Professor of History, Boise State University
Dr. John Bieter came to Boise State University as a member of the faculty in 2004 after earning his Ph.D. in History from Boston College. His major doctoral concentration was Nineteenth Century United States History, Immigration, The American West, and American Catholicism. He also has an M.A. in History from Boise State University where his thesis was “Basque-Americans, American-Basques: Three Generations in Boise, Idaho”, and a B.A. in Social Sciences from the University of St. Thomas where his studies concentrated on economics. Before teaching at the university level, Dr. Bieter taught history at Bishop Kelly High School, and was the International Tour Director and Studies Abroad Coordinator at Boise State. He has spent three years living, working, and studying in the Basque region of Northern Spain, and is proficient in Basque and Spanish.
Dr. Bieter’s research interests continue to center around immigration, secondary education social studies methods, and Basque studies, including teaching workshops on arborglyphs — tree carvings left behind by Basque sheepherders in Idaho’s high country.
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PhD Candidate in English Literature, University of Bristol
I am an AHRC-funded English Literature PhD student working with the University of Exeter and University of Bristol.
I completed my Undergraduate Degree in English Literature and Comparative Studies at the University of Warwick in 2012. I completed my Master's Degree in Education at the University of St Mark and St John, Plymouth, in 2017, while working full-time in schools.
I have seven years experience teaching English in rural comprehensive secondary schools in Somerset - with three years as Head of Department for English and Drama.
I am a singer-songwriter and poet drawing inspiration from rural life and experience past and present. I was a semi-finalist in the BBC Radio 2 Young Folk Award in 2011. I contributed to the BBC Radio 4 Documentary 'Dorset Rewritten' in 2014.
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Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Social Responsility in Mining, The University of Queensland
John Burton has been working in Australia and the countries of the Western Pacific region for over 40 years, including a decade in Papua New Guinea universities. He has also practised as a Native Title anthropologist, contributing to a range of successful Native Title determinations in Torres Strait and North Queensland since 2001. He is a Fellow of the Australian Anthropological Society and his current position is Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Social Responsibility in Mining at the University of Queensland.
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Professor and Head of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences; Director, The Queensland Centre for Olympic and Paralympic Studies, The University of Queensland
With over 25 years of experience in research, consulting, and education, John is a leading expert in sport, physical literacy and child health, and an accomplished leader in higher education. He is currently the Professor and Head of School in Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences at the University of Queensland (UQ), where he oversees the strategic direction, academic and research performance, and operational management of the school. He is also the Deputy Executive Director of the UQ 2032 Office of Games Engagement and the Director of the Queensland Centre for Olympic and Paralympic Studies.
John has a proven track record of leading high-performing teams and delivering exceptional outcomes for partners and funders. He has successfully led multiple multi-million dollar projects in Canada and Australia. He has also held senior leadership roles in prestigious institutions, such as the University of Toronto, McMaster University, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. Additionally, he has served as the President of two professional associations and provided valuable consultancy to governmental initiatives. John's extensive leadership experience and expertise underscore his reputation as a respected figure in his field.
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PhD Student in Plant Science and Landscape Architecture, University of Connecticut
As a graduate research assistant in plant science, specializing in native plants of New England, their co-evolution with pollinators, and the ecosystem services they provide, I have had to learn and develop a wide range of skills. I have formulated rigorous methodological models for testing scientific hypotheses. I have planned and supervised the growth of tens of thousands of plants for the establishment of scientific experiments that required extensive record keeping. I have led a team of researchers for the publication of a 283 page manual adopted by New England Departments of Transportation to transition to more sustainable methods for re-vegetating roadsides. I have worked closely with and built a reputation among other experts and practitioners in the fields of native plants and pollinator health. Together we have created organizations and advocated for policies that inform legislators and the general public of the role native plants play in maintaining the health of our environment and ecology.
As a teaching assistant for our department’s cannabis production class, I became familiar with the extensive spectrum of knowledge required for cannabis production, including plant physiology, breeding techniques, growing equipment and practices, industry specific pests and diseases, and areas for further research in the field.
