Director at the Centre of Human Rights Law Studies, Universitas Airlangga
Director at Centre of Human Rights Law Studies (HRLS), Faculty of Law, Airlangga University, and also Coordinator of Indonesian Lecturer Association for Human Rights (SEPAHAM Indonesia). PhD graduated from Leiden University Law School (2014), and Master of Arts in Human Rights and Social Development, Mahidol University (2006).
Actively working together with numerous human rights groups in Indonesia and international forum, such as ELSAM, KontraS, YLBHI-LBH Surabaya,Protection International, Southeast Asian Human Rights Studies Network (SEAHRN) and Epistema Institute. Can be reached at [email protected]
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Mathematician, University of Bristol
Brazilian-born Dr Hermes Gadelha is a poly-disciplinary mathematician working on the mathematics of life. He works at the fertile union of mathematical logic, physics, engineering and robotics. Dr Gadelha is the head of Polymaths-lab.com "entangling maths, experiments & soft-robotics to disentangle nature".
Polymaths-lab.com has generated international recognition, with countless scientific publications, public talks and worldwide media press releases and TV interviews, including BBC, CNN, Science Magazine, New Scientist and Discovery Channel.
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Associate Lecturer, School of Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Canada
Hernán Humaña teaches socio-cultural issues related to health, physical activity and sports as well as the history and politics of the Olympic Games at York University’s School of Kinesiology and Health Science.
His upcoming books focus on his immigrant family’s sinuous journey toward representing Canada on the international stage, featuring his children Felipe and Melissa. The other book is a look into Chile’s violation of human rights affecting elite athletes during the dictatorship years.
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Associate Professor of Public Health, UMass Lowell
Associate Professor Thind has degrees in clinical medicine and public health. Her research interests include physical activity and yoga interventions for chronic disease prevention and control. She has expertise in designing and implementing randomized controlled trials. She has been involved in various funded research projects including a NIH/NCCIH-funded project to examine the feasibility of yoga for adults with type 2 diabetes.
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Astrophysicien, Professeur, Vice-président, art, culture, science et société, Université Paris-Saclay
Astrophysicien engagé dans les missions spatiales Euclid (ESA), JWST (NASA/ESA/CSA), Planck (ESA), Herschel (ESA), Spitzer (NASA). Cosmologie observationnelle, galaxies et amas de galaxies, infrarouge et submillimétrique spatial. Gestion de la recherche. Gouvernance d'université. Enseignement universitaire. Médiation scientifique. Science & Société.
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Senior Research Scientist, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney and Adjunct Associate Professor, UNSW Sydney
I am an evolutionary biologist and botanist with a broad interest in macroevolution. My research interests concentrate on questions of floral evolution and macroevolution of angiosperms (flowering plants).
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Distinguished Professor of Economics and Finance, University of Toronto
Heski Bar-Isaac is the University of Toronto Distinguished Professor of Economics and Finance and a fellow of the CEPR and CRESSE. He has published widely in leading general-interest and a variety of leading field journals in economics and finance. He is particularly well known for his work on models of reputation (applied to finance, organizational economics, and industrial organization) and consumer search, and for his economics haikus. He currently serves as managing editor for the Economic Journal, as an associate editor for the RAND Journal of Economics, and on the board of editors for the American Economic Review, and as the area coordinator for the Economic Analysis and Policy area at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto.
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Clinical Fellow of Psychology, UCL
Hestia is a Clinical Research Fellow based in the Department of Clinical Educational and Health Psychology (CEHP), with teaching and course tutor duties on the Doctorate of Clinical Psychology (DClinPsy) training programme. Alongside this, she works clinically within a CAMHS disability service and is working towards completing a PhD aimed at better understanding mood and reward dynamics underpinning experiences of mood disturbances using a computational fMRI approach.
