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Emma Worden-Sapper

PhD Student in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder

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Emma A. Jane

Associate Professor, UNSW Sydney
Emma A. Jane - formerly published as Emma Tom - is an Associate Professor at UNSW Sydney. She researches the social implications of emerging technologies using complexity theory frameworks and transdisciplinary methods to interrogate the issues and consider proposed interventions. She has presented the findings of her research to the Australian Human Rights Commission, the Australian government's Workplace Gender Equality Agency, and the Festival of Dangerous Ideas at the Sydney Opera House. Prior to her career in academia, Dr Jane spent nearly 25 years working in the print, broadcast, and electronic media. Over the course of her working life, she has received multiple awards and prizes for her scholarly work, her journalism, and her fiction. Her 11th book, Diagnosis Normal, is a hybrid memoir published by Penguin Random House in 2022. In her spare time, she enjoys coding with AI and using OpenAI's DALL·E 2 to generate images of exuberant axolotls on their way to queer discos.

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Emma C. Edwards

Career Development Fellow in Engineering, University of Oxford
Emma completed her BSc in mathematics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2012. She then worked as a research assistant for a year at the University of Edinburgh's Institute for Energy Systems, where she was introduced to wave energy. Emma completed her PhD at MIT in 2020, and her thesis, supervised by Professor Dick Yue, was titled ‘Optimization of the geometry of axisymmetric point absorber wave energy converters.’ She then held a part-time postdoctoral position at MIT with Professor Yue for a year.

She then completed a postdoctoral research fellowship from 2021-2023 at the University of Plymouth, working with Professor Deborah Greaves and Dr Martyn Hann, expanding her expertise to floating offshore wind turbines and physical modelling at one of the global hubs for offshore renewable energy research. From 2018-2022, in addition to her PhD and postdoctoral research, Emma competed as professional cyclist. In October 2023 she started as a Career Development Fellow in Engineering at St Peter's College, University of Oxford.

Her research focuses on fluid mechanics and its application to offshore renewable energy (ORE). Her main area of interest is around the hydrodynamics of wave-structure interaction, particular for floating bodies, and its impact on the performance of devices--principally floating offshore wind turbines and wave energy converters.

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Emma Forton Magavern

Clinical Research Fellow, Centre of Clinical Pharmacology and Precision Medicine, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London
Emma is a Medical doctor and a PhD candidate at the William Harvey Research Institute, QMUL, working with Professor Mark Caulfield. She completed a BA in English prior to her MD and subsequent MScs in Bioethics and Genomics. Through training in clinical medicine, humanities, genetics and pharmacology she has developed an interest in the scientific merits, clinical potential and implementation challenges of pharmacogenomics. She was co-secretary of the RCP/BPS working group on pharmacogenomics and led the ESC pharmacotherapy working group pharmacogenomics position paper.

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Emma G Duerden

Canada Research Chair, Neuroscience & Learning Disorders, Assistant Professor, Western University

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Emma Loosley Leeming

Professor of Middle Eastern and Caucasian Christianities, University of Exeter
Emma studied for a BA in History and History of Art at the University of York (1991-1994), where she specialised in the Medieval and Renaissance periods. She then worked back in time and took an MA (1994-1995) in Classical and Byzantine Art at the Courtauld Institute, University of London. It was during her MA that she discovered Late Antique Syria, which became the subject of her PhD thesis at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.

After graduating from SOAS in February 2001 she spent three years living and working as an archaeologist, fund-raiser, secretary and potato-peeler for the Community of Al-Khalil at Deir Mar Musa al-Habashi in Syria. The Community is dedicated to hospitality and Christian-Islamic dialogue and she spent the summers directing an archaeological excavation for the Community at their other monastery, Deir Mar Elian in Qaryatayn, and the rest of the year dealing with all English correspondence, greeting guests and helping with general chores (hence potato-peeling). During this period she was a visiting lecturer at SOAS and at the Université Saint Esprit de Kaslik in Lebanon. She also worked for the Abu Dhabi Ministry of Information as an archaeologist studying the artefacts found at a sixth-century monastery on the island of Sir Bani Yas.

