Professor of Criminal Justice, University at Albany, State University of New York
Prior to coming to the School of Criminal Justice in 1990, Frankie Bailey was acting assistant vice-president for academic affairs and associate professor of criminal justice at Kentucky State University in Frankfort.
Her academic pursuits focus on crime history, crime and mass media/popular culture, and material culture. She has done research on topics related to images of victims, offenders, and criminal justice agents in American culture. She is interested in the intersections of race/ethnicity, gender, class, and sexuality. Her current research focuses on dress and appearance. Her books include Out of the Woodpile: Black Characters Crime and Detective Fiction (1991), nominated for the Mystery Writers of America 1992 Edgar Award for Criticism and Biography. With Steven Chermak, she co-edited Famous American Crimes and Trials (2004) With Donna C. Hale, she is the author of Blood on Her Hands: The Social Construction of Women, Sexuality, and Murder (2004). Other books include African American Mystery Writers (2008) and (with Alice P. Green) Wicked Albany: Lawlessness & Liquor in the Prohibition Era (2009). Bailey is the author of five books in a mystery series featuring crime historian Lizzie Stuart. Her new near-future police procedural series debuted with The Red Queen Dies (2013).
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Professor of Social Protection and Development, Maastricht University
Franziska Gassmann (PhD in Economics) is Professor of Social Protection and Development at Maastricht University. At UNU-MERIT, she is the Head of the UNU-MERIT Graduate School. Franziska Gassmann has a strong track record in the field of poverty, social protection and applied public policy. The focus of her current research is on understanding to what extent and under what conditions formal and informal social protection contribute to inclusive development and how such policies impact intermediate objectives such as the accumulation of human capital, the investment in, protection and accumulation of productive assets, labor market participation and the generation of local multiplier and spillover effects. Her research also addresses questions such as how social protection can be expanded to those groups that are currently not covered by formal systems, for example informal workers, and the determinants of preferences for redistributive policies. Franziska Gassmann has over 25 years of experience in advising international organizations and national governments. She has project experience in more than 15 countries in Europe, Asia and Africa. She is regularly teaching in graduate programs (MSc, PhD) in the field of welfare economics, social protection and public policy analysis (certified university teacher BKO), and executive training programs.
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Associate Professor, University of the Witwatersrand
Franziska is associate professor at the School of Law, and co-assistant dean (postgraduate affairs) at the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, where she teaches, researches and supervises in international trade law (since 2011). She holds a doctorate in law from the Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main and serves as executive co-treasurer of the Society of International Economic Law (SIEL). Prior to working in South Africa, she was a senior researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (2006‒2010) and a legal adviser in the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GTZ/GIZ), Accra, Ghana, for the Good Governance Programme (in 2006). Franziska is co-editor (with Kholofelo Kugler) of the book 'International economic law: (southern) African perspectives and priorities' (2021).
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I am a glacial geophysicist with expertise in remote sensing. Specifically, my research aims to unravel the key ice, ocean and atmosphere interactions responsible for controlling the pronounced deterioration of the world’s ice sheets and glaciers since the beginning of the observational era (c. 1960). To do this, I utilise a suite of cutting-edge satellite and airborne geophysical imaging techniques, ocean and atmosphere model outputs and data collected in the field (on ice or by boat).
My current research is supported by The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation. At Cambridge, in addition to supporting Part 1A teaching at Jesus College, he contributes to the MPhil in Polar Studies degree programme offered by the Scott Polar Research Institute, and lectures on topics pertaining to the remote sensing of the cryosphere.
I gained my MA (First Class Hons) degree in Geography from University of Aberdeen in 2014 and, following a brief interlude in industry, later obtained my PhD degree in Atmospheric and Environmental Science from the University of Edinburgh in 2018.
I am a Fellow of The Geological Society of London, and have recently published research in a selection of world-leading journals including Science and Geophysical Research Letters, and frequently acts as a reviewer for these journals and more. My work has also recently been cited in several high-profile Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) publications including, most notably, the IPCC’s ‘Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis’ (The Working Group I contribution to the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report).
