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Hazel Jones

Learning and Teaching Consultant (Curriculum), Griffith University
Hazel Jones is a Learning & Teaching Consultant (Curriculum) in Griffith Business School, Griffith University. She is a member of the Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education (ASCILITE) Executive where she leads the Special Interest Groups portfolio, co-leads the 'Contextualising Horizon' Project. and co-leads the Learning Analytics SIG.

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Hazem Zohny

Research Fellow in Practical Ethics, University of Oxford
I’m a research fellow at Oxford University’s Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. My research interests cover a wide terrain in ethics, from issues of distributive justice to human enhancement technologies and the nature of well-being. I received my PhD from The University of Otago. Previously, I worked as a journalist in Egypt where I grew up.

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Heath Brown

Heath Brown is an assistant professor of public policy at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center, City University of New York. He has worked at the U.S. Congressional Budget Office as a Research Fellow, at the American Bus Association as a Policy Assistant, and at the Council of Graduate Schools as Research Director.

He is the author of three books, including Lobbying the New President, Tea Party Divided, and Pay-to-Play Politics: How Money Defines the American Democracy, available in April, 2016 (http://www.abc-clio.com/ABC-CLIOCorporate/product.aspx?pc=A5175C).

In addition to his research, Brown is Reviews Editor for Interest Groups & Advocacy (http://www.palgrave-journals.com/iga/index.html) and hosts a podcast called New Books in Political Science (www.newbooksinpoliticalscience.com), where he interviews new authors about their political science publications. He is also an expert contributor to The Hill.

Brown currently a co-leader of the New York City Chapter of the Scholar Strategy Network.

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Heath J. Prince

Research Scientist in Public Policy, University of Texas at Austin

Quantitative and qualitative public policy analyst, evaluator and researcher in economic development and human development fields with over 15 years of pro-poor policy, evaluation and research experience. Adjunct lecturer and Teaching Assistant (2009-2011) in sustainable international development and poverty measurement. Doctorate in Social Policy, Brandeis University; Master of Public Affairs, LBJ School, University of Texas, Austin; Bachelor of Arts, International Affairs, University of Colorado, Boulder. Collaborating researcher for United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Non-resident adviser on monitoring and evaluation Center for Global Development and Sustainability, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University. Developer of financial resources through donor research, grant proposal writing, and direct requests to foundations.

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Heath McDonald

Dean of Economics, Finance and Marketing and Professor of Marketing, RMIT University
Heath McDonald is Professor of Marketing and Dean of Economics, finance & Marketing at RMIT University. Heath has a background in consumer research and product management, working mainly with "high involvement" products including sport, charities and the arts. His most recent work focuses on fan development and season ticket holder management. This work has been published in journals including the European Journal of Marketing, Journal of Sport Management, International Journal of Hospitality Management and the Journal of Business Research. He recently co-authored the book "Sport Consumer Behaviour" published by Routledge.

Recent industry research partners include the Australian Football League (AFL), the Federal Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and Arts, the Melbourne Victory, Melbourne Rebels, Cricket Australia and Movember. Having worked with the AFL for many years to improve member retention and satisfaction, Dr. McDonald is currently undertaking an ARC funded project to examine the impact of marketing tactics on the fan development process. this project has a particular emphasis on determining how best to build lasting support for the two new AFL teams in Gold Coast and Western Sydney. He was the consumer research co-ordinator for the committee organising the successful $550 million re-development of Adelaide Oval, assisted the Federal Government to improve public engagement with Australia's heritage, and works with a number of charity organisations to increase donor engagement.

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Heath Pardoe

Associate professor, Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health
Heath Pardoe is an Associate Professor and Neuroimaging Theme Lead at the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Stream Lead for Science Operations in the Australian Epilepsy Project and Director of the Florey Node of the National Imaging Facility. He holds honorary positions at New York University Grossman School of Medicine, Monash University and the University of Melbourne.

Dr Pardoe completed his PhD in 2005 at the University of Western Australia. He underwent postdoctoral training at the Florey (2005-2012) and was an Associate Professor of Neurology at the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center at NYU Grossman School of Medicine (2012 – 2022). He returned to Australia in 2022.

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Heather Blakey

PhD candidate in literary studies, The University of Western Australia
Heather Blakey is a scholar and writer in literary studies at the University of Western Australia. Her work examines intersections between technology, intimacy, and the environment in video games, literature, and virtual worlds. She is presently completing her doctoral thesis in literary studies. Heather has published scholarship on intimacy and aesthetics in video games, original poetry, and written arts coverage for various Australian media outlets. Heather co-hosts the game studies podcast Meaningful Play.