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Research Fellow, Australian Centre for Precision Health, University of South Australia
Hilary Bowman-Smart is a Research Fellow at the Australian Centre for Precision Health. She commenced her role in 2023. She previously held a position as Researcher in the Ethics of Prenatal Genetics and Genomics at the University of Oxford between 2021 and 2023. In this role, she worked on a project comparing the implementation of non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) in England, France and Germany, with her research conducted in both English and German. She has also been a visiting fellow at the University of Augsburg, and holds honorary positions at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and Monash University.
Hilary is an empirical bioethicist with a background in both genetics and philosophy. She was awarded her PhD by the University of Melbourne in 2022, receiving the Dean's Award for Excellence in Graduate Research. Her research approach involves ethical analysis that is informed by various types of empirical research, such as surveys, statistical analysis, and qualitative interview studies. Her areas of focus are reproductive ethics, genomics, and the philosophy of health and disease.
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Honorary Research Associate, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
Hilary Stace has a long involvement with autism and advocacy issues. She researched New Zealand autism policy for her 2011 PhD and found that complex, often contradictory understandings of autism and approaches signalled that autism could be considered a wicked policy problem.
Current research interests include disability, particularly autism and intellectual impairment, ethics (history, policy etc), New Zealand history, particularly disability, education, women, activism, politics etc.
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Speech Language Pathologist and Cognitive Rehabilitation Specialist, Marcus Institute for Brain Health; Instructor, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Hilary Diefenbach, MA, CCC-SLP, CBIST is a licensed Speech Language Pathologist at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health (MIBH) and Instructor in the University of Colorado (CU) School of Medicine. Hilary specializes in brain injury rehabilitation for adults. Hilary began her Speech Pathology career in inpatient rehabilitation serving at the Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation for patients recovering from stroke, traumatic brain injury, and other complex medical problems. Hilary joined the MIBH in 2018, where she leads the Speech Pathology Department as part of an interdisciplinary team specializing in intensive outpatient rehabilitation for U.S. Military Veterans and Emergency Responders with a history of mild-to-moderate traumatic brain injury, psychological health changes, and related health sequelae. Hilary is passionate about medical education, precision and preventative medicine, and interdisciplinary care design within her clinical and academic work at the University of Colorado. In her free time, Hilary enjoys time outdoors in the Rocky Mountains, music performance, and FaceTiming her nieces and nephews back home in Washington DC.
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Indigenous Teacher and Linguist, Indigenous Knowledge
Hilda Ngalmi is an Indigenous teacher-linguist and president of the school council at Numbulwar School.
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Hilde Coffé is Professor in Politics at the University of Bath, Department of Politics, Languages and International Studies. Her main research interests include political behaviour, public opinion, political representation, and gender and politics.
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Senior Research Officer, James Cook University
I am an early-career researcher interested in the interactions between corals and macroalgae, and the possibility to manipulate these interactions in the context of reef restoration and rehabilitation. Using a mixed-methods approach, I investigate the interactions between reef taxa from the cellular to the ecosystem level. My work uses a range of techniques, including molecular biology and genomics, microbial ecology, physiology, macro-ecology, field- and lab-based experiments to understand the relationships between species. Recent work incorporates significant outreach and engagement through citizen science involvement in reef restoration research.
Prior to working in science, I had a career in the fine arts and fashion design, so I am passionate about communicating science and encouraging people with non-traditional academic pathways to pursue careers in science. I maintain an interest in the arts through a side-hustle making scientific illustrations.
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Professor of Anthropology, Quinnipiac University
I am an applied medical anthropologist who studies settler colonialism, Indigeneity, and gender-based violence in Oceania. I am also a scholar of the political economy of higher education. I have published books on both gender-based violence and higher education.
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Postdoctoral researcher on the Global Commission on the Economics of Water, University of Amsterdam
Dr Hilmer Bosch is a postdoctoral Researcher with the Global Commission on the Economics of Water at the University of Amsterdam. He holds degrees from the University of Strathclyde (MSc Environmental Entreperneurship), IHE-Delft Institute for Water Education (MSc Water Management and Governance) and a PhD from the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research at the University of Amsterdam. His unwavering passion lies in conducting research and shaping policies related to inclusive development, water justice and water property rights with a specific focus on the Global South.