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Adjunct Fellow, The University of Queensland
Fred Cobbo is a Wakka Wakka traditional owner and Chief Investigator on the Binung Ma Na Du: cultural stories and living histories on Wakka Wakka Country project. Fred has extensive experience in education, health, leadership and cultural knowledges.
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PhD Candidate, Mental Health, Sophiahemmet University
I am a PhD student and licensed psychologist at Sophiahemmet University, focusing on risk factors of mental health problems among university students.
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Professor, Curtin University
Fred Jourdan is a professor and geochronologist / geochemist in the School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, at Curtin University, Australia. Since 2007, he is the director and primary user of the Western Australian Argon Isotope Facility (part of the John de Laeter Center) dedicated to 40Ar/39Ar geochronology. His research focuses on the application and development of the argon geochronometer to understand (1) the role of volcanism on past climate changes, and (2) the evolution of the volcanism and impact process on Earth and throughout the solar system. He is the unit coordinator of Dynamic Earth where he teaches Geology to large cohorts of first year students. He is passionate about teaching and uses a relax, yet engaging approach to learning where he applies flip and micro-flip pedagogy techniques. He is committed to actively transmit his passion for science to the public through school visits, radio interviews and news articles as well as leading the Geooutreach group at Curtin University. He is devoted to help his discipline flourish in his role of Discipline Lead.
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Professor of Computer Science, UMass Lowell
I am Associate Dean for Teaching, Learning and Undergraduate Studies at UMass Lowell.
I am interested in a collection of themes around what I call “Engaging Computing”:
- Engaged computing means computational processes that are engaged with the world—think embedded systems. I’m creating computationally-active, physical-media design environments for an unusual set of users, including children, artists, and other non-engineers.
- Engaging computing means the design processes that people use when they are creating, building, and debugging. I’m specifically interested in environments that allow people to perform ultra-rapid prototyping, to exploring their ideas by implementing them immediately, getting feedback from seeing them in action, and then iterating, repeating the process. A negotiational process rather than a planned one.
I am also working on building novel tools and approaches for student to gain fluency with data.
We’ve built the iSENSE collaborative data visualization platform, and a build of MIT App Inventor with extensions for publishing data to iSENSE.
We are also working on CS Pathways, to integrate computer science into middle schools based on kids building apps for social good.
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Distinguished Research Professor of Microbiology, University of Dayton
Dr. Tenover has had a long-standing interest in clinical microbiology, mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance and development of rapid diagnostic methods for infectious diseases. After undergraduate studies at the University of Dayton, he completed his Masters and Ph.D. in Medical Microbiology at the University of Rochester and undertook Post Doctoral studies in Clinical Microbiology and Public Health at the University of Washington in Seattle.
He served as Associate Chief of Microbiology at the Seattle Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Associate Professor of Laboratory Medicine at the University of Washington from 1982-90. In 1983, Dr. Tenover took a leave of absence from the Seattle VA Medical Center to work in Ismailia, Egypt, to help establish a clinical microbiology laboratory at Suez Canal University to support their medical school. In 1986, he took another leave of absence to work on rapid diagnostic DNA probes for infectious diseases at the Armed Forces Research Institute for Medical Sciences in Bangkok, Thailand. In 1990, he joined the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta and served for 18 years as Associate Director for Laboratory Science in the Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion and then as Director of the Office of Antimicrobial Resistance. He also served as Adjunct Professor of Epidemiology in the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University.
He joined Cepheid, a molecular diagnostics company based in Silicon Valley in California in 2008 as Head of Scientific Affairs. Over the next 14 years, he contributed to the development of over 20 PCR-based diagnostic tests for infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance. During this time, he also served as Consulting Professor of Pathology at Stanford University School of Medicine, where he worked collaboratively with several Stanford faculty members on studies of antimicrobial resistance and the development of rapid diagnostic tests for viral diseases. In 2023, he returned to the University of Dayton as Distinguished Research Professor of Microbiology. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Medical Microbiology and a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology, the Infectious Diseases Society of America, and the International Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.
