Menu

Search

Lynda Goldsworthy

Research Associate, University of Tasmania
Following many years as advocate, policy analyst and manager working across the non-government sector, focusing particularly on climate, high seas and antarctic issues, Lyn undertook a PhD at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania and is now a research associate at IMAS and member of Centre for Marine Socio-ecology

  More

Less

Lynette Washington

Research Fellow, UniSA Business, University of South Australia
I hold a PhD in English and Creative Writing from the University of Adelaide, and am the Founder and Publishing Director of the independent press, Glimmer Press. I have worked as an Editor and Publicist for MidnightSun Publishing. I have edited numerous story collections and my own story collection, Plane Tree Drive, was published in 2017. It was Highly Commended in the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award and shortlisted for the MUBA. I have over twenty years’ experience as a writer, editor, manuscript assessor and teacher of creative and professional writing.
I also consult on publishing with students in Creative Writing at Flinders University, and am a Research Fellow in the School of Business at UniSA.

  More

Less

Lynn Greenky

Associate Professor of Communication and Rhetorical Studies, Syracuse University
I am an attorney admitted to practice in New York State. I earned a Bachelor of Science and a Master of Arts in Communication Studies from Northwestern University. I have authored a book: When Freedom Speaks: The Boundaries and the Boundlessness of our First Amendment Right, published by Brandeis University Press and available for purchase on Amazon and other online outlets. My interests are in advocacy, argumentation, political communication, and first amendment jurisprudence. I have developed courses at Syracuse University that reflect those interests. I have been published in the Washington Post, The Hill, and Ms. Magazine and have participated in several podcasts, online lectures, and radio broadcasts. For more information, please visit https://lynngreenky.com/.

  More

Less

Lynn Kozak

Associate professor, History and Classical Studies, McGill University
Lynn Kozak has translated, directed, produced, and performed in numerous professional and student productions of ancient Greek and Latin epic and tragedy. Other research focuses on ancient Greek literature, classical receptions, and contemporary media studies, with particular interests in horror and television.

  More

Less

Lynn Meskell

PIK Professor of Anthropology; Professor of Historic Preservation, Weitzman School of Design, Penn Museum, University of Pennsylvania
Lynn Meskell is Penn Integrates Knowledge (PIK) Professor at the University of Pennsylvania. She is Richard D. Green Professor of Anthropology in the School of Arts and Sciences, Professor in the Graduate Program in Historic Preservation at the Weitzman School of Design, and curator in the Middle East and Asia sections at the Penn Museum. Currently she serves as AD White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University (2019-2025). She holds Honorary Professorships at Oxford University and Liverpool University in the UK, Shiv Nadar in India and the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa.

Over the last decade Lynn has conducted an institutional ethnography of UNESCO World Heritage, tracing the politics of governance and sovereignty and the subsequent implications for multilateral diplomacy, international conservation, and heritage rights. Employing archival and ethnographic analysis, her award-winning book A Future in Ruins: UNESCO, World Heritage, and the Dream of Peace (OUP, 2018) reveals UNESCO’s early forays into a one-world archaeology and its later commitments to global heritage. Building on this research, she is currently examining the entwined histories of colonialism, internationalism, espionage and archaeology in the Middle East coupled with a new project on the heritage security nexus at NATO. Her other fieldwork explores monumental regimes of research and preservation around World Heritage sites in India and how diverse actors and agencies address the needs of living communities.

  More

Less

Lynnaire Sheridan

Senior lecturer, University of Otago
Lynnaire Sheridan is a senior lecturer in HR and Management at the University of Otago.

Her educational research focuses on work integrated learning, academic integrity and widening participation through indigenising the curriculum. Her HR / management scholarship focuses on enhancing the employment outcomes of people with disabilities, understanding burnout and striving for business sustainability.

  More

Less

Lynne Chepulis

Associate Professor Health Sciences, University of Waikato
PhD health sciences (2008)
currently lead a number of large HRC-funded studies in primary healthcare and chronic disease (with equity focus)
executive board member of NZ Society for Study of Diabetes
associate member Royal Society of Medicine

  More

Less

Lynne Parker

Associate Vice Chancellor, University of Tennessee
Lynne E. Parker, a native Knoxvillian, is Associate Vice Chancellor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville (UTK), and Director of the AI Tennessee Initiative, which is positioning the University and the state of Tennessee as a national and global leader in the data-intensive knowledge economy. Prior to this role, she led national artificial intelligence (AI) policy efforts for four years (2018-2022) in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, serving as Deputy Chief Technology Officer of the United States, Founding Director of the National AI Initiative Office, and Assistant Director for AI. She also served as co-chair of the Congressionally-directed National AI Research Resource Task Force, which is working to democratize access to the computational and data infrastructure needed for AI research. She served for two years (2015-2016) at the National Science Foundation as Division Director for Information and Intelligent Systems. In these roles across three Administrations, she led the development of numerous landmark national AI policies bolstering research, governance, education and workforce training, international engagement, and the Federal use of AI.