In January 2004 she took up a position teaching Oriental Christian and Islamic Art at the University of Manchester and in 2010 she was appointed Senior Lecturer. During this time she was also a visiting lecturer at the Art University of Isfahan, Iran, the Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Georgia, the University of Tehran, the Teacher Training University of Tehran and the Amirkabir Polytechnic College, Tehran, Iran

She joined the University of Exeter in April 2013 and from 2012-2017 she worked on a five-year European Research Council funded project entitled Architecture and Asceticism: Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity exploring the purported Syrian evangelisation of Georgia in the fifth century and which sought to answer why the Georgians left the Oriental Orthodox fold to join with the Constantinopolitan Church in the early seventh century.

Since 2017 she has worked with the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi on an initiative to widen participation in Heritage Education amongst children from ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities across Georgia.

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Emma Louise Gorman

Senior Research Fellow, University of Westminster
Emma is a Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Employment Research, University of Westminster. As an applied economist, Emma’s research covers topics in education, labour economics and policy evaluation. Prior to joining the University of Westminster, she held appointments variously at Lancaster University, the University of Glasgow and the New Zealand Treasury, and has conducted research for the UK Department for Education, Social Mobility Commission and Department for Work and Pensions. Emma is a Fellow of the IZA (Institute of Labor Economics) and the GLO (Global Labor Organisation).

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Emmalee Ford

Conjoint Associate Lecturer in Medical Biochemistry, University of Newcastle
I research across the wide field of reproductive and sexual health, everything from abortions to vasectomy.

Our reproductive systems are so critical to our overall health and wellbeing. They’re responsible for the future of humankind, and yet they are so secretive and under-researched.

I am a multidisciplinary scientist with expertise in biology, public health, data science and education. I use my skills to collaborate with clinicians, health professionals, communities, and universities to improve reproductive health outcomes and increase access to sexual health education and services.

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Emmanuel Ameyaw

Researcher, Graduate School of Economics and Management, Tohoku University
Emmanuel Ameyaw is an economist and data scientist with a research interest in money and banking, macroeconomics, monetary economics, financial economics, applied macroeconometrics, central banking and financial institutions, development economics, and data analytics / data science in economics and finance. He obtained his PhD from Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan in 2023. He has authored several papers including
"The relevance of domestic and foreign factors in driving Ghana’s business cycle", "Business cycles in a cocoa and gold economy: Commodity price shocks do not always matter", "Hawkish shift in Ghana’s central bank’s monetary policy reaction function: a fiscal connection", among others.

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Emmanuel Destenay

Research Fellow, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Emmanuel Destenay received his PhD from Sorbonne University. He has held research fellowships at Oxford University, Stanford University, and University College Dublin. His first monograph, Shadows from the Trenches: Veterans of the Great War and the Irish Revolution (1918–1923) received an honorable mention from the American Conference for Irish Studies. Divergent Destinies, his second book, reexamines the interconnection between fears of military service and the rise of Irish republicanism between 1914 and 1918. He is currently finishing a monograph on American humanitarian interventions in France during World War I. He is a research fellow at Sorbonne University.

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Emmanuel Josserand

Emmanuel Josserand is a Professor of management at the University of Technology, Sydney, where he is the Director of the Center of Management and Organisation Studies. His current research interests relate to inter- and intra-organizational networks and social capital, including global supply networks and to individual identity.

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Emmanuel Oluwaseyi Atofarati

PhD Candidate, University of Pretoria
Publications:
Control of vortex shedding around a circular cylinder using bubble tabs in the laminar flow regime
EO Atofarati, AO Muritala, BO Malomo, SA Adio
Nigerian Journal of Technology 39 (4), 1108-1116 1, 2020

Assessing the factors affecting building construction collapse casualty using machine learning techniques: a case of Lagos, Nigeria
OO Awe, EO Atofarati, MO Adeyinka, AP Musa, EO Onasanya
International Journal of Construction Management, 1-9, 2023

The Evaluation of the Power Output of a Locally-Developed Micro Thermal Power Plant in Nigeria
A Morakinyo, EO Atofarati, A Asere
Ife Journal of Technology 28 (1), 18-27, 2021

Molecular Dynamics Simulation Research (From Atomic Fragments to Molecular Compounds)
EO Atofarati