Dr. Tenover received the John E. Dlugos, Jr. Memorial Award of Excellence in Biology from the University of Dayton, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Award for Outstanding Performance as a Senior Biomedical Scientist, the National Center for Infectious Diseases Recognition Award for Public Health Research and Service, the Becton Dickinson Award for Outstanding Research in Clinical Microbiology from the American Society for Microbiology, the Alumnus of the Year Award from the University of Dayton and Lifetime achievement awards from the Illinois Society for Microbiology and from the Danaher Corporation, the parent company of Cepheid. He has authored over 350 peer-reviewed publications and edited 11 books.
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Professor of Government Emeritus, Northeastern University
I study international relations and political economy, and from 1981 to 2021 taught at Mills College, Smith College, the University of North Carollina at Chapel Hill, the Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy in the United Arab Emirates and the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. My most recent articles appear in the Australian Journal of International Affairs, The International Specator and International Politics. In 1992-93, I was Fulbright Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Aleppo in Syria, and in 2001 was Fulbright Lecturer in Political Science at Aden University in Yemen.
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Research Associate, Centre for Global Political Economy, University of Sussex
Freddie Daley is a Research Associate at the Centre for Global Political Economy University of Sussex and research and communications lead on the SUS-POL project. He is co-author of the book Changing Our Ways: Behaviour Change and the Climate Crisis and articles in the journals Earth Systems Governance, Global Sustainability and Energy Research and Social Science.
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Directeur de l'EDHEC Infrastructure Institute, EDHEC Business School
Frederic Blanc-Brude, Ph. D., est directeur de l'EDHEC Infrastructure Institute et de l'EDHEC Asie-Pacifique. Il est titulaire d'un doctorat en finance (King's College London) et titulaire d'un diplôme de la London School of Economics, de la Sorbonne et de Sciences Po Paris. Il représente également l'EDHEC Business School au Conseil consultatif du Fonds mondial pour les infrastructures de la Banque mondiale.
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Chargé de cours aux départements de Sciences des religions et d'Études urbaines et touristiques, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)
Avec des formations de géographe, d’historien et de religiologue, Frédéric Castel mesure depuis 25 ans l’évolution du paysage ethnoreligieux du Québec à l’aide de méthodes quantitatives (statistiques) et qualitatives (enquêtes de terrain). Dans l’ouvrage collectif Le Québec APRÈS Bouchard-Taylor. Les identités religieuses de l’immigration (2012), il a cherché à voir comment se joue l’équation ethnicité/religion aux échelles des groupes ethniques et des univers religieux. Au fil des ans, il a publié des articles dans l’État du Québec dont la synthèse « De la visibilité des lieux de culte à l’invisibilité des jeunes ».
D’autre part, pour le compte de diverses instances du gouvernement du Québec et de certaines villes, il a travaillé sur divers dossiers comprenant une dimension religieuse. Il se concentre actuellement sur l’évolution récente du paysage religieux du Québec à partir des nouvelles données de recensements.
Il vient de terminer des articles sur l’immigration musulmane et sur l’immigration des chrétiens du Moyen-Orient au Québec.
Ces dernières années, il a écrit de courts articles sur certains aspects de la géopolitique électorale (mairie de Montréal, élections partielles au Québec, géopolitique du cabinet Trudeau, élection sénatoriale en Alabama, élections primaires américaines).
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Associate Professor, Organizational Behavior, INSEAD
Frédéric Godart is an Associate Professor (with tenure) of Organizational Behavior at INSEAD.
He received his PhD from Columbia University in the City of New York. He also holds an MPhil in Social and Political Sciences from the University of Cambridge (Trinity College) in the United Kingdom, an MSc in Management from Sciences Po Paris, and was a fellow of the École Normale Supérieure in France.