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Principal Lecturer, University of Portsmouth
John Caro is a principal lecturer in Film and Media at the University of Portsmouth. In 2001, supported by a Commonwealth Scholarship, he completed a Film and Video MFA at Toronto’s York University. He has screened his short films at the Raindance and International Tel-Aviv Film Festivals and was a set decorator at Pinewood Studios, working on "Aliens" and "Full Metal Jacket". More recently he has contributed an article about British comic books to Henry Jenkins' Pop Junctions Website. In 2023 he enrolled on the Portsmouth PhD programme, developing a project on British Comics.
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Professor of Criminal Law, University of Birmingham
Professor John Child specialises in criminal law, doctrine and theory, and the relationship between criminal law and neuroscience.
John co-authors two leading criminal law textbooks: Simester and Sullivan’s Criminal Law and Smith, Hogan and Ormerod’s Essentials of Criminal Law.
John is also the founder and co-Director of the Criminal Law Reform Now Network. Launched in 2017, its mission is to facilitate collaboration between academics and other legal experts to gather and disseminate comprehensible proposals for criminal law reform to the wider community. We include members of the public and mainstream media as well as legal professionals, police, policymakers and politicians. Our proposals might require legislation but we do not restrict ourselves to such projects. Reforms which public bodies such as the Home Office, Police or CPS can bring about by internal policies interest us, as do reforms which require the support of some of the judiciary, bearing in mind the proper judicial constraints on law making. We are ready to consult with and make suggestions to anyone who has the power to bring about reform.
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Professor of Public Policy, University of Michigan
John Ciorciari focuses on international politics and law, particularly in the Global South. His current research focuses primarily on hedging and alignment politics in the Indo-Pacific region and Middle East. He also works on international interventions and international criminal law.
He is the author of "Sovereignty Sharing in Fragile States" (Stanford, 2021) and "The Limits of Alignment: Southeast Asia and the Great Powers since 1975" (Georgetown, 2010), the co-author of "Hybrid Justice: the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia" (Michigan, 2014), and co-editor of "The Courteous Power: Japan and Southeast Asia in the Indo-Pacific Era" (Michigan, 2021), among other works.
He is currently a visiting scholar at St. Antony's College, Oxford. He has been a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford, an Andrew Carnegie Fellow, an Asia Society Fellow, and a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations. From 2004-07, he served as a policy official in the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of International Affairs. Since 1999, he has been a legal advisor to the Documentation Center of Cambodia, which promotes historical memory and justice for the atrocities of the Pol Pot regime. He has an AB and JD from Harvard and MPhil and DPhil from Oxford, where he was a Fulbright Scholar.
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Prof. John Colley is Professor of Practice at Warwick Business School.
He was formerly the director of MBA and executive programmes at Nottingham University Business School,
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John Cook is the Climate Communication Fellow for the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland. He also runs skepticalscience.com, a website that makes climate science accessible to the general public and examines the arguments of global warming skeptics. He co-authored the book "Climate Change Denial: Heads in the Sand" with environmental scientist Haydn Washington and the university textbook "Climate Change Science: a Modern Synthesis" with geologist Tom Farmer. He completed a First Class Honours degree in Physics at the University of Queensland and is currently completing a PhD in Cognitive Psychology at the University of Western Australia.
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Reader in History, University of York
My immersion in the sixteenth century began at Merton College, Oxford, where I was taught by Steven Gunn and Blair Worden, and attended lectures by Christopher Haigh and Penry Williams. I studied for an MA as a Thouron Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania before returning to Oxford to research my doctorate on Tudor royal propaganda. I came to York in 2005, having worked on the Tudor desk at the Dictionary of National Biography and as a teaching fellow at Lincoln College, Oxford.
My research focuses on the political, religious and cultural history of sixteenth-century England, and I am also interested in the history of early colonial America and Ireland. I write for the Times Literary Supplement and give regular public lectures – see ‘External Activity’ for more details.
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Dean of the Irvin D. Reid Honors College and Professor of Philosophy, Wayne State University
Corvino's research mainly focuses on controversial "culture war" issues surrounding sexuality and marriage. He is the author or co-author of three books from Oxford University Press: Debating Same-Sex Marriage (with Maggie Gallagher), What’s Wrong with Homosexuality?, and, most recently, Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination, with Ryan T. Anderson and Sherif Girgis.