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Emmanuel Pothos

Professor of Psychology, City, University of London
Emmanuel Pothos received a BSc in Physics from Imperial (1995) and DPhil in experimental psychology from Oxford (1998). At an undergraduate student at Imperial he received the Stainley Raimes Memorial Prize, for outstanding performance in first and second year mathematics. Emmanuel has worked at several universities, including Bangor University, Edinburgh University, Crete University, Swansea University, and, since 2009, City, University of London, where he has been a professor since 2014. He has been interested in several topics in cognitive science, including learning, categorization, similarity, language, and (more recently) decision making. He has been part of the quantum cognition research community from the very early days and has contributed some of the early models, for example, concerning the disjunction effect and the conjunction fallacy. He has co-authored two major reviews of the quantum cognition research programme, for the Behavioral and Brain Sciences (2013) and the Annual Review of Psychology (2022). He continues to actively develop quantum cognitive models and explore the potential and boundaries of quantum theory for behavioural modelling. He has 120 journal articles has his work has been funded by several organisations, including the ESRC, the AFOSR, the ONRG, and the Leverhulme Trust.

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Emmanuel Urquieta

Professor of Space Medicine and Emergency Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine
Emmanuel Urquieta holds a medical degree from Anahuac University in Mexico City and a master of science in aerospace medicine from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.

Emmanuel completed a diploma in emergency medicine and then worked for Mexico City’s Department of Public Safety as a flight surgeon in the Helicopter Emergency Medical Service "Condors" where he participated in hundreds of rescue missions and aeromedical evacuation within the Mexico City metropolitan area. He holds a private pilot certificate and an open water scuba diver certificate.

He has volunteered in medical missions in underserved regions throughout Mexico and in Nigeria, Africa. He was a volunteer paramedic for the Mexican Red Cross for more than 5 years.

Emmanuel has participated as a crew member of an analog mission at NASA Johnson Space Center: in 2017 he was selected to participate in the Human Exploration Research Analog (HERA) XI mission where he spent 30 days in a capsule simulating a deep space long duration mission. This mission aimed to understand the behavioral and physiological effects from isolation and confinement.

He currently serves as scientist at the NASA funded Translational Research Institute for Space Health, where he manages different research projects in different areas going from radiation protection to psychological changes during deep spaceflight.

Dr. Urquieta has a dual faculty appointment as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine and Center for Space Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. He is also a FAA private pilot and scuba diver.

During his free time he likes to design LEGO rocket ship models and spend time with his wife and daughters.

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Emmanuel Junior Zuza

Senior lecturer, Royal Agricultural University
Emmanuel is a distinguished academic renowned for his contributions to education and sustainable development. With a Ph.D. in Environmental Science and Sustainability, his research focuses on environmental sustainability and community development, earning him recognition in numerous peer-reviewed journals.

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Emmanuel Kwaku Siaw

Lecturer in International Relations, Swansea University

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Emmanuelle Bernheim

Professeure titulaire, Faculté de droit, titulaire de la Chaire de recherche du Canada en santé mentale et accès à la justice | Full Professor, Faculty of Law, Canada Research Chair on Mental Health and Access to Justice, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Emmanuelle Bernheim est professeur titulaire à la Faculté de droit, Section de droit civil, de l'Université d'Ottawa et titulaire de la Chaire de recherche du Canada en santé mentale et accès à la justice. Ses recherches portent sur le rôle du droit et de la justice dans la production et la reproduction des inégalités. | Emmanuelle Bernheim is a full professor in the Faculty of Law, Civil Law Section, at the University of Ottawa and holds the Canada Research Chair in Mental Health and Access to Justice. Her research focuses on the role of law and justice in the production and reproduction of inequalities.

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Emmanuelle Genin

Directrice de Recherche en génétique statistique et des populations, Inserm
Emmanuelle Génin développe des projets de recherche en génétique des populations et génétique statistique pour mettre en évidence les gènes impliqués dans les maladies. Après l’obtention d’une thèse de l’Université Pierre et Marie Curie à Paris dans le domaine de l’épidémiologie génétique, elle a réalisé un post-doctorat en génétique des populations dans le département de biologie intégrative de l’Université de Californie à Berkeley. Elle a contribué à la mise en évidence des gènes impliqués dans plusieurs maladies monogéniques en particulier des maladies récessives en utilisant la consanguinité. Elle a une expertise dans l’étude des populations isolées et consanguines et les stratégies d’analyse statistique dans ces populations. Elle s’est également intéressée aux interactions gène-environnement et a proposé des stratégies pour étudier ces interactions lorsque l’on travaille avec des témoins de référence sans information sur les expositions. En 2009, elle a obtenu un financement de l’Ambassade de France à Londres pour réaliser un séjour de recherche au Churchill College de Cambridge et travailler au Sanger Institute à l’étude des méthodes d’analyse statistique des variants génétiques rares. Elle a également étudié la stratification des variants rares dans la population britannique sur les données du Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. En 2012, elle a rejoint le laboratoire de génétique, génomique fonctionnelle et biotechnologies de Brest pour lancer de nouveaux projets sur la stratification génétique dans les populations de l’Ouest de la France. Elle dirige le laboratoire depuis 2017. Elle est impliquée dans le plan France Médecine Génomique 2025 comme responsable du projet pilote « Population Générale » qui vise à caractériser la structure génétique de la population française. En juillet 2022, elle a pris la co-direction de l'ITMO Aviesan Génétique Génomique et Bioinformatique (GGB) et la direction de l'Institut Thématique Inserm GGB.