His research explores creative industries (e.g., arts, fashion design, footwear, modeling, watchmaking). He covers the impact of formal and informal social networks on creativity, as well as the role played by stylistic choices and brand dynamics in the formation of firms and customers’ identities. He has received several prestigious awards such as the Academy of Management Organizational Behavior Division’s 2012 Best Paper Award and the Academy of Management Conflict Management Division’s 2017 Best Paper Award – New Directions.
Between 2018 and 2020, he was the Academic Director of the HEC Paris luxury certificate, sponsored by Kering (owner of Gucci, Saint Laurent...)
Since 2022, he is the co-editor-in chief of Poetics: Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts.
He has published his research in a wide range of leading academic peer reviewed journals such as Organization Science, the Academy of Management Journal, the Strategic Management Journal, Harvard Business Review, the Annual Review of Sociology, and Social Forces, and in several edited books. He is the author of "Unveiling Fashion: Business, Culture, and Identity in the Most Glamorous Industry" (Palgrave MacMillan, 2012) and (with Jacques Neatby) of "Leadership Team Alignment: From Conflict to Collaboration" (Stanford University Press, 2023).
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Dr. Lemieux joined the George Washington University in 2006 and he is jointly appointed at the Department of Sociology and the College of Professional Studies. He received his Ph.D. in Criminology from the University of Montreal in 2002. Dr. Lemieux’s research has focused on policing, homeland security, and cybersecurity. He is currently conducting studies on cyber defense and intelligence sharing on cyber threats. Dr. Lemieux has also published various journal articles examining crime control during major disasters, counter-terrorism, intelligence agencies, and police cooperation. He has published six books; Militarization of the Police Apparatus (2005), Norms and Practices in Criminal Intelligence (2006), Homeland Security Handbook (2007), International Police Cooperation (2010, Crime During Disasters (2010), Economic Development, Crime, and Policing (2014). He is currently working on a new book on Strategic Cyber Operations to be published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2015.
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Professor of Environmental Science, Griffith University
Frederic Leusch is Professor of Environmental Science at Griffith University (Australia), where he teaches biology and environmental toxicology. His current research focuses on occurrence, fate and toxicity of micropollutants and microplastics and the development of in vitro bioassays for water quality assessment.
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professeur de science politique, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Professeur de science politique à l'Université Paris 1-Panthéon-Sorbonne, chercheur au Centre européen de sociologie et de science politique (CESSP-CNRS), les recherches de Frédéric Sawicki portent sur les partis politiques, l'engagement militant et la politique locale.
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Professeur, géologie des surfaces planétaires, Université Paris-Saclay
Frédéric Schmidt est enseignant-chercheur, spécialiste des surfaces planétaires. Il étudie les échanges de molécules volatiles entre surface et atmosphère sur Mars et les glaces dans le Système Solaire.
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Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
My substantive areas of interest are resilience processes and outcomes for positive mental health. I have been leading the Resilience to Loneliness (RESLON) research, which is being expanded to investigate the complex interplay between biological systems, psychological and social-environmental factors in loneliness for mental and physical health outcomes. The RESLON-MPH project will use various research approaches combining intensive longitudinal data (e.g., experienced sampling methods), large-scale genetic studies (eg genome-wide association studies), and intranasal oxytocin trials. I am also involved in the research at BASE which aims to improve understanding of psychological problems and disorders, and to evaluate the effectiveness of evidence-based treatments inspired by the metacognitive control system model.
My research focuses on the application and assessment of quantitative methods in the social and behavioural sciences, covering a broad range of topics in design and data analysis, using complex methodology from both structural equations and multilevel modelling perspectives, complexity science and psychological network analysis. I try to combine these quantitative and substantive interests into a single programme of research that seeks to understand and promote adaptive psychological functioning and resilience.
