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Susanna Alyce

PhD Candidate, School of Health and Social Care, University of Essex
Susanna Alyce is a doctoral candidate at the University of Essex researching within a “Mad Studies” paradigm CSA survivors’ experiences of trust and trustworthiness. She is an educator in trauma-informed practice at the University for clinical psychology students, and for the charity Survivors’ Voices.
Susanna also delivers Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), and is a yoga teacher. She is currently working towards her diploma as a Person-Centred Counsellor at The Norwich Centre. She is a member of the Tavistock Network for Non-Recent CSA (https://www.networknrcsa.com), and facilitates two peer support groups for researchers.

Susanna is a survivor of child sex abuse (CSA). Her own debilitating anxiety led her to meditation and yoga in her early 20s. These effective self-care practices enabled her to live a full and rewarding life, while managing her internal landscape of fear. It was not until she turned 50 that she discovered the origin of what she now understands as ‘trauma distress’ caused by the dissociated and silenced memories of CSA.

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Susannah Ayre

PhD Candidate, Queensland University of Technology
Susannah is an Accredited Practising Dietitian (APD) and PhD Candidate at Queensland University of Technology.

Her research is centred around feeding interactions in toddlerhood and early childhood. She is currently completing a PhD that focuses on siblings, and their role at mealtimes in Australian households. She applies a prevention lens to explore factors that influence how eating behaviours are shaped early in life to optimise long-term health outcomes for children.

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Susannah Fisher

Principal Research Fellow, Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction, UCL
Susannah Fisher is a Principal Research Fellow at University College London and holds a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship. She works across research, policy and practice on adaptation policies, programmes and finance. Her interest is in ensuring these processes support effective and equitable adaptation, and that adaptation is at the scale and ambition we need for the escalating impacts of climate change.

Before taking up her Fellowship, she was a Lecturer in the Bartlett Development Planning Unit and worked with philanthropic foundations, multilateral climate funds, bilateral donors and research institutes to provide technical inputs into practical climate change projects and programmes. In previous roles, she led research across the European innovation agency for climate change where she developed a cross-cutting research and thought leadership portfolio on the role of innovation and policy experimentation in the systems change needed to address the urgent climate challenge. Prior to this she was a Team Leader and Senior Researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development, where she led action research projects supporting national and sub-national governments to adapt to climate change in different contexts.

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Susannah Bruns Ali

Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Administration, Florida International University
Dr. Ali is an Assistant Professor who joined the department of public policy and administration in Fall 2014. She received both her Ph.D. and M.P.P degrees from the American University. She had previously worked as a Policy Analyst at the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services where she collaborated with the White House, Congress, various Federal Government agencies, and advocacy groups. Her professional experience includes a position as a Human Resources Developer for a human services nonprofit organization.

Dr. Ali’s research focuses on factors that influence public sector employee career choices, with particular attention on the influence of the political environment on careerists’ choices. Her publication has appeared in Public Administration Review. She has presented her research at the annual meetings of the American Society for Public Administration, the American Political Science Association, the Association for Public Policy and Management, the Public Management Research Association, and the Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action. Dr. Ali has received several awards, including: Presidential Management Fellowship, Presidential Letter of Commendation, the DHHS Secretary’s Award for Distinguished Service, Human Services awards from the State of Maryland, and the American University John D. Young Award for scholarship, leadership, and commitment to public service.

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Susanne Ditlevsen

Professor in statistics, University of Copenhagen
I am a professor in statistics at the University of Copenhagen, with research interests including statistical inference for stochastic processes, mathematical biology, mathematical modeling of physiological systems, and non-linear dynamics and mathematical neuroscience. My career has also led me to model the behaviour of marine mammals.

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Susanne Täuber

Affiliated researcher, University of Amsterdam
Dr Susanne Täuber is a social psychologist and expert in gender equality, harassment and power abuse in higher education. She is affiliated with the University of Amsterdam. She investigates factors that affect the decoupling of practice from policy, for instance in the context of gender quotas and diversity, considering in particular power, intersectionality and inequality regimes. Dr Täuber further is interested in social identity processes during societal and organizational change, particularly where trajectories of culture, norm and value change are concerned.