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Emmanuelle George

Chercheuse en aménagement touristique, Inrae
Mes travaux de recherches sont centrés sur le tourisme de montagne, notamment celui porté par les stations de sports d’hiver. L’objectif est de questionner l’organisation productive du tourisme et les trajectoires d’adaptation de ces stations dans un contexte de fort changement global. Plus particulièrement, l’enjeu est d’apporter des connaissances et des outils aux acteurs des territoires et porteurs de politiques publiques, dans une optique d’analyses et d’accompagnement des transitions touristiques et territoriales.

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Emmanuelle Mansart-Monat

Économiste risque pays, Agence française de développement (AFD)
Diplômée d’un baccalauréat en administration des affaires trilingue (BAA) et titulaire d’un master en économie appliquée de HEC Montréal, Emmanuelle Mansart Monat commence sa carrière au sein d’Investissements PSP, un grand fond de pension canadien, où elle contribue à la recherche macroéconomique et financière du groupe. Par la suite, elle rejoint Exportations et Développement Canada, l’agence de crédit à l’exportation canadienne, en tant qu’économiste risque pays, spécialisée sur l’Union Européenne et l’Afrique du Nord. Elle rejoint l’AFD en 2020, en tant qu’économiste risque pays, couvrant une variété de pays, afin d’apporter un éclairage sur les trajectoires macroéconomiques, financières et sociales des pays dans lesquels l’AFD intervient.

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Emmanuelle Santoire

Postdoctoral researcher in energy transition, Université de Pau et des pays de l'Adour (UPPA)
Dr. Emmanuelle Santoire is normalienne, agrégée in geography, and a post-doctorate researcher in geography and public law at the UMR 6262 IODE - University of Rennes and formally researcher in the Energy Justice & the Social Contract Chair at the University of Pau et des Pays de l'Adour. She holds a Ph.D. in geography from the Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS) of Lyon in France. She specializes in energy transition research and in legal geography to study the role of law in structuring energy spatialities. Her current research revolves around energy justice in both Europe and Canada. She focuses on two objects: the spatialities of European energy investments, and the forms of energy regulation provided through bilateral trade and investment agreements. This research contributes to the development of a geo-legal methodology.

She is a former visiting researcher at the Institute of European and Comparative Law of the University at Oxford, where she lead a project on European energy investments. She is an early member of the Critical Legal Geography research network. Among her recent publications are a chapter on investments and energy justice at Springer Link and a chapter on energy and trade in CETA Implementation and Implications: Unraveling the Puzzle, edited by Prof Robert Finbow, published by Queen’s-McGill University Press.

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Emrah Kırdök

Assistant Professor, Department of Biotechnology, Mersin University

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Ena Chadha

Adjunct Professor York University Schulich School of Buisness / Chair of the Human Rights Legal Support Centre Board of Directors, York University, Canada
Chair, Human Rights Legal Support Centre

Ena Chadha is a senior human rights lawyer, investigator, scholar and mediator. As a proud member of Ontario’s South Asian community, Ena’s career has been dedicated to advancing social justice in the province. Ena is Chair of the Human Rights Legal Support Centre of Ontario. She served as former Chief Commissioner of the Ontario Human Rights Commission during the pandemic; Co-reviewer of the ground breaking systemic racism review of the Peel District School Board; Vice-Chair with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario from 2007-2015 and Director of Litigation with ARCH: Disability Law Centre, where she appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada in seminal equality rights cases. Ena has authored several precedent-setting human rights decisions and has published extensively on disability, race and gender discrimination and harassment. Ena is a recipient of the 2023 Law Society Medal.

