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Christian Lueme Lokotola

Lecturer in Planetary Health, Division of Family Medicine and Primary Care, Stellenbosch University
Dr. Lokotola Christian Lueme is an early career research in Climate change, air pollution and human health, and resilience of healthcare service. He has an MPH and PhD in Public Health. His current expertise is in Planetary Health Education (integration of planetary health into Health Professional Education) and Climate resilient Primary Health Care (what need to be done and known).

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Christiana Harous

PhD Candidate / Provisional Psychologist, Flinders University
Christiana is a PhD candidate and Provisional Psychologist who is part of the Psychology of Justice, Emotions and Morality lab at Flinders University. Christiana is researching how storytelling (and re-telling) may aid, or hinder, self-forgiveness following wrongdoing in relationships.

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Christiana Ochoa

Professor of Law, Indiana University
Christiana Ochoa’s research seeks to understand how economic activity impacts human and ecological well-being. Her theoretical and empirical research relies on international and comparative law, particularly in the fields of Business & Human Rights, Law & Development, International Finance, and Foreign Direct Investment. She brings her field work—as well as her practice experience at the global law firm Clifford Chance and with a number of human rights and humanitarian non-governmental organizations in Latin America—to her research questions and classroom teaching. She teaches Contracts as well as International Law, International Business Transactions, Human Rights, and Law & Development.

Her scholarship in these areas has been published and is forthcoming in the Yale Journal of International Law, Harvard International Law Journal, Virginia Journal of International Law, Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law, Duke Journal of International & Comparative Law, and Human Rights Quarterly, among others. Her work has also been published internationally, including in Germany, Colombia, and Korea. Her first documentary film, Otra Cosa No Hay (There is Nothing Else), was completed in 2014, received film festival acclaim, and has been viewed by audiences around the world.

Professor Ochoa has been recognized for her research, teaching, and service, and has held numerous administrative positions at the Law School, campus and university level. In 2018, she was named an Indiana University Class of 1950 Herman B Wells Endowed Professor. Individually, and as part of research teams, she has won competitive funding from numerous sources, including from the Mellon Foundation and the U.S. Department of Education. In 2015, she was a co-PI for a prestigious Sawyer Seminar on Documentary Media and Historical Transformations. Within the Law School, she has served as Executive Associate Dean, Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Affairs, and as Latin America Program Director for the Stewart Center on the Global Legal Profession. She has held campus-wide leadership positions, including as Associate Vice Provost for Faculty and Academic Affairs and as a founding Associate Director of the Center for Documentary Research and Practice. At the university level, she is the founding Academic Director of the IU Mexico Gateway, IU’s only office in Latin America. She has also served on various committees for AALS and ASIL.

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Christiane Gerblinger

Visiting Fellow, Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science, Australian National University
I've been a leader, communicator and collaborator across several policy areas across several agencies in the Australian Public Service and am currently a Visiting Fellow at the Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness. I have two PhDs (which I'm finding similar to having two driver's licenses) - one in film and literature, the other in policy communication. My most recent publications include How Government Experts Self-Sabotage (ANU Press) and “Peep show: a framework for watching how evidence is communicated inside policy organisations” (Evidence & Policy).

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Christiane Kehoe

Research manager and program specialist Tuning in to Kids, The University of Melbourne
DR Christiane Kehoe is the Research Manager at Mindful, Centre for Training and Research in Developmental Health, where she has been the Project Manager for several randomised controlled trials of the emotion-focused Tuning in to Kids (TIK) suite of programs, including a current trial investigating the efficacy of three methods of delivery of TIK (online, 1-1 delivery, and group delivery) with parents of children with challenging behaviours. Christiane is co-author of the evidence based Tuning in to Teens (TINT) and Tuning in to Toddlers (TOTS) programs, and Whole School Approach TINT program, which are variants of the TIK parenting program and has extensive experience in emotion-focused parent education, including designing and delivering intervention programs.

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Christiane Keys-Statham

PhD Candidate, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University
Christiane Keys-Statham is a PHD candidate at the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University. Her research focuses on the relationships between cultural and ecological infrastructures, and between public art and museums.

Christiane also works as a public art curator, project manager, cultural researcher and writer.