Her research has received substantial funding, for instance from the Dutch Research Foundation and the Dutch and German Ministries of Defense. Her work has been published in leading journals of social psychology (e.g., Personality and Social Psychological Bulletin), organization and management science (e.g., Journal of Management Studies, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes) and multidisciplinary science journals (e.g., The Lancet, Nature, Climate Change).

Dr Täuber serves as a member of the Advisory Committee Diverse and Inclusive Higher Education and Research, which provides advice to the Dutch government on promoting an inclusive, diverse and safe learning and working environment within the field of higher education and in scientific research. She further volunteers at the Academic Parity Movement and the Network Against Power Abuse in Science, non-profit organizations aiming to fight harassment and power abuse in academia.

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Susie Kilshaw

Associate Professor in Medical Anthropology, UCL
Susie's work focuses on reproductive disruptions, pregnancy endings and miscarriage. Her interest on impaired parenthood and compromised reproduction was piqued during her PhD work on Gulf War Syndrome (GWS) and her book Impotent Warriors: Gulf War Syndrome, Vulnerability and Masculinity includes these themes (Berghahn, 2009). Her research explored how cultural context impacts the way pregnancy loss is framed, articulated, and experienced in Qatar and the UK; and led to the book Pregnancy and Miscarriage in Qatar: Women, reproduction and the state (Bloomsbury, 2020) and Navigating Miscarriage: Social, Medical and Conceptual Perspectives (Berghahn, 2020). In 2019 She was awarded a Wellcome Trust University Award to continue her research into pregnancy endings. This ongoing project investigates what is left behind when a pregnancy ends and asks how these materials are perceived and handled in different contexts (clinics, homes, burial sites, crematoria) and by different people (women, their families, doctors, nurses, and funeral staff). For this work she has been based at an NHS Early Pregnancy Assessment Unit and its associated gynaecology wards. Susie has previously worked for the NHS as a clinically applied medical anthropologist.

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Suvrath Mahadevan

Verne M. Willaman Professor of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Penn State
Dr. Mahadevan's research interests include exoplanets, astronomical instrumentation, large scale surveys, astrophotonics, astrobiology and precision measurements in astrophysics.

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Suzanne Cosh

Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology, University of New England
A/Prof Cosh's primary research interests are in the mental health, specifically in relation to climate change including climate change anxiety and distress. She is also interested in natural disasters and mental health, including the impacts of disaster exposure on wellbeing, as well as ways of promoting preparedness and resilience in relation to natural disasters. She also has interests in sport psychology, including athlete mental health and disordered eating in sport and exercise.

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Suzanne Eckes

Susan S. Engeleiter Professor of Education Law, Policy and Practice, University of Wisconsin-Madison
I have published over 100 articles and book chapters on education legal issues. I am the former past president of the Education Law Association and am currently an endowed chair at the University of Wisconsin Madison School of Education. I am a faculty affiliate at the law school as well.

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Suzanne Heywood-Everett

Visiting Lecturer, Clinical Psychology, Leeds Beckett University
Dr. Suzanne Heywood-Everett is a Visiting Lecturer at Leeds Beckett University. She is also a Clinical Psychologist, Professional lead of Medical Psychology, Clinical Lead Primary Care Wellbeing Service, Bradford District Care NHS Foundation Trust, Clinical Associate for Eating Disorders for Yorkshire and Humber Clinical Network, NHS England. Suzanne has specialised in eating disorders clinically, as a researcher and as a lecturer and is passionate about raising the profile of inequalities in accessing health care.

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Suzanne Meldrum

Lecturer, Speech Pathology, Edith Cowan University
Suzanne is a lecturer in Speech Pathology in the School of Medical and Health Sciences.