In addition to his books and scholarly articles, Corvino has contributed to The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Detroit Free Press, the Huffington Post, The New Republic, Slate, Commonweal, and other popular venues. He is the recipient of several teaching awards, including the Wayne State University President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching and a 2012 Distinguished Professor of the Year Award from the Presidents Council of the State Universities of Michigan. In the last 25 years, he has spoken at over 250 campuses on issues of sexuality, ethics, and marriage. His online videos have received over two million views.
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Professor of Policing, Crime prevention, Learning & Innovation, University of East London
As a leading pracademic, Professor Coxhead has worked across professional policing practice and higher education for the last 30 years. His professional experience in policing has involved a number of specialist roles: working with the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), the Strategic Police Matters Unit (SPMU, Vienna) within the Organisation for Security in Europe (OSCE) and Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC).
Dr Coxhead works with several universities, police and security agencies in the UK and internationally and is external examiner in policing and criminology at the Universities of Wales and Manchester Metropolitan, having held professorial positions in policing at Keele and Loughborough Universities, and is founder of the Innovation in Policing national competition (hosted by Police Professional journal).
His primary research interests surround policing, particularly around enabling innovation and learning environments and has published widely, often directly for Government use, on serious organised crime and performance improvement within policing.
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Senior Research Fellow, NatCen Social Research
John Curtice is a Senior Research Fellow at NatCen Social Research, Professor of Politics at the University of Strathclyde and Research Consultant to the Scottish Centre for Social Research. He is particularly interested in electoral behaviour, electoral systems, and political and social attitudes.
A regular broadcaster and contributor to newspapers, John is also president of the British Polling Council and vice chair of the Economic and Social Data Service’s Advisory Committee.
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John Daley is the CEO of Grattan Institute, which conducts independent, rigorous and practical analysis of Australian public policy.
John Daley has 20 years experience at the intersection of the public sector, private enterprise, and academia. His diverse background includes law, finance, education, and workers compensation.
Previous roles include the University of Melbourne, the University of Oxford, the Victorian Department of Premier and Cabinet, consulting firm McKinsey and Co, and most recently ANZ where he was Managing Director of the online stockbroker, E*TRADE Australia.
John has a DPhil in Public Law from the University of Oxford, and degrees in Law and Science from the University of Melbourne.
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My research addresses energy and transportation with a focus on environmental challenges especially oil use, CO2 emissions and climate mitigation options. I also address energy and climate policy more broadly and direct the University of Michigan Energy Survey. My teaching and advising work has addressed transportation energy policy and sustainable energy systems as well as student research in other energy and environmental topics.
Prior to joining the University of Michigan faculty in 2009, I was senior fellow for automotive strategies at the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF; 2001-2009), transportation director at the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy (ACEEE; 1990-2000) and a staff scientist at the National Audubon Society (1988-1990).
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Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Wake Forest University
John Dinan's research focuses on state constitutions and federalism. He is the author of several books, including The American State Constitutional Tradition (University Press of Kansas) and State Constitutional Politics: Governing by Amendment in the American States (University of Chicago Press), and he writes an annual review of state constitutional amendments for The Book of the States. He is editor of Publius: The Journal of Federalism and received his PhD from the University of Virginia.
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Centenary Professor, Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance, University of Canberra
Professor John Dryzek is Centenary Professor in the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance, University of Canberra. He was previously Distinguished Professor of Political Science and ARC Federation Fellow at the Australian National University. Research and teaching interests include:
- democratic theory and practice
- environmental politics
- political theory
- climate governance
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Assistant Professor of Health Services Administration, Auburn University
John Kwame Duah is an Assistant Professor in the Health Services Administration Program at Auburn University. He received his doctoral degree in Health Administration from the Herbert H. & Grace A. Dow College of Health Professions at Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, in 2022. Dr. Duah holds an MA in Emergency Management and Homeland Security from the College of Public Service and Community Engagement at Arizona State University, an MPH-Health Policy Track from Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy at the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a BS in Animal Sciences from Washington State University, Pullman, Washington.
Dr. Duah's research areas of interest are in health systems strengthening, maternal and child health, quality improvement, community-based participatory research, health disparities, infectious disease surveillance, and pandemic preparedness and response. His recent research project has focused on points of entry surveillance for emerging infectious diseases like Ebola Virus Disease and COVID-19 in resource-challenged environments in West Africa.