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Heather Bowlby

Research Lead, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
My research focus over the previous 15 years has been on understanding changes in population dynamics for species of conservation concern. Questions with practical application to fisheries management or those that increase our understanding of changes in population status are my primary interests. I have concentrated on two general areas: first, on the development of methods to best generate data to support life history modeling or fisheries assessment; and second, on the integration of assessment methods or statistical techniques used outside of fisheries research to enable new ecological inference from historical data collections. Results from my research have been directly incorporated into multiple regional fisheries assessment programs (salmon, river herring, American eel, shark), and used to develop recovery strategies for species at risk (salmon, shark), for regional government departments, non-government organizations, and international RFMOs.

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Heather Ellis

Vice-Chancellor's Fellow, School of Education, University of Sheffield
I am a cultural historian of knowledge, education and ideas. My first book, Generational Conflict and University Reform: Oxford in the Age of Revolution, won the 2014 Kevin Brehony Prize for the best first book in the history of education. My new book, Masculinity and Science in Britain, 1831-1918, was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2017.

I am currently working on a study of the influence of classical scholarship and ancient natural philosophy on the emergence of the natural and physical sciences in the first half of the nineteenth century for OUP. I am a member of the Executive Committee of the History of Education Society and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

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Heather Ewart

Postdoctoral Researcher, Evolutionary Biology, University of Manchester
I have a PhD in Behavioural Ecology from The University of Manchester, specialising in examining how anthropogenic disturbance and ecological complexity affect the behaviour, spatial ecology, and population dynamics across a range of species and environments. I have conducted non-invasive laboratory experiments on Testudines, and I am an experienced field researcher, having completed a funded field season in the Arctic researching the effect of changing snow patterns on the spatial behaviour and energetics of a highly specialised and threatened Arctic bird. I have also conducted four months of fieldwork in the tropical rainforests of Costa Rica, examining the behavioural ecology and energetics relative to ecological complexity and environmental disturbances of two sloth species. Finally, I received Turing funding to conduct a placement at the University of Sao Paulo investigating the impacts of anthropogenic disturbance and habitat fragmentation on threatened mammal communities of the Atlantic Forest.

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Heather Hendershot

Professor of Film and Media, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Heather Hendershot studies conservative media and political movements, film and television genres, and American film history. She has held fellowships at Vassar College, New York University, and Princeton University, and she has also been a Guggenheim fellow. She is the editor of Nickelodeon Nation (2004) and the author of Saturday Morning Censors: Television Regulation before the V-Chip (1998), Shaking the World for Jesus: Media and Conservative Evangelical Culture (2004), and What's Fair on the Air? Cold War Right-Wing Media and the Public Interest (2011). For five years she was the editor of Cinema Journal, the official publication of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. During the 2014–2015 academic year, she was a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University where she wrote Open to Debate: How William F. Buckley Put Liberal America on the Firing Line.

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Heather Kharouba

Associate Professor of Ecology, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
The Kharouba research group studies the causes and consequences of global change for insect and plant communities.

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Heather LaMarre

Associate Professor of Media and Communication, Temple University
Dr. LaMarre is a political communication expert with over 20 years experience in politics, media, and public affairs. As a social scientist, Dr. LaMarre's research examines the how different forms of political media affect attitudes, behaviors, and opinions. She is especially interested in understanding the role of media in shaping democracy and democratic outcomes.

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Heather Lench

Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Texas A&M University
Dr. Heather C. Lench is a professor for the Texas A&M Department of Psychology and the Senior Associate Vice president for Faculty Affairs. On top of being an accomplished teacher, scholar, and mentor, Dr. Lench is the Director and Principle Investigator for the Emotion Science Lab.

The underlying premise of the Emotion Science Lab research is that emotional processes are the foundation of behavior and thought. We examine the role of affective reactions and emotions in how people think about the future and what they think will happen to them in the future. We are also investigating when and why particular emotions might improve functioning and decision-making.

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Heather Lum

Assistant Professor of Human Systems Engineering, The Polytechnic School, Arizona State University
Heather Lum is an assistant professor in the human systems engineering program in The Polytechnic School. She joins ASU from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. At ASU, she will explore human factors psychology with an emphasis on human-technology interactions. More specifically, she is investigating how working dogs can be studied and used as models for human-robot teaming.