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Christiane Zarfl

Professor for Environmental Systems Analysis, Faculty of Science, University of Tübingen

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Christianna Alexiou

MSc in Regulation Student, London School of Economics and Political Science
Christianna Alexiou is an MSc in Regulation student at the London School of Economics and Political Science, where she is studying governance, policy, and law extensively. Her research and academic interests include: procedural justice, accountability and participation in decision-making processes, DEI policy, public interest regulation, socio-legal studies, comparative and cross-cultural policy and law, discourse, and human rights.

Before beginning her master’s degree, Christianna received a Bachelor in Journalism Honours with a double minor in Law and Spanish from Carleton University in Ottawa. Upon graduating she was awarded the Senate Medal for Outstanding Academic Achievement for finishing in the top 3% of the 2022 graduating class.

Christianna is also a freelance writer and editor, experienced in journalism, strategic communications, and corporate and public-sector communications. Her published works have appeared in the Ottawa Citizen, Ottawa Sun, Ottawa Business Journal, Montreal Gazette, and The Province, among others. Notably, two of her articles, covering Indigenous language preservation and sustainability in fashion, were shortlisted for the Fraser MacDougall Prize for Best New Canadian Voice in Human Rights Reporting.

Her academic contributions have appeared in the journals Journalism Practice, and Facts and Frictions.

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Christina Aggar

Associate Professor of Nursing, Southern Cross University
Christina has held academic roles in undergraduate and postgraduate nursing programs at several Australian universities. Christina’s most recent projects have involved interdisciplinary research in collaboration with health care professionals from various fields of expertise. Christina is currently the Conjoint Academic with Northern NSW Local Health District.

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Christina Breed

Senior Lecturer, University of Pretoria
PhD in Landscape Architecture, University of Pretoria (2015)
Post Graduate Certificate in Higher Education (2009)
Masters in Design, UNAM, Mexico (2003)
BL Landscape Architecture (1998)

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Christina Chan-Meetoo

Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication, University of Mauritius
Christina Chan-Meetoo has published on press freedom, media regulation, new media, gender-sensitive reporting, and language and culture. She is also a scientific collaborator on research projects related to Mauritian Creole and Rodriguan Creole. She writes at: www.christinameetoo.com

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Christina Chau

Lecturer at Curtin University, Curtin University
Christina is an arts writer and lecturer in the School of Media, Culture and Creative Arts at Curtin University. Her book is titled "Movement, Time, Technology and Art"

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Christina Culwick

Senior researcher, urban sustainability transitions, environmental governance and resilience, Gauteng City-Region Observatory
Christina's research extends across a range of disciplines, including environmental sustainability, urban form and development, social justice, and quality of life. She has a particular interest in collaborative knowledge creation and the role of research in informing policy and governance practices. Christina Culwick joined GCRO as a researcher in 2013 after completing her MSc in Geography. She completed both undergraduate (BSc Geography & Maths) and postgraduate studies (BScHons & MSc Geography) at Wits University, and she is currently a PhD candidate in Geography and Environmental Sciences at the University of Cape Town. Christina’s PhD project focuses on the boundary between environmental sustainability and social justice in low-income housing developments in Gauteng.

Beyond her academic research, Christina holds a postgraduate teaching diploma from UNISA and she worked as an SABC broadcasting meteorologist for 6years. Her climbing and travelling help to sustain her love for Joburg, where she grew up and now lives with her husband.

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Christina Le

Physiotherapist and Researcher, University of Alberta
I graduated with a Master of Science in Physical Therapy in 2011 and have worked as a musculoskeletal physiotherapist for over 10 years. Since 2015, I have worked closely with orthopaedic knee surgeons and developed a strong interest in knee injuries. I have extensive experience treating people with an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. In 2022, I completed my PhD in Rehabilitation Sciences with my thesis focusing on the quality of life of young athletes with a knee injury. Ironically, I ruptured my ACL at the start of my PhD, so I am well-versed in ACL injuries as a physiotherapist, researcher, and patient.

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Christina Maags

My research focuses on issues around Chinese governance, state-society relations and political economy, particularly in thr policy fields of cultural heritage and demographic change.

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Christina Maher

Biomedical Engineer, University of Sydney
Christina is a PhD candidate in the School of Biomedical Engineering and Brain and Mind Centre at the University of Sydney. She applies AI and computational neuroscience to MRI and EEG data to map brain networks and signals. Her goal is to explore novel neuroimaging biomarkers that can guide diagnosis and treatment of persons living with drug-resistant epilepsy. Along with a postgraduate in psychology and neuroscience, her broad experience includes a clinical role providing EEG neurofeedback and leading a software development team.