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Enayat Nasir

Research Assistant in Educational Policy, University at Albany, State University of New York
Enayat Nasir is a Ph.D. scholar in educational policy and leadership at the State University of New York at Albany (SUNY Albany). He has earned a Master of Science in the same discipline from SUNY Albany and has also undertaken Project Management studies at Cornell University. He is an alumnus of prestigious programs like the Fulbright Program, the Swedish Institute, and the World Innovation Summit for Education.

He researches equity in education, public-private partnerships, and the privatization of higher education. His research and advocacy work has gained considerable attention. Enayat shares his expert opinions and analyses through various channels, including his blog (https://enayatnasir.substack.com/). Enayat is deeply committed to advocating for girls' education in Afghanistan.

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Endalcachew Bayeh

Lecturer and Researcher, Bahir Dar University
Endalcachew Bayeh is a lecturer and researcher in the Department of Political Science and International Studies at Bahir Dar University. He holds a BEd in civics and ethical education from Bahir Dar University (2010), an MA in international relations from Addis Ababa University (2014), and a Bachelor of Law (LLB) from Ambo University (2016). Currently, he is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science and International Studies at Bahir Dar University. His research interests include geopolitics, hydropolitics, human rights, gender equality, democracy, and peace and security studies. He has published numerous articles in national and international peer-reviewed journals. He can be reached at [email protected].

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Endang Jamal

Senior lecturer in aquaculture, Pattimura University and doctoral student, Southern Cross University
Endang Jamal is a senior lecturer in the Aquaculture Study Program, Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science, Pattimura University Ambon Indonesia. She just completed her doctoral study at the Southern Cross University, NSW, Australia, titled “Estuarine Contaminants and Oyster Health in the Richmond River Estuary, NSW, Australia”.

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Engelbert Bain Luchuo

Senior Research Associate, University of Johannesburg
I am a public health (Global health) professional and a specialist in empirical research methods in bioethics. I have a keen interest in Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights, Climate Change and Health, One Health, HIV-AIDS, Health systems strengthening/Resilience, human resources for health management, and monitoring and evaluation of public health interventions. I am particularly interested in core epistemological questions in global health (equity, justice, funding), and a student of "decolonization of global health".

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Enid Slack

Director of the Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance (IMFG) at the School of Cities, University of Toronto
Dr. Enid Slack is the Director of the Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance (IMFG) at the School of Cities at the University of Toronto. The IMFG focuses on the fiscal health and governance challenges facing large cities and city-regions. The Institute’s mandate is to conduct independent research, spark and inform public debate, and to engage the academic and policy communities around important issues of municipal finance and governance.

Enid has been working on municipal finance issues in Canada and abroad for 40 years. Prior to establishing the IMFG, she was a consultant specializing in municipal finance. Enid has worked with the World Bank, the IMF, UN Habitat, ADB, and IDB in countries such as Brazil, China, Colombia, India, Mexico, Mongolia, the Philippines, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda. She has written several books and articles on property taxes, intergovernmental transfers, development charges, financing municipal infrastructure, municipal governance, municipal boundary restructuring, and education funding. Recent books (co-edited with Richard Bird) include Financing Urban Infrastructure: Who Should Pay and Is Your City Healthy? Measuring Urban Fiscal Health.

Enid received her B.A. in Economics from York University (Glendon College), and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Toronto. In 2012, Enid was awarded the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal for her work on cities.

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Ẹniọlá Ànúolúwapọ́ Ṣóyẹmí

Departmental Lecturer in Political Philosophy and Public Policy, University of Oxford
I am Departmental Lecturer in Political Philosophy and Public Policy at the Blavatnik School of Government, Oxford. I work on topics in African and Contemporary political, moral, and legal philosophy-- in particular, on questions of freedom, injustice, democracy and authority, and deliberative democratic practice. My academic work has been published in Political Theory, the Philosophical Forum, the Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, and the Routledge Handbook of African Political Philosophy. My essays and commentary have also appeared in Weekendavisen, the New York Times, the New Yorker Radio Hour, the Guardian, and Premium Times Newspaper, among others.