Current Teaching
SPE1102 Language Across The Lifespan
SPE2103 Analysis of Speech and Language
SPE3106 Management of Speech and Language Disorders
SPE4110, 4111 Clinical Practicum (Tutor)
Background
Adjunct Research Officer – University of Western Australia (current)
Post-Doctoral Research Fellow – University of Western Australia (past)
Speech Pathologist, Therapy Focus (past)
Speech Pathologist, WA Department of Health Shire Wyndham East Kimberley (past)
Research Areas and Interests
The pathogenesis and development of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs)
Infant and early childhood language development
Effects of early experiences upon language development
Effects of prematurity on later speech and language development.
Nutritional effects on neurodevelopment, particularly long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids
Qualifications
Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Western Australia, 2012.
Bachelor of Science (Human Communication Science), Curtin University of Technology, 2006.

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Suzanne Rutland

Professor of Hebrew, Biblical and Jewish Studies, University of Sydney
Suzanne Rutland is Professor in the Department of Hebrew, Biblical and Jewish Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Sydney. Her research focuses on Jewish education in Australia, Judaism and Islam in Australia, Australia and the Struggle for Soviet Jewry, Jews from the Former Soviet Union in Australia and Australia, the Holocaust and its aftermath.

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Suzi Malan

Manager: Partnerships and Projects at Department of Family Medicine, University of Pretoria
Dr Suzi Malan is currently working for the University of Pretoria in a multi-disciplinary academic environment with a focus on sustainable community development, particularly in the field of primary healthcare and One Health. During the COVID-19 pandemic, she acted as project manager of two large collaborations with mine companies to support mine communities and mineworkers with providing homebased care. Suzi thrives in environments focused on finding holistic policy solutions related to any of the country’s environmental and societal challenges.

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Suzie Dunn

Assistant Professor, Law, Dalhousie University
Suzie Dunn is an Assistant Professor in Law & Technology for 2021-2022. She will teach Contracts and Law and Technology in the first semester, and Contracts and Intellectual Property in the second term. She is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. While at the University of Ottawa, she acted as a part-time professor where she taught Contracts Law and the Law of Images. She was awarded the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Scholarship for her research which centers on the intersections of equality, technology and the law, with a specific focus on technology-facilitated violence, deepfakes, and impersonation in digital spaces. She will also coach the Harold G. Fox Intellectual Property moot team

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Suzy Solley

PhD Candidate, Queen Mary University of London

My research interests are primarily in gender, development, intersectionality, well-being, gendered agency, qualitative methods and South Asian studies.

My doctoral research explores intersectionality, well-being and agency amongst Nepali widows. The methodological approach taken involves a triangulation of qualaitive methods. My research hopes to not only contribute empirically to the limited scholarship on widowhood, especially in Nepal, but also conceptually to reimagine approaches to understanding and theorising widowhood. With this doctoral research, and my personal pursuits outwith this work, I hope to bring attention to the issue of widowhood and in some way improve the lives of Nepali widows.

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Svante Lundgren

Researcher, Lund University
Svante Lundgren is Associate Professor of Jewish Studies from Åbo Akademi University, Finland, and works as a researcher at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies and the Centre for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University, Sweden. His research interests include modern Jewish history and thought, antisemitism, and Jewish-Christian relations, but also Christian communities in the Middle East, especially Armenians and Assyrians. He has published extensively on the Armenian Genocide and on modern and contemporary Armenian issues. He acted as the narrator in the documentary movie Map of Salvation (1915), which tells the story of five women missionaries who were eyewitnesses to the Armenian Genocide. In 1998 he was awarded with the International Erich Fromm Prize for his book on the religious thought of Erich Fromm.

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Sven Sandin

Associate Professor, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, Karolinska Institutet
Sven Sandin is a statistician and epidemiologist with 35 years of experience, 200 research publications and an Associate Professor at the Departments of Psychiatry at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.. He has a background from the pharmaceutical industry where he gained broad experience in design and analysis of clinical trials, phases I to IV, production and toxicology. Since joining Karolinska Institutet in 2003 he has been involved in studies of pregnancy related outcomes, psychiatric epidemiology, cancer, autoimmune diseases and mapping risk to occupation and familial exposure using the Swedish registers.

His current research focus is on the etiology of Autism Spectrum Disorders. As such he is the PI of a NIH funded project examining autism risk in families with Rheumatoid arthritis (RAASD) and the PI of a project funded by the Swedish Research Council examining etiological links between autism and preterm birth.