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Course Chair in Building Design & Senior Lecturer in Built Environment, Victoria University
Dr Hing-Wah Chau is the Course Chair in Building Design and Senior Lecturer in Built Environment. Before joining Victoria University in 2019, Dr Chau taught architectural design at the University of Melbourne at undergraduate and postgraduate levels for eight years (2011-2019).
He completed his doctoral research and the Graduate Certificate in University Teaching at the University of Melbourne in 2014 and 2018 respectively.
He received the Teaching Excellence Award at the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne in 2018.
His research interests lie in sustainable built environment, architectural and urban design, design for ageing and inclusive design, as well as design for health and wellbeing.
He has published numerous refereed journal articles, refereed conference papers and book chapters.
Dr Chau received his architectural education in Hong Kong. He has more than ten years of professional practice experience in Hong Kong as a registered architect in an interdisciplinary environment involving in various projects from small public structures and public housing to large infrastructure.
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Teacher Assistant, Colgate University
Graduated in Journalism and Humanities from the San Pablo CEU University, my career has touched several points of knowledge. After graduating I did the Radio Master at COPE (Spain). Later, I was hired at Colgate University (USA) as an adjunct professor in the Spanish Department. Finally, it is worth highlighting my research work on historical battles in the history of Spain. More specifically, the battle of Cagayan.
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Profesor Adjunto de Historia Antigua Universidad CEU-San Pablo, Universidad CEU San Pablo
Hipólito Sanchiz Álvarez de Toledo es doctor en Historia Antigua por la UCM y profesor adjunto de Historia Antigua de la Facultad de Humanidades y C.C. de la Comunicación de la universidad CEU-San Pablo en Madrid, en donde lleva dieciocho años impartiendo asignaturas como Prehistoria, Historia Antigua del Oriente Próximo y Arqueología en los grados de Historia e Historia del Arte. También coordina e imparte en la Escuela de Arquitectura del CEU el módulo de Arqueología Digital en el título propio de Fabricación Digital.
Su principal línea de investigación reside en el Oriente Medio Antiguo, especialmente en Mesopotamia, tema sobre el que realizó su tesis doctoral Testimonios históricos y míticos de la ciudad de Shuruppak, siendo su aproximación plenamente interdisciplinar: desde el punto de vista de la Historia, de la Filología, gracias a su conocimiento del sumerio, el acadio, el egipcio faraónico y de la Arqueología. En este último campo ha participado en diversas excavaciones arqueológicas en España y dos en Israel, en Tel Hatzor (Bronce final y Hierro I y II) y la de Tel Regev (Hierro II). Ha publicado diferentes artículos científicos sobre ese tema en revistas como Gerión y Studi Epigrafici e Linguistici sul Vicino Oriente Antico. También ha participado con las universidades CEU-San Pablo (Madrid) y UTPL (Loja, Ecuador) en el proyecto de aplicación de nuevas tecnologías en Prehistoria en el yacimiento de Quillusara (Ecuador).
Su segunda línea de investigación tiene que ver con la Historia Contemporánea española, sobre la que ha publicado junto con el novelista León Arsenal un libro titulado Una historia de las sociedades secretas españolas y diversos artículos en Aportes y Revista de Órdenes Militares sobre Ordenes Militares en los siglos XIX y XX.
Es miembro del consejo editorial de la revista Cuadernos de Investigación Histórica de la F.U.E y secretario de la Revista de las Órdenes Militares, de la Fundación Órdenes Españolas.
También está dentro del grupo de investigación LECOBI sobre el significado de los colores en la Biblia su función es comparar los resultados con el significado que tienen en la literatura sumero-acadia.