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Heather MacIndoe

Associate Professor of Public Policy, UMass Boston
Heather MacIndoe is an Associate Professor of Public Policy in the McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Before joining the McCormack School, she was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Brown University’s Taubman Center for Public Policy, and a Research Fellow at Harvard University’s Hauser Center for the Study of Nonprofit Organizations at the Kennedy School of Government. MacIndoe earned her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Chicago in 2007, and a master’s degree in Sociology from Stanford University. Her undergraduate degree from Wellesley College was in Economics and American Studies.

Dr. MacIndoe’s research applies theoretical frameworks from organizational and urban sociology to address questions concerning the social organization of the nonprofit sector. Her current research focuses on nonprofit advocacy and policy engagement. She has conducted studies of nonprofit advocacy at the local, state, and federal levels. Other research examines foundation philanthropy and spatial relationships in the nonprofit sector. Her research has appeared in journals such as American Journal of Sociology and Sociological Forum, Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, and Nonprofit Policy Forum.

Dr. MacIndoe is an Associate Editor on the Editorial Board of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Review. She also served as an editorial board member for City and Community. MacIndoe serves on the fiduciary board for Boston Cares, the largest volunteer service agency in New England and was previously appointed as a commissioner to the City of Somerville Commission for Women.

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Heather Margonari

Lead Coordinator for the Opioid Free Pathway, University of Pittsburgh
Heather Margonari, DNP, CRNP is a Doctor of Nursing Practice graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in May 2015 with extensive experience in diverse clinical settings, including plastic surgery, orthopedics, and neurosurgery. Currently, she serves as the Lead Coordinator for the Opioid Free Pathway in the Department of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine, as well as working within the Department of Chronic Pain at the Center for Innovation in Pain Care and is affiliated with UPMC Passavant, UPMC Presbyterian, and UPMC Shadyside.

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Heather Massey

Heather Massey is a Senior Lecture working within the Extreme Environments Laboratory in the School of Sport, Health and Exercise Science at the University of Portsmouth in the UK. She has 15 years of experience in research in Extreme Environments, with a special interest in the physiological effects of cold water immersion.

As well as an academic interest in the cold water immersion she is also a keen long-distance open water swimmer. She has successfully completed a solo English Channel crossing and competed in the 2nd International Ice Swimming Association World Championship in the 1 km event, and has participated in numerous other long-distance swims and relays. With aspirations to do more.

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Heather May Morgan

Research Fellow, University of Aberdeen

I am a social scientist and health services researcher working on the integration of new health technologies (wearables, apps) into health and social care.

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Heather McGregor

Provost and Vice Principal of Heriot-Watt University in Dubai, Heriot-Watt University
Professor Dame Heather J. McGregor is the Provost and Vice Principal of Heriot-Watt University Dubai.

Professor McGregor has a PhD from the University of Hong Kong in Structured Finance and is an experienced writer and broadcaster, including writing for the Financial Times for 17 years under the pseudonym 'Mrs Moneypenny'. She is also the founder of the Taylor Bennett Foundation, which works to promote diversity in the communications industry, and a founding member of the steering committee of the 30% Club, which is working to raise the representation of women at senior levels within the U.K.’s publicly listed companies. Professor McGregor is a non-executive director of two public companies, and the author of eight books, including Careers Advice for Ambitious Women (Penguin, 2012).

In 2009 Professor McGregor received an Honorary Degree from the University of East London for her work to support diversity in employment. Professor McGregor was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire for her services to diversity and employment in the New Year Honours List 2023. In 2021 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.

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Heather Ross

Clinical Associate Professor in Nursing and Clinical Associate Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University
Dr. Heather Ross holds a joint appointment as Clinical Associate Professor in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society and the Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation. She is also a Senior Global Futures Scientist in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Laboratory and a faculty affiliate in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change along with the Barrett Honors College. She brings expertise in healthcare practice; health, science and technology policy; and implementation science to a broad portfolio of applied research initiatives.

Current and recent projects include:

SolarSPELL Health: solar-powered offline digital libraries and health education in remote, under-resourced, and hostile environments globally. Current implementation sites include East and Southern Africa, Latin America, the Pacific, and the American Southwest.
Innovative evidence-based solutions to complex system challenges in behavioral health and public safety in the City of Phoenix.
Investigation of law enforcement documentation practices and technology implementation implications.
American and global health equity and policy. Direct experience in municipal, county, and state government settings.
Infectious disease epidemiology projection modeling.
Sensor-based human technology interaction including wearable health devices and water quality sensors in commercial/industrial buildings.
Dr. Ross is a Fellow of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners and Heart Rhythm Society. She holds national certification as an adult nurse practitioner and maintains an active practice in cardiac electrophysiology with the HonorHealth Cardiac Arrhythmia Group.