In his current capacity, Dr. Duah plays a pivotal part in shaping the education of undergraduates. He teaches courses centered around healthcare policy, management, and leadership. His passion lies in crafting innovative solutions that yield improved patient outcomes.
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Venom Systems Lab, University of Galway
My background include working with reptiles and arthropods, mostly venomous species.
My PhD focused on a holistic approach to determine the potential medical significance and invasiveness of the noble false widow spider Steatoda nobilis.
My current research is investigating the venom compositions of medically important scorpions in Morocco.
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Professor of History, University of Montana
John Eglin's work explores the relationship between culture and politics in British society from the late 1600s until the end of the 1700s. His current research project, entitled "Gambling and the Public Sphere in England's Long Eighteenth Century," traces the emergence of commercialized gambling from the 1660s through the 1790s. He is also editing James Boswell's travel journals in Italy and France.
Thanks to the efforts of the University of Montana's Mansfield Library, UM is unusually well equipped to support graduate study in early modern Britain. Undergraduate and Graduate students alike have access to online databases such as Early English Books Online (EEBO), Eighteenth-Century Collections Online (ECCO), the Burney Collection of Early English Newspapers, and the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. John Eglin correspondingly accepts MA students in all areas of early modern British history (1500-1800), and PhD students focusing on Britain's long eighteenth century (1660-1800).
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John Fender has three degrees including a D.Phil from the University of Oxford. He was a Lecturer at Lancaster University and an Associate Professor at the Pennsylvania State University in the United States before coming to the University of Birmingham in 1992, where he has been Professor of Macroeconomics since 1998. He is leader of the Macroeconomics and Finance Research Group and Deputy Head of Department. He has published widely in macroeconomics, including open economy macroeconomics but is also interested in political economy issues and in economics and philosophy. Monetary policy, on which he published a book in 2012, is a particular interest. His current research encompasses analysing the effects of fiscal consolidation programmes and developing an appropriate framework for analysing the stock market.
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I was awarded an MA in Politics from the University of Glasgow in 1994. Whilst continuing my studies at Glasgow, I lectured part-time in HM Prison, Saughton, Edinburgh before gaining an MPhil in Urban Policy in 1998.
I became a part-time Research Associate on the ESRC-funded Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime, within the Centre for Law and Society, University of Edinburgh and also joined the Department of Urban Studies, University of Glasgow as a part-time Research Assistant. I continued in both roles until 2000 when I was appointed as a full-time Research Fellow in the Department of Urban Studies and then Lecturer in Housing Studies in 2004.
I moved to Sheffield Hallam University in 2005, where I took up a post as Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research.
I became a Principal Research Fellow at Sheffield Hallam in 2006 and was appointed as Professor of Housing and Urban Governance in 2007.
In October 2011 I was appointed to the post of Professor of Town and Regional Planning in the Department.
My research interests include housing policy, housing management, citizenship, crime and anti-social behaviour, neighbourhood renewal and social cohesion and religion.
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Dean, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland
John Fraser has been Dean of the Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Auckland since 2012. He is a graduate of Victoria University of Wellington (BSc Hons ‘80) and University of Auckland (PhD ’83), and conducted fundamental immunology research at Harvard before returning to New Zealand. He was the inaugural Wellcome Trust (UK) Senior Fellow in Medical Science (1992) John holds a Personal Chair in Molecular Medicine and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. John has a long-standing interest in immunity, infectious disease and particularly the mechanisms of virulence and pathogenicity of microbes. His current research focuses on the development of a staphylococcal vaccine. John has published over 170 peer reviewed publications and books and has supervised 35 postgraduate and doctoral students. He serves on a number of national and international scientific bodies, boards and committees and is a foundation principal scientist of the national Maurice Wilkins Centre of Research Excellence. John was President of the Australia and New Zealand Society for Immunology (2018-20) John is a strong advocate for the role of science in society and the importance of research led teaching in medical education.
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John Freebairn holds the Ritchie Chair in economics at the University of Melbourne.
He has degrees from the University of New England and the University of California, Davis. Prior to joining Melbourne in 1996 his preceding career includes university appointments at the ANU, LaTrobe and Monash, and periods with the NSW Department of Agriculture and at the Business Council of Australia.