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Christina Mammone

Early Careers Researcher in Peace and Conflict Studies, Flinders University
Awarded her PhD at Flinders University, South Australia in 2022, Christina has consistently focused her research on the limitations of international humanitarian efforts in post-conflict countries to promote sustainable long-form peacebuilding. Her research is primarily focused on transitional justice and how its relationship with development can provide a more durable form of peace. To address this relationship, Christina’s approach to transitional justice research incorporates retrospective analysis and contemporary development perspectives. Presently, Christina’s research explores transitional justice implementation in the early 2000s and its contemporary impact.

Prior to commencing her PhD at Flinders University, Christina studied at the University of South Australia where she primarily focused on the Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration of Child Soldiers and how child soldiering impacts peacebuilding and societal reconstruction.

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Christina Pilgrim

Master's student, Department of Sociology, Queen's University, Ontario
Christina Pilgrim is a Master's candidate in the Department of Sociology at Queen's University. Her research is focused in surveillance, media, and communication technology.

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Christina Tworeck

Ph.D. Student in Developmental Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

I research the development of moral beliefs and beliefs about social groups. I am interested in how cognition and social context influence these beliefs in children and adults.

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Christina Wilkins

Lecturer in Film and Creative Writing, University of Birmingham
I am researcher in contemporary film, television and literature with a specialism in adaptations and mental health. I am also a poetry editor for a small press. My most recent book looks at character, the body, and adaptation was released in 2022. I am currently working on a book about male mental illness in contemporary culture.

My primary research area is adaptations. I have published various chapters related to this field, regularly participate in the AAS conferences (and am on the board of trustees), have established the BAFTSS Adaptation group, and have recently released a book in this area. This book, Embodying Adaptation: Character and the Body examines the connection between character and the body, and the hierarchies inherent within this relationship. It seeks to find a new approach to adaptations that is framed by the body and its importance in our increasingly intangible society. It was published through Palgrave in 2022 as part of the Adaptations and Visual Culture series. My other research interests include mental health, identity, memory, and queer studies. This is reflected in the chapters I have published on these topics. Another strand of my research is male mental health and suicide in contemporary culture, which will be the focus of my next monograph.

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Christina S. Baer

Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences, Binghamton University, State University of New York
I'm interested in the natural history, ecology, and evolution of insects' interactions with plants, animals, and changing environments. Much of my research focuses on shelter-building caterpillars and the invertebrates that interact with them, but my FRI students work on a wide range of global change projects. I'm currently investigating how invertebrate communities that live in shelters will respond to warming temperatures. I'm also interested in how herbarium specimens can be used to investigate plant-insect interactions.

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Christine Batchelor

I am a physical geographer with a broad research interest in reconstructing the past extent and behaviour of ice sheets. I am interested in all temporal scales of ice-sheet and climatic change, ranging from annual ice-margin fluctuations, to large-scale advances and retreats of ice sheets during the last ~3 million years. I mainly use marine geophysical techniques to analyse the glacial landforms and sediments that are preserved on and beneath the seafloor.

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Christine Coughlin

Professor of Law, Wake Forest University
Christine Nero Coughlin is a Professor of at the Wake Forest University School of Law. She also has faculty appointments at the Wake Forest University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the Wake Forest University School of Medicine's Translational Science Institute. In addition, she is a core faculty member in the Wake Forest University Center for Bioethics, Health and Society. She is the recipient of the Legal Writing Institute's Mary S. Lawrence Award, the Wake Forest University Teaching and Learning Center's Teaching Innovation Award, the Joseph Branch Award for Excellence in Teaching, and a multi-time recipient of the Graham Award for Excellence in Teaching Legal Research and Writing. Her teaching and scholarship are concentrated in the areas of legal analysis and writing, bioethics, and health care law. She has written over a dozen law review articles and essays, is the co-author of several leading law school textbooks, and frequently pens op-eds and guest blog posts. She is a member of the American Law Institute (ALI).

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Christine Curry

Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Miami

Dr. Curry is an academic generalist, practicing both obstetrics and gynecology. She has an interest in comprehensive reproductive health. She is supportive of women seeking trials of labor after previous cesarean sections and those desiring external cephalic versions. Her gynecology practice includes both outpatient well woman care, contraception and sexually transmitted disease care, as well as inpatient surgical management of benign gynecologic disease.