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Senior Lecturer in Child Psychiatry and Paediatrics, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
My research interests include psychological problems experienced by children and young people with long-term physical conditions (chronic illness), eating disorders, autism spectrum disorders, COVID-19 related childhood mental health and the use of technology to improve the mental health of children and young people.
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PhD candidate in Religious Studies, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)
Nathasha Fernando is a PhD candidate at the University of Quebec in Montreal, Canada. Her research focuses on the religio-political discourse surrounding the Easter Sunday Attacks of Sri Lanka and among its diaspora in Canada. She is supervised by Professors Chiara Letizia and Stephanie Tremblay. Her interests include : religiously motivated terrorism, religious extremism and religious radicalization in the Indian subcontinent.
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Lecturer in Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences - Advanced Pharmacist Practitioner at London Ambulance NHS trust, University of Reading
Dr Hisham Al-Obaidi is a highly skilled pharmacist and researcher with a passion for advancing drug delivery systems and patient care. As an advanced pharmacist practitioner with the London Ambulance Service, he brings hands-on expertise in delivering critical care in high-pressure environments. In academia, Dr Al-Obaidi has pioneered innovative drug delivery systems, earning patents, research funding, and recognition for his work. His focus includes developing advanced formulations and applying artificial intelligence to optimise treatments, reflecting his commitment to improving health outcomes through science and practice.
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Professor, Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, University of Birmingham
Professor Hisham Mehanna is the chair of head and neck surgery, and is the Director of the Institute of Head and Neck Studies and Education (InHANSE) at the Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences.
Hisham is a head and neck and thyroid surgeon with clinical interests in recurrence in thyroid and parathyroid surgery. He has a keen interest in clinical and translational research, heading a research team of 20 researchers, and holding over £15million in research grants. His research has changed clinical practice across the world.
His experience of multi-disciplinary research in the field of cancer biology and treatment has made him a strong proponent of multi- and inter- disciplinary research, as the way to provide new insights and approaches to address intractable global challenges.
As Deputy PVC, Hisham has responsibility for promoting interdisciplinary research across the University. Also as Director of the Institute for Global Innovation (IGI) and the Institute of Advanced Studies (IAS), Hisham strives to ensure that the Institutes inspire, support and deliver world-leading, multi- and inter-disciplinary research that seeks to address some of the world’s most pressing challenges, that affect humanity at a global level. The IGI’s research themes revolve around the factors that challenge, and sometimes threaten, the sustainability and resilience of individuals, communities, countries and the world as a whole. Themes include resilient cities, water challenges in a changing world, clean cooling, pollution solutions, antimicrobial resistance, ageing and frailty, gender inequality, artificial intelligence and 21st century transnational crime.
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Professor in the School of Chemistry, University of the Witwatersrand
My research field is environmental analytical chemistry. My areas of interest include: analytical method development for water and soil analysis; the chemistry of acid mine/rock drainage; elemental speciation in polluted environments (water and soil systems); water quality assessment; remediation and mitigation aspects (development and modification of materials for the capture of pollutants in polluted water; constructed and natural wetland systems); value recovery (recovery of precious elements and rare earths from wastewaters; alternative uses of waste and wastewaters); geochemical modelling (predicting elemental speciation; forward and inverse modelling; 1-D, 2-D and 3-D reactive transport modelling; pit lake chemistry; evaporite and secondary mineral formation); and applications of artificial intelligence (optimisation and heuristic methods; classification; machine learning; deep learning; text minig; large language models; internet of things (IoT)).
Computational competence: PHREEQC, PHAST, MODFLOW, FEFLOW, Geochemist’s Workbench, Visual Minteq, Statistica, Visual Gene Developer, Minitab, SIMCA, R, SQL, Python, C and Fortran.