John is an applied microeconomist and economic policy analyst with current interests in taxation reform and environmental economics.
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Adjunct Professor (Industry), University of Technology Sydney
John is a sustainability and communications professional across diverse industries with a focus on product stewardship, the circular economy and extended producer responsibility. He is a director of the Australian Product Stewardship Centre of Excellence, an adjunct professor with the Institute for Sustainable Futures at UTS, and co-founder of the Ewaste Watch Institute. His early work on circular design and cradle-to-cradle thinking represents a pioneering phase with RMIT’s Centre for Design team. John’s policy, stewardship and circular design projects cover appliances, automotive, electronics, office furniture, floor coverings, textiles and plastic products used in the healthcare sector. He served as Executive Director of Product Stewardship Australia from 2006 to 2011 advising global consumer electronics brands in the development of Commonwealth product stewardship legislation and the National Television and Computer Recycling Scheme. John was also the Associate Director of the European Union-funded ‘EcoSmart Design Program’ based in Ireland. He has worked in Australia, New Zealand, India and Northern Ireland, and is an Honorary Fellow of the Design Institute of Australia. John is also a member of the Ministerial Advisory Group on the Circular Economy recently established by the Australian Government through the Minister for the Environment and Water, the Hon Tanya Plibersek MP.
Master of Arts (Environmental Design), RMIT University, 2004
Bachelor of Social Science (Socio-Environmental Assessment and Policy), RMIT University, 1988
Graduate Diploma (Media Studies), Deakin University, 2001.
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Professor of Archaeology and Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool
John Gowlett is a British Archaeologist born in the Isle of Man, based in the University of Liverpool, and collaborating with colleagues on projects in Kenya. He has worked on archaeological sites around the world for many years, and has particular interests in fire and in the evolution of form in tools. He is currently mainly involved with research on the extinct volcano of Kilombe in Kenya, which has a record 2 million years long.
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Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs and Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine, University of Florida
Dr. Gums is a Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine in the Departments of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research and Community Health and Family Medicine at the University of Florida. Additionally, he holds the title of Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs in the College of Pharmacy and Director of Clinical Research in Family Medicine at the University of Florida. He received his undergraduate degree in pharmacy from the University of Wisconsin and his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the Medical University of South Carolina. Subsequently, he completed a fellowship in Family Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina. Dr. Gums joined the faculty at the University of Florida in 1985, and is actively involved in teaching in the colleges of Pharmacy and Medicine. He has received the Faculty Recognition Award from the College of Pharmacy and twice was selected as Teacher of the Year by the University of Florida, Department of Family Medicine.
He has authored more than 120 peered-review articles, 14 continuing education programs, and 25 book chapters. He has given more than 150 invited presentations to national and international pharmacy and medical associations. He maintains an active clinical research program and is currently an investigator on a 5-year NIH grant evaluating the pharmacogenomics of hypertension (PEAR2 study), a 2-year NIH grant evaluating the impact of clinical pharmacy services in a primary care model (CAPTION trial), and continues to be the principal investigator of the Antimicrobial Resistance Management (ARM) Program, the largest antibiotic resistance surveillance program in the country.
Dr. Gums maintains membership in ASHP, ACCP, is a member of the Family Medicine Editorial Advisory Council for the Annals of Pharmacotherapy, and was recently appointed as a Scientific Editor for the journal Pharmacotherapy. In 1993, he was appointed by the governor as a member of the State of Florida Pharmacy Services and Technical Review panel. In 1997, he received the Outstanding Clinical Practice Award from ACCP. In 2002, Dr. Gums was selected as a Primary Health Care Policy Fellow through the office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services in Washington, D.C. And in 2007, he was elected as a Fellow in the American College of Clinical Pharmacy.
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Doctorant en littérature et arts de la scène et de l'écran (concentration cinéma), Université Laval
John Harbour est doctorant en littérature et arts de la scène et de l’écran à l’Université Laval.
Ses recherches portent sur l’artiste multidisciplinaire québécois Raoul Barré, les interactions entre le cinéma d'animation et la bande dessinée ainsi que sur les cinéastes pionniers et pionnières. Également vidéaste pour la chaîne Noovo, John Harbour est aussi cinéaste d’animation dont les films furent sélectionnés dans plusieurs festivals internationaux (Fantasia, Sommets du cinéma d'animation, Festival international de cinéma d’animation de Meknès, LINOLEUM d’Ukraine).