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Christine Hempel

Post-doctoral researcher, School of Urban and Regional Planning, Toronto Metropolitan University
Dr. Christine Hempel is an urban designer and researcher specializing in community-led planning and visioning. She received her Bachelor degrees in Environmental Studies and Professional Architecture from the University of Waterloo, Masters in Planning and PhD from University of Guelph. She has professional experience as urban designer, illustrator and engagement specialist.

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Christine Huebner

Lecturer in Quantitative Social Sciences, University of Sheffield
Christine is a researcher of political engagement and a lecturer in quantitative social science at the University of Sheffield's Sheffield Methods Institute. Her research explores changes in political engagement, conceptions of citizenship and democracy, in particular among young people.

Christine has accompanied and collected evidence on the outcomes of the lowering of the voting age to 16 in Scotland and Wales and is providing evidence-based advice to policymakers wanting to connect with young people around Europe, partially in her role as partner of independent and non-partisan think tank d|part.

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Christine Kinealy

Director of Ireland's Great Hunger Institute, Quinnipiac University
Christine Kinealy is the founding Director of Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute.

A graduate of Trinity College, Dublin, Christine has published extensively on Ireland’s Great Hunger and, more recently, the Irish Abolition movement. This includes the award-winning This Great Calamity. The Great Hunger in Ireland, and a graphic novel entitled, ‘The Bad Times’, or ‘An Drochshaol’. In 1997, she spoke in the British Houses of Parliament and in the American Congress on the Famine.

Christine is a Director of the African American Irish Diaspora Network. In 2018, she published Frederick Douglass and Ireland. In his own words. In 2020, Black Abolitionists in Ireland was published and a second volume is planned. This research led to the creation of Frederick Douglass Walking Trails in Belfast, Cork and Dublin.

Christine has been named one of the top educators in Irish America. In 2014, she was inducted into the Irish America Hall of Fame and, in 2017, received an Emmy for ‘The Great Hunger and the Irish Diaspora’ documentary. In 2019, she was one of five historians who walked 100-miles from Roscommon to Dublin, following in the footsteps of tenants sent to Canada in 1847. This route now forms The National Famine Way.

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Christine Loscher

Professor of Immunology, Dublin City University
Professor Christine Loscher completed her PhD in Immunology at NUI, Maynooth in 2000 and was awarded a Health Research Board Fellowship to pursue her postdoctoral studies at Trinity College Dublin. In 2003 she moved to the Institute of Molecular Medicine at St James Hospital to continue her research and then was appointed to a permanent academic position at Dublin City University in 2005. She leads the Immunomodulation Research Group at DCU which has a focus on translating how modulation of the immune response has health benefits. Her focus includes discovering new anti-inflammatory/anti-allergic compounds and ingredients that can be used in the pharma and food industry. She is a Principal Investigator in the Food for Health Ireland Technology Centre and served on the Scientific Advisory Council at Kerry Foods from 2015 to 2017. She has developed significant expertise in commercial research and industry engagement and has secured over €5.5M in external funding for her research. In 2014 she was named in Silicon Republics top 100 Women in STEM and in 2015 she was a speaker at InspireFest. In 2016 she delivered a TEDx talk to communicate her views on the Future of Food and in 2018 she was included in Silicon Republic’s “22 high-flying scientists making the world a better place in 2019”. In 2020 she was promoted to Full Professor of Immunology and established the DCU Covid-19 Research & Innovation Hub which currently has 16 funded projects aimed at novel solutions in the fight against Covid-19.

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Christine Martineau

Assistant Professor, Faculty of Education, Concordia University of Edmonton
Christine Martineau (Cree/Métis) is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Education at Concordia University of Edmonton where she teaches in the undergraduate Education minor, the Bachelor of Education After-degree, and the Master of Education degree programs. She has more than 20 years of teaching and leadership experience in Alberta, the majority of which has been in First Nations communities as a secondary teacher and school leader.

Dr. Martineau’s primary teaching and research focus is in Indigenous Education policy and practice in Canada. In 2006, Dr. Martineau established an accredited on-reserve Alternative Junior/Senior High School, for which she served as Principal and Director of Education before pursuing her PhD.