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Lecturer in Law, Cardiff University
Dr Cram is Lecturer in Law at the School of Law and Politics and Director of the Centre for Crime, Law and Justice at Cardiff University. His research interests are in the fields of policing, offender management, criminological theory, procedural justice, and legitimacy. Dr Cram has authored a number of significant Integrated Offender Management (IOM)-focused publications, including his most recent book: Integrated Offender Management and the Policing of Prolific Offenders (Routledge, 2023). His current work on IOM involves a Ministry of Justice funded national evaluation of the implementation of new arrangements introduced under the 2021 'Refresh’ of IOM.
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Senior Lecturer, Department of Community Development, SD Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies
Dr Frederick Dapilah is a senior lecturer in the Department of Community Development, Simon Diedong Dombo University of Business and Integrated Development Studies, Wa, Ghana. He obtained his doctorate in geography from Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany, in 2020 with a dissertation entitled “Climate change adaptation in the Global South: navigating complexity to build adaptive capacity and resilience to climate change in Northern Ghana”. Frederick’s research is at the intersection of human-environment relations, focusing on human dimensions of vulnerability, adaptation and resilience in the context of climate change and how these open up for exploration of efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Agreement. He is a postdoctoral fellow of the Climate Change Research in Africa programme (ClimapAfrica) and the NDC Financing Fellowship Programme (NDC-FFP). In addition, he is an editorial board member of SN Social Science journal and works as a guest editor for the journal Regional Environmental Change.
(https://ubids.edu.gh/fplm/departments/community-development)
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Professor of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Washington
Dr. Rivara served as founding director of the Harborview Injury and Research Center in Seattle for 13 years, founding president of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention, and his contributions to the field of injury control have spanned 30 years. He has received numerous honors including the Charles C. Shepard Science Award from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Public Health Association, Injury Control and Emergency Health Services Section Distinguished Career Award, and the American Academy of Pediatrics, Section on Injury and Poison Prevention, Physician Achievement Award, and the UW School of Public Health Distinguished Alumni Award. Rivara was elected to the Institute of Medicine in 2005. Rivara is also a founding board member of the Washington State Academy of Science. He was one of the editors of WHO's report, World Report on Child Injury.
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Assistant Professor (Internal Medicine, Kidney Transplantation & Nephrology), Erasmus University Medical Center
Frederike Ambagtsheer, PhD, is a criminologist and organ trafficking researcher based at Erasmus MC Transplant Institute, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Department of Nephrology and Kidney Transplantation in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
She has a MSc in Criminology, a LL.M. in Public International Law and obtained her PhD (cum laude) on the Organ Trade in 2017. She initiated/coordinated the HOTT Project (2012-2016) and is the recipient of a Veni grant from the Dutch Research Council (NWO) for the project, 'Organs as a Gateway to Europe: studying kidney sales among migrants entering the EU' (2021-2025).
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Lecturer, Pwani University
Fredrick Kayusi has been a lecturer and research scientist in Pwani University's Department of Environmental Science in Kilifi-Kenya for more than five years.
He has a Master of Science degree in geography from Pwani University and is currently a PhD candidate. He also has a Post Graduate Certificate in Representing the Real World in Geographic Information System and Diploma in Advanced Diploma in Geographic Information Systems from Alison in Galway, Ireland.
He researches earth sciences, slope stability, mining, sustainability transformations in post-mining regions, geotechnical solutions, climate change, GIS & GPS services, and sediment dynamics in Kenya's hydrological systems, trying to understand their sources, fate and the biophysical conditions that control sediment deposition and accretion and their possible effects on critical habitats. He is also interested in mainstreaming geoscience as key contributor to ecosystem assessment, management, and the blue economy. He has also been involved in slope stability mapping, specifically generating slope stability maps and satellite imagery (remote sensing).
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Lecturer in Accounting & Finance, University of Stirling
My research interests are motivated and driven by professional and personal experiences in accounting and finance and are grounded in the areas of Personal Finance and Financial Reporting. In relation to personal finance, my research interests focus on risk tolerance and investor characteristics; investment strategies and portfolio performance; and financial literacy. Whereas, my research interests in financial reporting mainly target public sector entities; voluntary and mandatory disclosures in annual reports.
