in Earth system science and economics.

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William Feuerman

Course Director (B Des Arch), Senior Lecturer, School of Architecture, University of Technology Sydney

William Feuerman is the founder and principal of Office Feuerman, a Sydney-based design office, founded in New York in 2007. Before starting Office Feuerman, William worked at several leading international architecture firms including five years at Bernard Tschumi Architects in New York.

Feuerman has coordinated and taught in graduate and undergraduate architecture programs in Australia and the United States, including Columbia University GSAPP, the University of Pennsylvania, and the interior design program at Pratt Institute. Since 2012, he has been the Course Director for the Bachelor of Design in Architecture Program and Senior Lecturer at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS).

Feuerman received a Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design (MSAAD) from Columbia University, GSAPP and a Bachelors of Architecture (BARCH) from the California College of the Arts. He came to Sydney in 2010 via New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

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William Gardner

Researcher in Neonatal and Child Health at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington
I am a global health researcher interested in the political economy of health and health inequality, global maternal and child health, and universal health coverage.

I currently work as a Research Scientist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. I work on the Global Burden of Disease study, modeling the disease burden due to neonatal infectious diseases, impairment due to anemia, disease burden attributable to a variety of nutritional and environmental risk factors, and coverage of essential obstetric care interventions.

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William Garriott

Professor of Law, Politics, and Society, Drake University
William Garriott is Professor and Chair of the Law, Politics, and Society Program at Drake University. He holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Princeton University and an M.T.S. from Harvard Divinity School. His research and teaching focus on the relationship between law, crime, and criminal justice, with specific interest in drugs, addiction, and policing. He is the author of Policing Methamphetamine: Narcopolitics in Rural America as well as the edited collections Addiction Trajectories, Policing and Contemporary Governance, and The Anthropology of Police. His work has appeared in journals such as Anthropological Theory and Law and Social Inquiry, where he also serves on the editorial board. He is former coeditor-in-chief of PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. He currently serves as coeditor of the book series, Police/Worlds: Studies in Security, Crime, and Governance with Cornell University Press. He is currently completing a book on marijuana legalization.

Professor Garriott teaches courses in the core LPS curriculum, including Introduction to Law, Politics, and Society; Critical Concepts in Law, Politics, and Society; and Senior Seminar. His elective courses include Law and Order, Crime and Film, and Drugs, Law, and Society.

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William Geary

PhD Student, Deakin University
William is just wrapping up a PhD at Deakin University and is interested in understanding how to manage ecosystems better. William has experience in ecological modelling, fire ecology, wildlife ecology and conservation science and policy.

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William Gulsby

Associate Professor of Wildlife Management, Auburn University
Degrees:
B.S., University of North Georgia, 2008, Biology
M.S., University of Georgia, 2010, Forest Resources
Ph.D., University of Georgia, 2014, Forest Resources

Expertise: Gulsby is an expert in the areas of wildlife habitat management in forested and agricultural systems, white-tailed deer ecology and management, and coyote ecology.

Teaching Responsibilities: Wildlife Habitat Assessment and Management, Wildlife Sciences Summer Practicum, and Techniques in Wildlife Population and Habitat Management.

Research Interests: Managing wildlife habitat in silvicultural and agricultural systems; White-tailed deer ecology and management; Coyote ecology.

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William Hatungimana

Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Oklahoma State University
Dr. William Hatungimana teaches courses in Comparative Politics, African Politics, American Government, and Politics of Immigration and Migration. His research mainly focuses on Attitudes toward Immigrants. He explores the influence of material and symbolic factors on attitudes towards immigrants in Africa. He also conducts research on Corruption, Political Participation, and Africa-China Relations.

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William Hedgcock

Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Minnesota
William Hedgcock is an Associate Professor in the Marketing Department at the University of Minnesota, Carlson School of Management. His teaching and research focus on consumer behavior and the neuroscience of choice. Professor Hedgcock’s research utilizes a range of techniques from simple paper and pencil preference questionnaires to physiological measures (e.g., facial expressions, heart rate, eye tracking, skin conductance) and functional brain imaging. His primary research stream involves identifying decision biases and the physiological and neural correlates of these biases. He has published in journals such as the Journal of Marketing Research, Neuropsychology, Management Science, Psychological Science, and the Journal of Consumer Psychology.