Dr. Martineau’s research over the last two decades has focused primarily on educational policy and practice in relation to Indigenous Peoples in Canada, with a specific focus on the Alberta context. Her PhD research was an analysis, from a Cree perspective, of Alberta’s Aboriginal education policy requiring teachers to infuse Indigenous perspectives into the K-12 curriculum. Her dissertation presents an understanding of Cree identity, an examination of how colonization has impacted identity for Aboriginal Peoples in Canada, and a discussion of the role of public education in relation to Aboriginal identity development.

Dr. Martineau’s research interests include:

Indigenous education policy and practice
Educational leadership
Teacher education
Indigenous research methodology
Race and racialization in education

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Christine Peacock

Lecturer in Law, Federation University Australia
Christine Peacock is a Lecturer in Law at Federation University. She has significant experience teaching and researching, and often writes from a comparative perspective. Her industry experience includes working in the Asia Pacific region and Europe. In 2019 she was the recipient of the Australasian Tax Teacher's Association Promoting Women in Tax Academia Scholarship.

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Christine Picard

Associate Professor of Biology, Indiana University
The Picard Lab’s research is focused on the understanding and correlations between genotype and phenotypes specifically related to insects.

Many of the insects studied in the lab are forensically relevant insects (i.e. blow flies), with the goal of using whole-genome data to extract variations in the genome related to forensically relevant traits such as development time and rate.

Additionally, The Picard Lab has expanded to include species of insects for development as sustainable, alternative protein sources for human food and animal feed consumption. The lab uses a combination of traditional genetic and bioinformatics techniques to mine data for the characterization of important traits.

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Christine Shepardson

Professor and Head, Department of Religious Studies, University of Tennessee
Tina Shepardson studies the history of early Christianity, particularly the Mediterranean world in the period of late antiquity. She is the author of two books: _Controlling Contested Places: Fourth-Century Antioch and the Spatial Politics of Religious Controversy_, which demonstrates the ways in which contests over local places shaped the development of religious orthodoxy and orthopraxy in the late Roman Empire; and _Anti-Judaism and Christian Orthodoxy: Ephrem’s Hymns in Fourth-Century Syria_, which examines Ephrem, a fourth-century church leader from Syria, and the role his sharp anti-Jewish language played in an intra-Christian theological struggle. She is also the co-editor of two other volumes: _Invitation to Syriac Christianity: An Anthology_, and _Dealing with Difference: Christian Patters of Response to Religious Rivalry in Late Antiquity and Beyond_. She is currently finishing a project on early Syrian Orthodox Christianity, and the political and theological conflicts that consumed the eastern Mediterranean during the fifth and sixth centuries. In teaching about the history of early Christianity, she demonstrates the effects that early Christian arguments continue to have in the modern world, as well as the rich diversity of early Christian history. She is the winner of a 2016-2017 NEH Fellowship, a 2009-2010 ACLS Fellowship, a 2008 NEH Summer Stipend, and a 2008 Franklin Research Grant from the American Philosophical Society.

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Christine Weldrick

Antarctic Marine Zooplankton Ecologist, University of Tasmania
I am a Canadian-Australian marine Antarctic ecologist who specialises in the ecological structure and roles of Southern Ocean zooplankton, which a particular interest in their relationship to sea ice.

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Christine Wen

Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, Texas A&M University
Dr. Christine Wen is a professor of urban planning, currently at Texas A&M University. She specializes in community economic development. Before entering academia, she worked for Good Jobs First in D.C. producing research in support of transparency and accountability in government processes and development schemes.

Christine received her Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning from Cornell University in 2019 with her interdisciplinary research, supported mainly by the C.V. Starr Fellowship, that bridges developmental sociology, critical geography, political economy, and labor studies. She was also part of an award-winning team that pushed for a more just and equitable tax system for the rural parts of upstate New York.

In her former life, she worked a year-long hydrology research project for the Earth Institute at Columbia University. Prior to that, she helped out with the cosmic microwave background radiation group at Princeton University while completing a bachelor's degree in physics there. And before that, at age 15, she received First-Class Honors with Distinctions in professional piano performance for the Associate Diploma from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Canada where she lived as a teenager.

Christine now resides in eastern Texas with her dog Arthur, cats Salem and Billy, lizard Syren, and parrot Jake (now passed). She loves literature, science, philosophy, art, music, theater, and interior design, and spends her spare time writing stories, boating, bushcrafting, boxing, playing video games, swimming, cooking, studying foreign languages, hanging with friends, and finally picking up piano again after 17 years.

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Christine Abdalla Mikhaeil

Assistant professor in information systems, IÉSEG School of Management

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