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Heather B MacIntosh

Associate Professor, Director, MScA Couple and Family Therapy, School of Social Work, McGill University
Heather MacIntosh is Associate Professor and Director of the MScA Couple and Family Therapy Programme at McGill University where she is the recipient of the H. Noel Fieldhouse Award for Distinguished Teaching. Dr. MacIntosh is a clinical psychologist and principal investigator on SSHRC, FQRSC and FAVACS funded research projects examining the impact of early life trauma on the process and outcome of couple therapy, and the development and maintenance of healthy adult relationships. Dr. MacIntosh is the author of the recently released book: Developmental Couple Therapy for Complex Trauma a Manual for Therapists by Routledge Press, a treatment manual outlining her evidence based treatment model for working with couples dealing with the impacts of complex trauma, as well as a number of peer reviewed articles and chapters in the area of trauma and couple therapy. Dr. MacIntosh provides trauma focused consultation and maintains a small private practice. She is currently recruiting couples for a free Covid couple therapy online group based on the DCTCT model. To inquire about participating follow this link: https://www.mcgill.ca/docmacintoshdctct/recruiting-now

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Heather Joyce Nelson

Assistant Professor of Nursing, University of Regina
I am an early career researcher. I have diverse research interests including nursing during the pandemic and sport for children from low income settings. However, most of research is in the area of supporting older adults: older adults experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, joy and future planning in 100 year olds, and the impact of phone programs on mood and loneliness.

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Heather M Hachigian

Assistant Professor of Business, Royal Roads University
Dr. Heather Hachigian is an assistant professor teaching in the Masters of Global Management Program and the Graduate Certificate in Corporate Social Innovation. Her research interests include responsible investment, social finance and new forms of organizations. Hachigian’s recent work focuses on the governance of investment institutions with an explicit long-term mandate. Her research has explored investment decision-making under ambiguity, shareholder engagement and integrating sustainability criteria into infrastructure investment deals. Hachigian has published her research in several book chapters and academic journals, including Business and Politics, Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment, Journal of Business Ethics, European Financial Review and Stanford Social Innovation Review.

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Heather R. Stevens

Researcher - Environmental Science, Macquarie University
I have worked across all three tiers of government (federal, state and local) in the fields of climate change mitigation and adaptation. I completed my PhD in the School of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering and also lecture at the University of Newcastle.

Qualifications:
2017 - 2022 PhD. Macquarie University.
2016- 2017 Masters of Research (Environmental Science). Macquarie University
2013- 2014 Masters of Environment and Business. Newcastle University
2003- 2006 Bachelor of Applied Science (Environmental Management) with Distinction. The University of Western Sydney.

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Heather Taylor Johnson

Adjunct Research Fellow at the JM Coetzee Centre for Creative Practice, University of Adelaide
I am currently a fulltime professional writer with publications spanning poetry, novels and creative nonfiction, and I also work as an editor and arts reviewer. I'm passionate about illness and disability narratives and experimental, hybrid forms.

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Hedvig Skirgård

Postdoctoral researcher, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
Linguist working on language diversification at MPI-EVA in Leipzig, Germany. Also co-host of linguistics podcast "Because Language".

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Hee Song

Project Assistant at the Center for Research on College-Workforce Transitions, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Presently enrolled as a PhD student in Educational Policy Studies at UW-Madison.

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Hefin Gwilym

Lecturer in Social Policy, Bangor University
I completed my bachelor degree followed by an MA, at the University of Wales, Swansea. Then I did my PGCE and later on attained my DipSW, from the University of Wales, Bangor. Recently, I have gained my doctorate from Keele University. My thesis is entitled: ‘The declared political identity of social workers in a neoliberal era’.

My past work includes research assistant in the Welsh Political Archive, National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth; working in the voluntary sector; working as a social worker in north Wales; and teaching social work in further education.

I joined the School of Social Sciences as a lecturer in social work in 2006 and became a lecturer in social policy in 2012.

I have recently completed my doctorate which explores the development of declared and enacted political identity amongst social workers through the use of a constructivist grounded theory and biographical interviews. My supervisors were Dr. Pat Chambers, Professor Farzana Shain and Dr. Damian Breen, School of Public Policy and Professional Practice, Keele University.