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Associate professor, University of Nottingham
I'm an Associate Professor based in N/LAB. My recent work focuses on the use of aggregated consumer behavioural data to address social issues, such as: food and nutritional security, food waste, loneliness, deprivation, and vulnerable migration.
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Teaching Assistant Professor of Environmental Design, University of Colorado Boulder
John has worked at the intersection of multimodal mobility and community development for more than 15 years, including positions with municipal, regional, state, and federal transportation-planning agencies, affordable-housing intermediaries, and universities in Boston, Denver, and Washington DC.
John earned a bachelor's degree in sustainable urban planning and a master's degree in regional planning from the University of Massachusetts - Amherst and a master's degree in real estate development from the University of Maryland - College Park.
Living in Colorado since 2016, John enjoys exploring the great outdoors and learning in the living laboratory of great places.
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Dr John Hewson is the former leader of the Liberal Party of Australia. John has had a distinguished business career both before and after his political career.
He has worked as an economist for the Australian Treasury (Census and Statistics), the Reserve Bank, the International Monetary Fund and also as an advisor to two successive Federal Treasurers and the Prime Minister. John was a Director of Macquarie Bank and a past Chairman of ABN AMRO in Australia.
His academic career included 11 years as a Professor of Economics, with four years as Head of the School of Economics at the University of New South Wales, and two years as Dean, Macquarie Graduate School of Management and Professor of Management at Macquarie University.
John has been director of many organisations and has guided many from early stage to maturity. John has been extensively involved in the climate debate in Australia and internationally.
He is a the Chairman of the Asset Owners Disclosure Project.
John is an Honorary Professorial Fellow at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University.
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Professor of Alcohol Policy, Sheffield Alcohol Research Group, University of Sheffield
I am a Professor of Alcohol Policy and Director of the Sheffield Alcohol Research Group (SARG) in ScHARR at the University of Sheffield. My research uses both quantitative and qualitative methods and covers epidemiology and policy analyses related to alcohol. In particular I work on SARG's analysis of alcohol pricing policies, lead our research on lower risk drinking guidelines and also study drinking culture culture and trends in drinking
My degrees were all undertaken within the Social Policy and Social Work department of the University of York. During this time I worked as a research assistant studying trends in child poverty in the UK and developing countries.
After completing my PhD I worked for the Institute for Social Change at the University of Manchester as a Research Associate for one year before moving to Sheffield as a Research Fellow in 2010.
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Senior researcher, Institute of Geophysics, Czech Academy of Sciences
I am a researcher and teacher based in Prague. My research group explores how climate, tectonics and life transform Earth's surface through time.
Following research positions at universities in Wollongong, Glasgow, Stockholm, Potsdam and Aarhus, I joined the Institute of Geophysics in 2019 where I lead the Surface Processes and Palaeoclimate group. I am also visiting senior fellow at the University of Wollongong (2023- ), visiting professor at the Chengdu University of Technology (2019- ) and associate editor with the Geological Society of America Bulletin (2018- ).
I have co-authored >75 peer-reviewed scientific papers cited in total >4000 times. All my publications can be accessed freely at https://johnjansen1.blogspot.com
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Co-Director of the Centre for Pilgrimage Studies, University of York
John is the Co-Director of the Centre for Pilgrimage Studies at the University. His work currently focuses on the relationship between cathedrals, saints’ cults and pilgrimage from the medieval period to the present day. He first came to York in 2014 as a Research Assistant on the AHRC-funded ‘Pilgrimage and England’s Cathedrals: Past and Present’ project. Following that he was a researcher on projects looking variously at the influence of Thomas Becket’s cult in Canterbury and London, and at exploring ways in which understanding historic uses of space could help with visitor engagement in contemporary churches.
He was a key member of the planning and organisation committees for ‘Becket 2020’, the anniversary commemorations of Thomas Becket’s birth, death and translation. His work on the digital reconstructions of Thomas Becket’s medieval shrine in Canterbury Cathedral, produced by the Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture at the University, received international media coverage in 2020. He has made several appearances on the BBC and the Smithsonian Channel discussing various aspects of his work on pilgrimage and medieval history.
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