Associate Professor in Polish Literature and Culture, UCL
Dr Katarzyna Zechenter is an Associate Professor at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL. Katarzyna specializes in Polish contemporary literature and the history of ideas, specifically suffering and cultural trauma in Poland. She is the author of the first English language monograph of Tadeusz Konwicki ("The Fiction of Tadeusz Konwicki: Coming to Terms with Post-war Polish History and Politics"), and the editor of a highly popular book on bilingualism ("Bilingual and Bicultural: Speaking Polish in North America') that ran to three editions - two in the UK and one in the USA.
She has written on the transformation of post-1989 spatial identity; the concept of suffering; memory and identity formation, on Polish-Jewish literature, and bilingualism.
Katarzyna is also an award-winning poet whose poems regularly appear in major literary journals in Poland. Her last volume of poetry, 'There and Here', (Tam i tutaj: Poznań 2019) was nominated for *Orfeusz Literary Prize for 2019* and won *The Best Book Award of the Union of Polish Writers Abroad*. Her poems in English appear in The Bangalore Review or in Bhutan (Tashi Delek).
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Associate Head of School, Teaching and Learning (Health, Disability & Inclusion), Deakin University
Dr Kate Anderson is a senior lecturer and researcher at Deakin University, Melbourne. Kate grew up in a family of educators and is driven by her passion for education and inclusion across the lifespan. Kate is a qualified speech pathologist and has worked in the areas of cerebral palsy, autism, and assistive technology. Her primary research explores how communication about health services and technologies can be made more accessible for people with disability or diversity. She is passionate about co-design and consumer consultation, and teaches inclusive design methods to students from a wide range of disciplines. Kate is also a Fellow of Deakin's Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning (CRADLE).
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Professor of Law, Columbia University
Kate Andrias teaches and writes in the fields of constitutional law, labor law, and administrative law. Her scholarship probes the failures of U.S. law to protect workers’ rights, examines the efforts of historical and contemporary worker movements to transform legal structures, and analyzes how labor law and constitutional governance might be reformed to enable greater political and economic democracy. Drawing from constitutional law, administrative law, and legal history perspectives, she also has explored the relationship between law and the perpetuation of economic inequality. She frequently provides advice on policy initiatives to legislators and workers’ rights organizations and works on related litigation. Andrias is a co-director of the Columbia Labor Lab and the Columbia Law School Center for Constitutional Governance.
Prior to law school, Andrias worked for several years as an organizer with the Service Employees International Union. After receiving a J.D. from Yale Law School, she clerked for Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit and for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’59 on the U.S. Supreme Court. Andrias practiced political law at Perkins Coie and served as associate counsel and special assistant to President Barack Obama and as chief of staff in the White House Counsel’s Office.
She joined the faculty of Michigan Law School in 2013 and was the recipient of its L. Hart Wright Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2016. She joined the faculty of Columbia Law School in 2021 and also has served as an academic fellow at Columbia Law School and taught American Constitutional Law as a visiting professor at L'Institut d'Études Politiques (Sciences Po) in Paris. Andrias served as a commissioner and the rapporteur for the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court, is a member of the American Law Institute, and sits on the Board of Academic Advisors of the American Constitution Society.
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ARC DECRA Senior Research Fellow, The University of Queensland
Dr Kate Ariotti is an ARC DECRA Senior Research Fellow in the School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry at the University of Queensland. Her research examines the social and cultural impacts of war in Australia. She has published on wartime captivity and the experiences of Australian prisoners of war – including the 2018 book Captive Anzacs: Australian POWs of the Ottomans during the First World War (Cambridge University Press), which was nominated for the inaugural Les Carlyon Literary Award – as well as the ways in which Australians have historically remembered and commemorated wars. In 2017 she edited with Dr James Bennett Australians and the First World War: Local-Global Connections and Contexts (Palgrave).
Her current ARC-funded project ‘Between Death and Commemoration: An Australian History of the War Corpse’ will provide the first comprehensive account of the changing policies, practices and attitudes that have shaped the treatment of the physical remains of Australian war dead between the First World War and recent wars in the Middle East (1915-2015). This project will provide a valuable new perspective on the realities of Australian participation in war and a critical understanding of the place of death in war in the Australian past and present.
Kate teaches 19th and 20th century Australian history, and supervises both honours and postgraduate students working on research projects within this rich field. Several of her students have won prestigious national prizes for their work.