Dr. Parker joined the UTK faculty in 2002 and is an expert on distributed and intelligent robot systems, human-robot interaction, and AI, having published extensively in these and related areas. She previously worked for several years as a Distinguished Research and Development Staff Member and Group Leader at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, researching multi-robot and human-robot systems. Dr. Parker has served on many government advisory boards, including the National Academies' Intelligence Science and Technology Experts Group (ISTEG), National Research Council's (NRC) committee on persistent surveillance for the counter-IED mission, NRC Panel for Review of the Engineering Laboratory at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), NRC Panel on Mechanical Science and Engineering at the Army Research Laboratory (ARL), NRC Advisory Panel on Information Science at ARL, NRC Advisory Panel on Air and Ground Vehicle Technology at ARL, and NRC Advisory Panel on Armor and Armaments at ARL. Dr. Parker was also a member of the 2004-2005 class of the Defense Science Study Group (DSSG).

She has received numerous awards for research, teaching, and service, including the U.S. Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) and the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Robotics and Automation Society’s George Saridis Leadership Award in Robotics and Automation. She is a Fellow of AAAI (Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence), AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science), and IEEE; and a Distinguished Member of ACM (Association for Computing Machinery). Dr. Parker earned a B.S. from Tennessee Technological University, an M.S. from the University of Tennessee, and a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, all in computer science.

  More

Less

Lynne Quick

Senior Research Fellow, Nelson Mandela University
I am a Senior Research Fellow associated with the African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience (ACCP) at Nelson Mandela University in South Africa. I am a palaeoecologist, specifically a palynologist who runs the Palaeoecology Laboratory (“Palaeolab”) at the university’s Gqeberha campus (Eastern Cape). My research relates to reconstructing southern African palaeoenvironments, with a key focus on the vegetation history and past climate dynamics of the highly biodiverse Cape Floristic Region.

  More

Less

Lynsey Sutton

Teaching Fellow/Clinical nurse specialist, Victoria University of Wellington
I graduated as a nurse in 1996 from the University of Nottingham and have worked in the Intensive care specialist area all my career. I have worked in Wellington ICU since 2004 where I have progressed through the career pathway to Expert level and worked briefly as an ICU flight retrieval nurse. In 2012 I graduated from Victoria University of Wellington with a Masters in clinical nursing. From 2009 I became an Associate Charge Nurse Manager (ACNM) managing and coordinating ICU services. Through these years I have led several projects improving the quality of patient care in the ICU and have published in several critical care journals. For the past 4 years I have been a guest lecturer going on to become a teaching fellow with Victoria University of Wellington post graduate Nursing programme as well as being the Clinical Nurse Specialist in Wellington ICU.

  More

Less

Lyombe Eko

Professor of Journalism and Creative Media Industries, Texas Tech University
Lyombe Eko is a professor in the College of Media and Communication, Texas Tech University. His areas of research and teaching expertise are comparative and international communication studies, with an emphasis on Francophone and Anglophone Africa; comparative information and communication technology law and policy, with a focus on the European Union, the United States, France and the UK. He also studies visual communication (cartoons), human Rights, and freedom of expression. He has published four books, including the award-winning, The Charlie Hebdo Affair and Comparative Journalistic Cultures: Human Rights Versus Religious Rites (Palgrave Macmillan 2019), and New Media Old Regimes: Case Studies in Comparative Communication Law and Policy (2012); and The Regulation of Sex-themed Visual Imagery: From Clay Tablets to Tablet Computers (2016). He has also published numerous, widely cited articles in law review journals and refereed visual and international communication journals.

Before he joined Texas Tech in 2015, he was an associate professor at the University of Iowa School of Journalism and Mass Communication. He was also Director of the African Studies Program at the University of Iowa. He has also taught at the University of Maine, Orono, Maine. He earned his PhD in Journalism from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Before his academic career, he was a journalist at Cameroon Radio and Television (CRTV), and an editor/translator and producer at the African Broadcasting Union (URTNA) in Nairobi, Kenya.

  More

Less

Lysanne Lessard

Associate Professor, Telfer School of Management, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
I received a Ph.D. in Information Systems from the University of Toronto's Faculty of Information. I also hold a Master's degree in Information Technology (M.Sc.) from Téluq - Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). While my primary funding agency is NSERC, I also hold grants from CIHR and SSHRC.

My research aims at improving how we design digitally enabled services like telehealth so that they can better address human needs. My research program focuses on three key aspects of the design of digitally enabled services: the need for improved models and modeling techniques supporting the analysis and design of these systems; the need to articulate their sociotechnical architectures; and the need to anchor the design of the information and communication technologies (ICTs) embedded in these systems both in relevant theories and in a deep understanding of multiple stakeholder needs. I investigate these aspects in the health care domain, with a particular interest on how they can support the transformation of health systems.

I am a member of the LIFE Institute and of the Institut du Savoir Montfort.

  More

Less

  11 12 13 14 
  • Market Data
Close

Welcome to EconoTimes

Sign up for daily updates for the most important
stories unfolding in the global economy.