Prior to Carlson, Professor Hedgcock was an Associate Professor and Director of the Marketing PhD Program at the University of Iowa, Tippie College of Business. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota, Carlson School of Management in 2008.

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William Irwin

Professor of Philosophy, King's College

Editor of the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series. Author of the forthcoming book, Free Market Existentialism: Capitalism without Consumerism.

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William Lawrence

Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, American University
William Lawrence is a professor of political science and international affairs at American University’s School of International Service. He has served as a senior diplomat at the U.S. embassies in Morocco and Libya. He lived and worked for 7 years in Morocco and Libya and has travelled dozens of times to both when not living there. He also served as International Crisis Group’s North Africa director and as Control Risks’ North Africa Director. He was previously a Peace Corps Volunteer in Morocco and is currently working with current and former Peace Corps Volunteers to raise funds for earthquake relief. In Peace Corps, he served two years in a small Atlas Mountain town and one year teaching at a university in Marrakech. He previously taught at Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, George Washington, Tufts, and two Moroccan universities (the one in Marrakech and one in Rabat). He co-authored After the Uprisings: Political Transition in Tunisia, Libya, and Yemen, and has published analysis on Morocco and Libya in Foreign Policy and with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Middle East Institute, Oxford University, and Afropop Worldwide. His research focuses on global challenges, youth protest, informal economy, Islamic law and social change, U.S. policy towards Muslim communities, and political and popular culture. He also co-produced six MENA-related films and fourteen albums of North African music, mostly in Morocco and Libya or featuring Moroccans and Libyans.

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William Lempert

Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Bowdoin College
William Lempert is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. He has conducted over two years of ethnographic fieldwork since 2006 in the Kimberley region of Northwestern Australia with Indigenous media organizations. Through collaboration on production teams, he aims to understand the stakes of Aboriginal self-representation embedded within the dynamic process of filmmaking. His research engages tensions between the production of films that vividly imagine hopeful and diverse Indigenous futures, and the broader defunding of Aboriginal communities and organizations. This ethnographic research informs his current work on how critical engagements with settler-colonial histories and Indigenous futurisms can help to reimagine the current era of outer space colonization.

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William McCorkle

Assistant Professor of Education, College of Charleston
I am an assistant professor of education with a focus on the intersection of immigration, nationalism, and education. I work extensively in Mexican border cities (Reynosa and Matamoros) with asylum seekers and examine how the realities of the borders and migration relate to the social studies classroom and broader social narratives.

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William Ortman

Associate Professor of Law, Wayne State University
William Ortman writes about the legal and institutional design of criminal justice. His current scholarship focuses on plea bargaining, the practice that accounts for the vast majority of criminal convictions in American courts. Before joining Wayne Law, Ortman taught legal research and writing as a Climenko Fellow at Harvard Law School. From 2007 to 2013, he was a criminal defense lawyer and commercial litigator in Des Moines, Iowa. Before that, he clerked for Judge David Tatel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Ortman earned his law degree with highest honors from the University of Chicago Law School, and a bachelor of arts with highest honors from Swarthmore College.

Since joining the Wayne Law faculty in 2016, Ortman has taught criminal law, evidence, criminal procedure, administrative law and a seminar on advanced topics in criminal law and procedure. He has been voted Professor of the Year by Wayne Law’s upper-level students three times, in 2018, 2019, 2020, and by its first-year student once, in 2021.

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William Perry

Postdoctoral Research Associate at the School of Biosciences, Cardiff University
I am a Post-doctoral Research Associate working at Cardiff University with an interest in data analysis, freshwater ecology and anthropogenic pressures. My background is in molecular ecology, and I have previously worked in a variety of study systems, including Atlantic salmon aquaculture, environmental DNA and wastewater monitoring for health.