Kate has been a participant in several writer’s festivals, public symposia, and museum exhibitions, and has served as a judge for the NSW Premier's History Awards. Before commencing her position at the University of Queensland, Kate worked as a Historian in the Military History Section of the Australian War Memorial and, most recently, in the School of Humanities and Social Science at the University of Newcastle
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Professor / Head of Education, Northumbria University, Newcastle
Academic qualifications
PhD examined professionals' learning working as multi-agency teams within Children's Services (2010-2013, Lancaster)
MBA completed in 2009 (Chester)
Also hold PGCE (Aberystwyth, 1999), MSc (Bangor, Ecology, 1995), BSc Hons (Reading, Physical Geography, 1994)
Professional qualifications
Principal Fellow of HEA (PFHEA)
Certified Management and Business Educator (CMBE)
Member of CIPD (MCIPD)
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Associate Professor of Human Geography, University of Tasmania
Kate Booth is Associate Professor of Human Geography in the School of Geography, Planning, and Spatial Sciences. Her work addresses socio-ecological inequity in the context of rapid and unprecedented global change.
She leads a strategic insurance research program, investigating on the intersections of geography, insurance and society. This program is the only program of its kind in Australia. Kate’s research has established her as a world leader in insurance in a changing climate. She is instrumental in defining the field of critical insurance studies.
Kate also leads the University of Tasmania’s postgraduate planning program and the professionally accredited Master of Planning. She co-ordinates the Master’s thesis stream, and teaches regional and urban planning. Her teaching addresses rising inequity and the escalating economic and social impacts and risks of unmitigated climate change.
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Research Area Specialist, University of Michigan
Kate Brantley, MSW, is a research area specialist at Housing Solutions for Health Equity at the University of Michigan. Their work focuses on eviction injustice, the consequences of forced displacement for mental health and community well-being, and structural change that affirms housing as a human right.
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Kate Burridge is a prominent Australian linguist and the current Chair of Linguistics at Monash University.
Kate completed her undergraduate training in Linguistics and German at the University of Western Australia. This was followed by three years postgraduate study at the University of London. Kate completed her PhD in 1983 on syntactic change in medieval Dutch.
Amongst other things, Kate is also the author of many books, a regular guest on ABC radio and recently presented a TED talk in Sydney on Euphemisms in English.
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Professor, School of Events, Tourism and Hospitality Management, Leeds Beckett University
Professor Kate Dashper is the Director of Research Degrees in the School of Events, Tourism and Hospitality Management. Her research applies a critical sociological lens to examine practices of work and leisure, particularly focusing on gender issues and interspecies encounters.
Kate is an internationally recognised researcher for her work in human-animal studies. Through her research on equestrian sport and leisure, Kate examines how humans and nonhumans work and play together, and the interspecies relationships that can develop through joint action and interaction. Her research considers the potential contributions that multispecies perspectives can make to understanding events, tourism and hospitality practices and organisations. She is author of the 2017 monograph Human-animal Relationships in Equestrian Sport and Leisure (Routledge) and co-editor of the first book on multispecies events, Humans, horses and Event Management (CABI, 2021).
Kate’s other main area of expertise is gender, and she has conducted research and consultancy projects within both the events and equestrian industries, evaluating gender equality initiatives in organisations and exploring the gendered experiences of women and men within professional and leisure contexts. She is editor of Sport, Gender and Mega-events (Emerald, 2021).
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Professor of Marketing, Cardiff University
Kate’s research interests include consumer misbehaviour, dysfunction during service, service design, social media dynamics disinformation and behavioural change. Kate was awarded Cardiff Business School’s Martin Evans award for excellence for teaching for 2018. Kate serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Service Research, Journal of Business Research, Journal of Marketing Management and Journal of Services Marketing. Kate is a professional member of the Chartered Institute of Marketing (MCIM), a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and a member of the Beta Gamma Sigma International Business Honour Society.
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Senior Lecturer and Head of Discipline of Strategic Communication, University of Technology Sydney
Kate Delmo's research interests are explore the intersection between data, technology, and people. Her areas of interests are in digital influencers, social media literacy and disaster risk resilience, and organisational risk, issue and crisis communication. She teaches both in the undergraduate and postgraduate programs in Strategic Communication at UTS.