He is the PI of a two genetic data collections in Sweden. One includes 3,000 individuals with autism in Sweden and another includes more than 3,000 individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder, Tourette syndrome and tics. The purpose of the genetic studies is to identify genes and possible environmental factors that increase the risk of developing the different disorders.

He is the PI of the Women Lifestyle and Health cohort (WLH) which was set up to create a large prospective cohort designed specifically to investigate the association between lifestyle factors (exogenous hormones and dietary habits) and cancer and cardiovascular diseases in young women. The cohort includes 50,000 women who answered an extensive questionnaire in 1991/92, a follow-up questionnaire in 2003/04.

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Svitlana Chernykh

Senior Lecturer, Australian National University
Svitlana Chernykh is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University (ANU). Prior to coming to ANU, she was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Oxford. She is the recipient of the 2009 Paul Lazarsfeld Award for the Best Paper in Political Communication from the American Political Science Association and the Discovery Early Career Researcher Award from the Australian Research Council (2016-2018). Her research focuses on democratisation, comparative political institutions (election, parties, constitutions), and executive-legislative relations. Her work has been published in many of the discipline’s leading journals, including the Journal of Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Political Communication, Legislative Studies Quarterly, and Political Research Quarterly.

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Swapnesh Masrani

Swapnesh Masrani is currently Lecturer at the University of Stirling. Swapnesh is the Deputy Director of the Stirling MBA. His research interests are in management history and strategic management. Swapnesh obtained his PhD from the University of St Andrews where he examined the strategic response of firms to growing international competition in the Dundee jute industry during the 20th century.

Currently he is researching the origins and development of governance structures of large businesses in India during the 20th century.

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Swrajit Sarkar

Senior Lecturer in Nutrition, City, University of London
Swrajit is a registered public health nutritionist with the association for nutrition (UKVRN), and a member of the Nutrition Society, a full member of the Royal Society of Biology and chartered biologist (CBiol), and fellow of the Royal Society of Public Health (RSPH). His educational background includes a BSc (H) in Biosciences: Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Masters by Research (MRes) in Public Health Nutrition and a three year doctoral programme in Public Health Nutrition.

Previous to his current role has worked as an Associate Dean Student Experience (Faculty of Health and Social Sciences) at Bournemouth University, he was also a senior lecturer in nutrition, he was working as an associate senior lecturer in food and nutrition at Leeds Trinity University and he was a lecturer of nutritional sciences at the University of Central Lancashire. He has also worked as an associate of access and widening participation unit and part-time Lecturer of the University of Greenwich.

His key research has been in the field of non-communicable diseases risk identification among south Asian Communities living in the United Kingdom, although he has a broader interest in nutrition-related non-communicable diseases (NR-NCDs) in developing countries and the impact of the nutrition transition on NCD prevalence among migrants from developing countries into developed countries. He is a member of the Africa Nutrition Society (ANS) and have assisted the ANS in organising the African Nutrition Epidemiology Conferences (ANEC) in Kenya and South Africa.

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Sydney Engelberg

Teaching Fellow, School of Public Health, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Sydney Hartman-Munick

Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, UMass Chan Medical School
Sydney Munick-Hartman, assistant professor of pediatrics at UMass Chan Medical School, is a board-certified pediatrician and fellowship trained adolescent medicine physician with expertise in eating disorders. Dr. Munick-Hartman is the president of the New England Regional Chapter of the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. She is a pediatrician at UMass Memorial Children’s Medical Center. She has published on increases in eating disorders during the pandemic as well as adolescent body image.

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Sydney Lines

Sydney Lines holds a B.A. English Literature, B.A. Museum Studies, M.A. English Literature, and M.A. Creative Enterprise and Cultural Leadership from Arizona State University. She is Project Manager of the Winnifred Eaton Archive and Project Manager for the UBC Public Humanities Hub. Her work has appeared in Oxford Bibliographies in American Literature and is forthcoming in Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers. She is currently writing a dissertation on Winnifred Eaton and Icelandic Canadian author Laura Goodman Salverson.