My published research:
Comparison of individual and ensemble machine learning models for prediction of sulphate levels in untreated and treated Acid Mine Drainage
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
2024/04 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-024-12467-8
The transport of toxic elements from the Marie-Louise landfill site and nearby gold mine dumps to waterbodies
International Mine Water Association Congress 2024
2024/04 | conference-paper
Trends in Innovations and Recent Advances in Membrane Protected Extraction Techniques for Organics in Complex Samples
Critical Reviews in Analytical Chemistry
2023/08/18 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1080/10408347.2021.2013769
Microplastics in freshwater environment: the first evaluation in sediment of the Vaal River, South Africa
Heliyon
2022/10 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e11118
Comparison of PSA to Moringa Oleifera Seed Protein as Sorbent in QuEChERS: A Response Surface Methodology Optimization for Extraction of Some Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals in Food
Journal of Chemistry
2022/09/13 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1155/2022/7161318
Multivariate optimization of a two-way technique for extraction of pharmaceuticals in surface water using a combination of membrane assisted solvent extraction and a molecularly imprinted polymer
Chemosphere
2022/01 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131973
In Situ Decarboxylation-Pressurized Hot Water Extraction for Selective Extraction of Cannabinoids from Cannabis sativa. Chemometric Approach
Molecules
2021/06/02 | journal-article
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26113343
Selective Extraction of Cannabinoid Compounds from Cannabis Seed Using Pressurized Hot Water Extraction
Molecules
2020/03 | journal-article
DOI: 10.3390/molecules25061335
Statistical comparison of two modeling methods on pressurized hot water extraction of vitamin C and phenolic compounds from Moringa oleifera leaves
South African Journal of Botany
2020/03 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.sajb.2018.09.001
Sorption of uranium(VI) onto hydrous ferric oxide-modified zeolite: Assessment of the effect of pH, contact time, temperature, selected cations and anions on sorbent interactions
Journal of Environmental Management
2017/12 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.09.034
Synthesis and characterization of a molecularly imprinted polymer for the isolation of the 16 US-EPA priority polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in solution
Journal of Environmental Management
2017/09 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.05.041
Dispersion of inorganic contaminants in surface water in the vicinity of Potchefstroom
Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C
2017/08 | journal-article
DOI: 10.1016/j.pce.2017.04.008
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Senior Research Fellow, Department of Electrical, Computer and Software Engineering, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
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Associate Professor, School of Education, UNSW Sydney
Hoa Nguyen, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the School of Education at the University of New South Wales, Australia. Hoa conducts research in the areas of teacher education/development and mentoring.
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PhD Student, Faculty of Law, Bond University
Hoda Asgarian completed her bachelor’s degree in law at Allameh Tabatabayi University in Iran. Driven by her fascination with international affairs, she pursued an LLM in International Law at the same university, and later specialised in and earned a second LLM in Maritime Law from Lund University in Sweden.
Hoda is licensed to practice law in Iran and has extensive experience as a sole practitioner and as an in-house legal counsel at Unilever, among other multinational corporations. Hoda has published several academic articles and is currently a Ph.D. student at Bond University in Australia, and her research focuses on environmental law and climate change, which she considers one of the most pressing international issues of our time.
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Acting President, Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Holger Görg is currently Acting President of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy and Professor of International Economics at the University of Kiel. He is also Director of the Kiel Centre for Globalization, and is affiliated with the FIND Research Centre at Aarhus University, GEP at Nottingham University and IZA in Bonn. Before joining Kiel in 2008 he was on the staff at the University of Nottingham (2000 – 2008), the University of Ulster at Jordanstown and University College Cork. He completed a Ph.D. in Economics in 1999 at Trinity College Dublin.
His research interests are in empirical international trade and industrial organisation focusing in particular on the activities of multinational companies, foreign direct investment, and international outsourcing. He has published widely in international journals. Holger has also worked as Consultant for, among others, The World Bank, European Commission, UNIDO, UN Economic Commissions for Europe and Africa, and government bodies in the UK, Ireland and Germany.