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Professor of psychology, Lund University
My research concerns how people perceive themselves and others with regard to morality, personality, and the like. Main areas:
Moral psychology - How do we come to the judgment that something is morally blameworthy or praiseworthy? Using experimental methods we study how judgments and decisions are affected by contextual factors and interact with personality.
Stereotypes and prejudice - How do stereotypes affect our view of ourselves and others? Experimental research based on social cognitive theories.
Personality assessment - What role does social desirability play in the measurement of personality, and how can we counteract it in self-ratings? Involves both basic and applied research.
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Senior Lecturer in Library and Information Science, Linnaeus University
Fredrik Hanell holds a PhD in Library and Information Studies from Lund University (2019). He is a Senior Lecturer in Library and Information Science and Head of the Department of Cultural Sciences at Linnaeus University, Sweden. His research interests include critical library studies, in particular focusing on public libraries as actors in a democratic society, and studies of media and information literacy in digital settings, as well as digital methods development and critique. He currently teaches on the Bachelor's programmes in Library and Information Science and the Master's programme in Digital Humanities.
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Associate Professor of Sociology, Tufts University
I study masculine power, neoliberalism, feminist theory, and Black politics. My forthcoming book, Black Boys Apart, uses the case study of single-sex public schools to show how neoliberal ideologies and respectability politics are transforming Black manhood.
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Lecturer in History of Art and Liberal Arts, University of Bristol
Freya Gowrley is a Lecturer in History of Art and Liberal Arts at the University of Bristol, and writes about the relationship between art and identity from the early modern period to the present day. She received her PhD in History of Art from the University of Edinburgh in 2016. Her work has explored the role of emotions in the decoration of the eighteenth-century home, the relationship between art and pornography, and, most recently, the importance of collage as an art form that can express our most intimate relationships, worries, and desires. She is the author of Domestic Space in Britain, 1750–1840: Materiality, Sociability, and Emotion (Bloomsbury, 2022) and Fragmentary Forms: A New History of Collage, due out September 2024, with Princeton University Press.
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PhD Candidate, Griffith University
Freya Langley is a writer and PhD candidate at Griffith University. Her doctoral research focuses on women and gender diverse people's participation and experiences in the Australian music scene, with a view to addressing chronic gender inequality in these spaces from a grassroots perspective.
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PhD candidate, University of Adelaide
Freyja Watters is a PhD student exploring the global wildlife trade
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Quizmaster, The Conversation
Fritz Holznagel is a professional writer and fun fact fanatic. He is the 1995 winner of the Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions, co-founder of the biographical database Who2, and winner of an Emmy Award for scripting the CBS animated special "A Claymation Easter Celebration." He is also the author of books including "The Ultimate Droodles Compendium" and "Secrets of the Buzzer." He lives in Somerville, Massachusetts with his wife and several backyard bunnies.
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Research Associate, Indaba Agricultural Policy Research Institute (IAPRI)
Fwasa Singogo is an economist with several years of research experience in development economics, agricultural policy analysis and economic theory. He is a research associate at Indaba Agricultural Policy Research (IAPRI) in Zambia. He previously worked as a Research Associate at the University of Namibia from 2018. His publications include a book entitled African Gold: Production, Trade and Economic Development and several peer-reviewed journal articles, some of which include: The ASGM sector in Africa – A child of misery and desperation?; Illicit Financial Flows, Theft and Gold Smuggling in Africa; Structural Changes of the 21st Century and their Impact on the Gold Price; Trade and Smuggling of African Gold to UAE: the Cases of Libya and Sudan; Gold, Economic Transformation and Regional Integration in Africa; and Determinants of Per Capita Alcohol Consumption in Africa: A cross-section Approach. Some of his work can be found here: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Fwasa-Singogo-2
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