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Enoch F Sam

Head of Department , Department of Geography Education, University of Education, Winneba
Enoch is a Senior Lecturer and a Transport Geographer with research interests in Traffic safety, Public transport management and Sustainable urban mobility. His current projects include: "Towards a disability-inclusive urban transport system in Accra and Nairobi: a policy-practice agenda" funded by Volvo Research and Educational Foundation under the Mobility and Access in African Cities (MAC) initiative; "Safety culture and practices among the public transport operators in Ghana" and "Media reportage on road traffic accidents in Ghana".
Transport Geography, Sustainable Urban Mobility, Traffic Safety, Public Transport Operations, Statistical Methods and Techniques, Mixed Research Methodologies

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Enock Sithole

Lecturer, University of the Witwatersrand
PhD in climate change communication.

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Enrica De Cian

Professor of Environmental Economics, Ca' Foscari University of Venice
Enrica De Cian is professor in environmental economics at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice (Italy), research scientist at Fondazione Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC), and at RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment.

She is an ERC Starting Grant grantee with the project ENERGYA – Energy use for Adaptation. She coordinates Ca’ Foscari’s Master in Science and Management of Climate Change. Before she was researcher at Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM), and she has collaborated with several research organizations in Europe (CEPS, ZEW) and in the U.S. (Joint Program at MIT, Boston University). Her research focuses on the global impacts of climate change on the economy, the society, and sustainable development. She works with integrated assessment models and econometric and statistical approaches.

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Enrico Bonadio

Enrico Bonadio is Senior Lecturer in Law at City University London (City Law School), where he teaches various modules on intellectual property law.

He holds law degrees from the University of Florence (PhD) and the University of Pisa (LLB), and is Associate Editor and Intellectual Property Correspondent of the European Journal of Risk Regulation.

He regularly lectures, publishes and advises in the field of UK, European and international intellectual property law. He published a book on TRIPS Agreement and genetic resources (Jovene, 2008) and several articles in leading international peer-reviewed journals. He received the ECTA Award for the Best Paper in Trademark Law in 2013 (plain packaging of tobacco products under European intellectual property law). Enrico is currently co-editing a book entitled "Beyond Plain Packaging - The New Intellectual Property of Health" (Elgar, forthcoming 2016). He has also done academic work on digital copyright and free speech, exhaustion of IP rights and parallel imports, patentability of human embryonic stem cells and patents and food safety. His current research agenda focuses on copyright protection of graffiti and street art.

Enrico is Visiting Professor in European Intellectual Property Law at Université Catholique de Lyon (France) and University of Turku (Finland) as well as visiting lecturer at the LLM in Intellectual Property offered by WIPO and the University of Turin. He also recently taught at Universidad San Carlos de Guatemala, University of Wroclaw (Poland), Academy of European Law (Germany), Moscow State Law Academy (Russia), Université de Toulouse (France) and University of Pisa (Italy). In 2013 he has been Visiting Scholar at Melbourne Law School (University of Melbourne, Australia). His research and teaching interests have led him to deliver papers and talks in all five continents.

Enrico is a Solicitor qualified to practise in England and Wales as well as in Italy. He practised as Intellectual Property attorney for several years in top-tier international law firms.

He is member of AIPPI (Association Internationale pour la Protection de la Propriété Intellectuelle), ATRIP (International Association for the Advancement of Teaching and Research in Intellectual Property), EPIP (European Policy for Intellectual Property), LES (Licensing Executives Society), BILA (British Italian Law Association), The Law Society of England and Wales and the Spinelli Network Group.

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Enrico Coiera

Professor of Medical Informatics, Macquarie University
Professor Coiera's research explores the roles, benefits and risks of artificial intelligence in healthcare. He has worked in academia, industry and the health system, and is dual trained in medicine and computer science. He is Director of the Centre for Health Informatics at the Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University. He is also the Director of the NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence in Digital Health, and leads the Australian Alliance for AI in Healthcare.

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Enrico Gennari

Research Associate at the Department of Ichthyology and Fisheries Science and Shark Scientist and Founder Oceans Research Institute, Rhodes University
Dr Enrico Gennari has been studying sharks for over 15 years. Researcher by aspiration and educator for passion, he has specialised in the eco-physiology of the white shark but his interests are currently focusing on animal movement ecology and the mitigation of human/shark conflict.

He is an honorary research associate of the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), research associate at Rhodes University’s Department of Ichthyology and Fisheries Science (DIFS), member of the Shark Advisory Group invited by the South African Department of Environmental Affairs, member of the South African White Shark Research group and member of the Southern Africa Movement Ecology group.

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