I’m currently writing two articles based on my thesis to be submitted to peer reviewed journals.

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Heidi Busse

PhD Student in Chemistry, Penn State
Heidi Busse is interested in atmospheric chemistry and has a passion for science outreach and education. She earned her bachelor's degree in chemistry at the University of California San Diego. Heidi’s research focuses on looking at ice nucleation of atmospherically relevant organic and biological particles.

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Heidi Drummer

Professor and Co-Program Director, Disease Elimination, Burnet Institute
Professor Heidi Drummer is Program Director for Disease Elimination and co-Head of the Viral Entry and Vaccines research group at Burnet Institute. In 2021, she was appointed as Scientific Director of the Burnet Diagnostics Initiative, a new Burnet Initiative to progress diagnostics through to human health solutions. She also leads the Hepatitis C Vaccine development stream of the Burnet Vaccine Initiative.

Heidi is an inventor on numerous granted patents and is internationally recognised as a leader in viral glycoprotein structure and function. She has developed multiple point of care diagnostic assays to measure immunity to COVID-19 and established clinical studies to examine immune response generated by SARS-CoV-2 vaccines. Heidi has extensive experience in industry engagement and commercialisation of diagnostic assays and the translation of vaccines through pre-clinical studies into clinical trials.

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Heidi Fantasia

Associate Professor of Nursing, UMass Lowell
Heidi Collins Fantasia, Ph.D., is an associate professor and department chair in the Solomont School of Nursing, Zuckerberg College of Health Sciences at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. She is a board-certified women’s health nurse practitioner with more than 25 years of experience providing women’s health care in public and private settings. Her research interests include the intersection of violence and reproductive health, including physical and sexual violence and human trafficking. She has numerous publications and presentations related to women’s health issues including sexual risk behaviors, sexually transmitted infections, and intimate partner violence. In 2011 Fantasia was inducted into the National Academies of Practice as a Distinguished Practitioner and Fellow. She previously served on the Board of Directors for the National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health from 2019-2021. Fantasia is the editor for the journal "Nursing for Women’s Health" and the lead editor and author for "Protocols for Nurse Practitioners in Gynecologic Settings."

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Heidi Gazelle

Senior Lecturer in Developmental Psychology, University of Melbourne

The broad area of my expertise is the development of social behaviour, interpersonal relationships, and emotional functioning in childhood and early adolescence, with emphasis on interpersonal and environmental influences on child development. The specific area of my expertise the interpersonal and emotional developmental pathways of social anxious or withdrawn children over time.

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Heidi Hausse

Assistant Professor of History, Auburn University
Heidi Hausse is a historian of early modern Europe (c.1500-1700), with a particular interest in the intersections of culture, medicine, and technology. Her research interests include early modern surgery, prosthetics, and disability history. Her book, The Malleable Body: Surgeons, Artisans, and Amputees in Early Modern Germany, examines surgical treatises and artifacts of prostheses to uncover a transformation in the ways in which surgeons and artisans cut apart the human body through amputation and worked to artificially put it back together with mechanical limbs.

Hausse received her PhD in history from Princeton University in 2016, and was a member of the Society of Fellows in the Humanities at Columbia University from 2016-2018. She was also the 2016-2017 Molina Fellow in the History of Medicine & Allied Sciences at the Huntington Library. In 2018, Hausse joined the faculty at Auburn University. Her research has been supported by the American Council of Learned Societies, the Consortium for History of Science, Technology and Medicine, and the Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung Foundation.

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Heidi Hawkins

Research fellow, honorary research associate, University of Cape Town
I am a research fellow at Conservation International and an honorary research associate at the University of Cape Town, enabling a linking of academia with grass roots conservation efforts.

My main interest is nutrient cycling and drivers in aboveground-belowground communities, and what this means for ecosystem functioning and global change. Recent work tests how major drivers in grasslands and savanna (climate, herbivory, fire, woody plant encroachment) affect primary productivity as well as nutrient cycling, soil microbial and faunal diversity, and carbon sinks. My work has informed agroecological problems concerning sustainable and integrated livestock farming, human-wildlife conflict, as well as nutrition and water balance of indigenous crops (protea and rooibos, barley). Besides academic articles, my work includes translational productions such as manuals and policy briefs. My future research vision is to provide major contributions to the knowledge base of biodiversity and nutrient cycling within above-belowground communities, including wildlife areas, so that we can better understand the biodiversity-carbon nexus and manage habitats in the face of global change.

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