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William Rees

PhD Candidate in Modern American History, University of Exeter
I am a PhD candidate at The University of Exeter studying modern American history. I am particularly interested in how music has reflected and shaped US culture and politics in the late twentieth-century. This research has ranged between indigenous EDM, psychedelic rock and disco. My interests outside of research include tea and bass guitar. I do a history blog and podcast: https://willdoeshistory.wordpress.com/

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William Roberts

Assistant Professor, Climate Science, Northumbria University, Newcastle
I've always been fascinated by the weather and climate. This ultimately led to an undergraduate degree in Meteorology and a PhD in Atmospheric Sciences. Along this journey I learnt that not only do we know quite a lot about how the climate changed in the past, but also, by using climate models, we can explain the physics behind these changes. This is now the focus of my research. In the past I've looked at how year to year variability in the tropical Pacific evolved over the last 10 thousand years, how collapsing ice sheets can alter the global climate, and how year to year variability in Antarctica can be changed by the size of ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere. Underpining all of these studies is a desire to not just document changes but to explain how and why the changes happen.

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William Robertson

Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Memphis
Broadly, I am interested in the connections between biomedical practice and cultural norms concerning bodies, genders, and sexualities. My research sits at the intersections of critical medical anthropology, queer theory, and science & technology studies.

My work has focused on issues concerning queer and trans people in medical settings. My dissertation project, based on 12 months of ethnographic fieldwork at an anal cancer prevention clinic in Chicago, developed a queer theory of care that challenges heteronormative logics underlying both medical care and anthropological scholarship on care. My earlier Master's Thesis work examined the experiences of queer medical students as they were socialized into medical professionalism and developed a heteronormative medical gaze.

My new work builds on my queer theory of care in a collaborative engaged-applied project in Memphis examining the care and wellbeing needs of LGBTQ+ people in re-entry after incarceration.

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William Rudgard

Senior Postdoc, University of Oxford
Dr William Rudgard is a senior post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Social Policy and Intervention at the University of Oxford. His work focuses on identifying ways to support and empower vulnerable adolescents across countries in Africa to participate fully in this critical period of life. He is particularly interested in the transformative role of health and social protection systems for achieving this. He has research and health policy experience with the World Health Organization, World Food Programme, UNICEF, and Government Ministries in Brazil, Ethiopia, Kenya, Zimbabwe, and South Africa.

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William Scott

PhD Candidate, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources, Stanford University
William Scott is a PhD Candidate at Stanford University working in the fields of environmental economics and policy and energy systems modelling. His research focuses on evaluating climate and energy policy to better understand how alternative approaches to decarbonization manage trade-offs between environmental, economic, and social objectives.

Will's research has been published in the journals Energy Policy, Climate Policy, and featured in Nature Climate Change and Policy Options. He has testified before Canada's Senate Committee on Energy, Natural Resources and the Environment and presented to the federal Environment Ministers of Canada, the United States, and Mexico at the Commission for Environmental Cooperation Ministerial. Will also holds a Masters degree in Economics from Stanford University, a Masters of Environment from Griffith University (Australia), and a BA from Western University (Canada).

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William Tayler

Assistant Professor in Economics, Lancaster University
Dr William Tayler is a lecturer in economics at Lancaster University. His research areas are: Monetary Policy, Macroprudential Policy, Financial System - Real Business Cycle Linkages, Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) models and Credit Market Frictions, Strategic Monetary and Fiscal Policies.

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William Waqavakatoga

PhD candidate, University of Adelaide
William Waqavakatoga is a PhD candidate in Politics and International Relations at the University of Adelaide. He was previously a teaching assistant at the University of the South Pacific and has worked in the Fiji media.

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William Watkin

Professor of Contemporary Philosophy and Literature, Brunel University London

I am one of the leading experts on contemporary, continental philosophy in particular as regards how it relates to contemporary political situations. I specialise in the work of Agamben, Badiou, Derrida, Foucault, and Deleuze. I also work extensively on violence, conflict, terrorism, world politics and technology.

I teach a course on violence at Brunel University specialising in issues of capital punishment, technology, terrorism, surveillance and control. I have recently published articles in the media on ISIS decapitations and on the crisis in capital punishment in the US.

I have also published academic work on violence, for example: “Agamben, Benjamin and the Indifference of Violence” in Towards a Critique of Violence: Benjamin and Agamben. London: Bloomsbury, July 2015.

I am currently working with my agent on a book about the way digital technology has changed our relationship towards violence and death. Provisionally entitled "Snuff" it stretches from the use of social media to develop an intimate digital relationship with images of extreme violence, to the way digital technologies such as drones distances us from acts of war making them seem no more real than video games.

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