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Sydney Rosen

Professor of Global Health, Boston University

Sydney Rosen, M.P.A., is a Research Professor in the Department of Global Health and the Center for Global Health & Development of the Boston University School of Public Health and the co-director of the Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office (HE2RO) of the Wits Health Consortium at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. In collaboration with HE2RO and colleagues at BUSPH, she leads an interdisciplinary team that is carrying out a set of studies on the effectiveness, costs, and benefits of HIV/AIDS care and treatment interventions. She has also worked on other applied economics projects at the Center, including research on the economics of tuberculosis, antimicrobial resistance, malaria prevention and treatment, and air pollution. Her technical training is in public policy analysis and applied economics. She came to the Center in 2001 from the Health Office of the former Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID). Before joining the staff of the Health Office, she managed a set of HIID environmental policy projects in the former Soviet Union. She is also the co-founder and former executive director of WorldTeach, Inc., a nonprofit organization that places volunteer teachers in developing countries. She holds a B.A. from Harvard University and a master’s degree from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard.

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Sydney E. Smith

Ph.D. Candidate in Computational Neuroscience, University of California, San Diego
As a Neuroscience PhD candidate at UC San Diego, I specialize in neural signal analysis. Our brains produce many different kinds of signals--chemical, magnetic, electrical--and the ways that neuroscientists use these signals is essential to how we research the brain. I'm specifically interested in the brain's electrical signals, or "brain waves" that we can measure using tools like the electroencephalogram (EEG). When these electrical signals are measured in research experiments, neuroscientists use complex mathematical methods to extract information from their brain waves. This is where my research comes in: how does the math we use influence how we think about the brain? What happens when we're using that math incorrectly or misinterpreting it?

These are the questions I face every day in my research. So far, I've been able to answer some pretty big questions about brain waves and how they change in patients receiving treatment for severe depression. By challenging our assumptions about brain waves, I hope to help settle long-standing mysteries about the brain and uncover new, exciting discoveries that help us better understand how the brain works in healthy cognition and disease.

Currently, I'm a PhD candidate in the Neurosciences Graduate Program, supervised by Dr. Bradley Voytek in the Neural and Data Analytics Lab at the University of California, San Diego. I have a B.S. in Biopsychology from UC Santa Barbara and also volunteer as a writer for Stories of Women in Neuroscience, a blog and podcast that features women neuroscientists, their research, and journeys in academia.

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Syed Assad

Research Associate, Quantum Science & Technology, Australian National University
Syed Muhamad Assad received the B.Sc. degree with a double major in physics and computational science from the National University of Singapore, and the joint Ph.D. degree in realization of harmonic entanglement between a light beam and its second harmonic, and theoretical proofs of security for quantum key distribution protocols from the National University of Singapore and The Australian National University in 2011. He was with the National University of Singapore as a Teaching Assistant and the Centre for Quantum Technologies as a Research Assistant. He has been with the Quantum Optics Group, The Australian National University, since 2011.

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Syka Iqbal

Lecturer in Psychology, University of Bradford
I am currently a lecturer in Psychology at University of Bradford. Prior to this, I worked as a lecturer at Birkbeck University and Manchester Metropolitan University.

My research investigates health behaviours, specifically in relation to ethnically diverse groups. I have worked collaboratively with the NHS on tackling health inequalities and building behavioural models for change. I am interested in mental health, health inequalities, critical, and community psychology. I also have expertise on rapid qualitative research and public and patient involvement.

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Sylvain Barbot

Associate Professor of Earth Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
My research focuses on understanding the dynamics of the lithosphere-asthenosphere system at time scales relevant to the seismic cycle. My work revolves around modeling seismic and geodetic data with the long-term goal of improving resilience to seismic hazards.

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Sylvan Baker

Senior lecturer, Royal Central School of Speech & Drama
Dr Sylvan Baker is an Artist, Practitioner and Researcher who has been working in Applied Arts & social justice for over 30 years.