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Professor in Contemporary European History, University of Stirling
Holger Nehring is a historian of post-1945 Western Europe, with special interest in the history of peace and other forms of social activism in Britain and West Germany, the intellectual history of the 'nuclear age', and the social history of the Cold War. He received his training in contemporary history, political science and philosophy at Tübingen University (Germany), the London School of Economics, and (as a Rhodes scholar) at University College, Oxford. Before joining the Sheffield History Department in March 2006, he was based at St. Peter's College, Oxford, as a junior research fellow. His book "Politics of Security", a comparative and transnational study of British and West German protests against nuclear weapons and their meanings in the context of the Cold War from 1945 to the late 1960s, was published by Oxford University Press in October 2013.
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Research Fellow, Primary Care, University of Southampton
Hollie is an experienced researcher in chronic pain, focusing particularly on musculoskeletal pain and the integration of psychology in pain and health services research through multiple research projects:
- Leading a Cochrane review and network meta-analysis on the efficacy and safety of antidepressants for chronic pain.
- Exploring pain-related distress in chronic musculoskeletal pain and how to address this in primary care.
- Exploring the psychosocial mechanisms of chronic pain as part of the Consortium to Research Individual, Interpersonal, and Social mechanisms of pain (CRIISP, as part of the Advanced Pain Discovery Platform).
- Working within primary care randomised controlled trials for stratified care and clinician decision support systems.
Hollie’s has a School for Primary Care post-doctoral fellowship that was awarded the Elizabeth Murray award to explore the development of pain related distress in musculoskeletal pain.
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Senior lecturer, Macquarie University
Holly Doel-Mackaway is an academic at the Macquarie University Law School. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on international human rights law with a particular focus on children and young people.
Her 2022 book 'Indigenous Children's Right to Participate in Law and Policy Development' (Routledge) presents a model for reforming and developing Indigenous related legislation and policy in Australia and internationally. The model provides guidance about how to seek, listen to and respond to the voices of Indigenous children and young people.
Before becoming an academic Holly worked as a lawyer across more than 20 countries for the United Nations and various international non-government organisations providing specialised advice on international children’s rights law. She has held senior legal and managerial positions with a range of child focused agencies including UNICEF, Save the Children and the NSW Department of Community Services. Holly also operates a child rights consulting practice providing children's rights research, training, legislative and policy advice nationally and internationally on matters relating to child protection, girls’ rights, the commercial sexual exploitation of children, children engaged in armed conflict and child rights-based approaches to research and development.
Prior to becoming a lawyer Holly worked as a social worker with women and children who had experienced domestic violence and sexual abuse.
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Professor of English Literature, Cardiff University
Professor Holly Furneaux specialises in Victorian literature and culture. Together with Matilda Greig she is editor of Enemy Encounters in Modern Warfare and her book on Enemy Intimacies and Strange Meetings in Writings of Conflict 1800-1918 is forthcoming with Oxford University Press. Her research is featured in the current War and the Mind Exhibition at Imperial War Museum and she previously curated Created in Conflict: Soldier Art from the Crimean War to the Present. Her previous books include Military Men of Feeling: Emotion, Touch and Masculinity in the Crimean War and Queer Dickens: Erotics, Families, Masculinities. She was an advisor for the BBC's Dickensian.
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Associate Professor, Anthropology, Deakin University
I am an anthropologist, do fieldwork in Laos and use ethnographic methods and anthropological analysis to understand human experience. I was trained at Australian National University, and have held postdoctoral fellowships at Yale, Cambridge and Sydney. Now I live, work and raise two kids on the beautiful Wadawarung lands and I am a member of the Alfred Deakin Institute at Waurn Ponds Campus, Deakin University.
I have written about anthropological approaches to debt, power and desire; psychoanalytic theory and anthropology; Lao policy (including cultural, poverty, health and agricultural policies) in relation to lived experience in that country; everyday politics in Laos; emerging infectious disease as an intercultural zone; and religion in Laos.
Currently, I am investigating transformations in pregnancy, birth and early childhood in Laos.
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