He is a Senior Lecturer at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, London. Beyond Central, his practice has taken place in the UK and globally in sites across Brazil and the US. He has delivered projects in a diverse range of communities and contexts from favelas to hospitals, and has a specific interest in participatory collaboration, transitional justice and interventions in sites of conflict. His current research projects work with young researchers with experience of the UK care system, and separately with neurodivergent young people to develop resources to support positive adolescent mental health.

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Sylvester Kaczmarek

Chief Technology Officer, Imperial College London
Sylvester Kaczmarek is chief technology officer at OrbiSky Systems, where he specializes in the integration of artificial intelligence, robotics, cybersecurity, and edge computing in aerospace applications. His expertise includes architecting and leading the development of secure AI/machine learning capabilities and advancing cislunar robotic intelligence systems. Read more at SylvesterKaczmarek.com

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Sylvia Bell

Senior Instructor of Educational Leadership, Thompson Rivers University
I hold a Doctorate of Education, specialising in Educational Leadership from the University of Calgary (2014), a Master of Arts in Leadership and Administration from Gonzaga University (2007), a Bachelor of Education from Simon Fraser University (2002) and a Bachelor of Arts in English from Thompson Rivers University (1996).

I had years of elementary classroom experience before going into administration. I was the principal at Don Titus from 2012-2016; prior to that I was the principal of Windrem Elementary. As a teaching principal, I taught a variety of things from Music prep to Learning Assistance. But most of my teaching was helping our most vulnerable students learn literacy.

Currently I am on faculty at TRU where I teach in the masters program and serve as an Assessor and researcher in the Prior Learning and Recognition department.

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Sylvia Charity Akotia

Professor of Psychology, University of Ghana
Charity S. Akotia is a professor in the Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences, University of Ghana, Legon. Her specialty is social/community psychology and she teaches both at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology and Russian from the University of Ghana, a Master of Arts degree in community psychology from Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario, Canada, and a PhD from the University of Ghana.

Her main research interest is in suicidal behaviour in a cultural context and how to prevent suicide. She has collaborated with colleagues from Norway and Uganda to work in this area of psychology for several years. In recent times, she has also developed an interest in the multifaceted needs of the ageing and how they navigate on a daily basis to improve their lived experiences. She has also done some work on the psychology of eating behaviour. This area of research is new in Ghana and is a very interesting area where an attempt is made to understand how people eat and what eating means to them. Prof. Akotia also researches personhood in an African context. This project is funded by the Mellon Foundation and focuses on understanding how people conceptualise personhood and the factors that determine personhood.

She is a member of the Ghana Psychology Association (GPA) and has been licensed by the Ghana Psychology Council. Internationally, she is a member of the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) and the Critical Suicidology Group. She is the current national representative of the IASP and a co-chair of the Council of National Representatives of the IASP.

Research area(s) (including ongoing research).

Suicide and suicide prevention
Gender and gender role attitudes
Ageing, care and spirituality
Psychology of eating behaviour
Personhood in an African context

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Sylvia H. Duncan

Senior Research Fellow, Microbiology, University of Aberdeen
Dr Sylvia Duncan is a senior Research Fellow at the Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen. She has considerable experience in anaerobic microbiology and conducts research on a large bacterial strain collection used for research purposes. Her research interests include elucidating the composition of the human gut microbiota, the impact of diet and gut environmental factors on modulating the gut microbiota to promote health and prevent disease.

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Sylvie Bortoli

Ingénieure de Recherche, Université Paris Cité
Sylvie Bortoli est ingénieure de recherche en toxicologie mécanistique à l’Université Paris Cité. Dans l’équipe METATOX, elle coordonne plusieurs projets visant à caractériser l’impact de contaminants environnementaux tels que les hydrocarbures aromatiques polycycliques et les pesticides sur l’homéostasie métabolique en lien avec la progression tumorale, et s’intéresse particulièrement aux mécanismes de toxicité qui altèrent le fonctionnement des mitochondries. Elle a participé à l’expertise collective INSERM « Pesticides et Santé » pour le chapitre sur les fongicides SDHi et est membre du comité de pilotage “Cancer et Environnement” de la Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer et du conseil scientifique de la Société Française de Nutrition.

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