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Professor of American History, University of Leeds
Kate is an award-winning historian of the twentieth century United States with broad interests in cultural and political history and specializations in African American History, Gender histories and histories of the African Diaspora. She has published widely on Black Theatre, the Harlem Renaissance, Black Feminism and the history of the archive. Her current research examines how the collection of Black cultural archives by the British and U.S governments in the early twentieth century shapes access to and knowledge production about black history and heritage today. Supported by the Independent Social Research Foundation and British Library Eccles Centre Fellowship, the project explores the relationship between Black British and African American theatre by examining Black theatre manuscripts collected by the state
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Lecturer, Veterinary Science, The University of Queensland
I am a wildlife conservationist with expertise in wildlife reproduction and behaviour. I also have a background in veterinary epidemiology and One Health.
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PhD Researcher, Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures and Holocaust Research Institute, Royal Holloway University of London
Kate Ferry-Swainson is an AHRC-sponsored technē DPT PhD researcher in the department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures and the Holocaust Research institute at Royal Holloway, University of London.
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Senior Lecturer, Communications and Media, Monash University
Dr Kate Fitch is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Media, Film and Journalism at Monash University. Her research foregrounds critical and sociocultural understandings of public relations, drawing on historical, feminist and social justice perspectives. Her first monograph, Professionalizing Public Relations: History, Gender and Education (Fitch, 2016, Palgrave) remains the only book-length, historical investigation of the development of the industry in Australia. Her second book, Popular Culture and Social Change: The Hidden Work of Public Relations (Fitch & Motion, 2021, Routledge) offers a critical account of the broader societal impact of public relations. Dr Fitch co-edits Public Relations Inquiry.
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Adjunct Associate Professor in, Griffith University
Kate Freiberg, Adjunct Associate Professor at Griffith University, is Director of Research and Development at RealWell. Her work draws together developmental psychology and prevention science. She maintains a strong focus on the development of accessible resources and methodologies to support frontline professionals, schools, child serving organisations, and policy makers who strive to achieve better outcomes for children and families living in challenging environments.
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Sustainable Care Research Fellow, University of Sheffield
Kate joined the University of Sheffield to work on the Sustainable Care Programme in 2018. Previously she worked at the University of Oxford for almost nine years on projects exploring the balance between unpaid care and paid employment; self-employment and ageing; technology and its role in the care of older people with complex needs; and the role of museums and galleries in promoting wellbeing.
The Sustainable Care programme is highly relevant to Kate’s research interests. Its ambitious agenda looks to inform the design and delivery of care systems to promote the wellbeing of both those providing and receiving care. It is this aim and the inclusion of international partnerships to encourage cross-national debate and discussion that attracted her to the programme.
Kate is working on the overarching theoretical work package as well as those which focus on the role of technology in the provision of care, new models of care provision and support for those combining work and care.
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Lecturer of Clinical Pathophysiology and Family Nurse Practitioner, Kennesaw State University
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Senior Lecturer, Journalism, Liverpool John Moores University
Kate Heathman began her career in weekly and daily regional newspapers where she was a writer, copy editor and columnist. She has been teaching Journalism since 2000 and her research interests include community reporting, simulated newsrooms in the classroom and political communication on Twitter.
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Lecturer in International Studies, Indiana University
My research focuses on the intersection of social movements and media, especially social media, and debates over women's rights. I study this comparatively, and have published research on social movement organizations working across Ireland, Canada, and the United States.
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Professor in Sociology, Western Sydney University
Professor Kate Huppatz is Associate Dean, Research (School of Social Sciences), and Research Lead of SAGE/Athena Swan at WSU. She specialises in the study of gender (especially women and girls), labour, care and occupations. Her recent empirical research has explored gendered violence in workplaces and relationships, gender equity in academia, and labour market inequalities for western Sydney women, having impact on policy and practice. Dr Huppatz's publications include the books: The Good Mother' (with Sue Goodwin, 2010), 'Gender Capital at Work' (2012), 'Identity and Belonging' (with Hawkins and Matthews, 2016), and 'Gender, Work and Social Theory' (2023).
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Professor of Clinical Nursing, Dublin City University
Kate is currently working in Dublin City University, where she is Professor of Clinical Nursing, a joint appointment between DCU and the CHO9. She completed her PhD in 2001 at Curtin University of Technology, Western Australia. This thesis was entitled: Case studies in restraint use. Kate has a significant leadership role Irish dementia policy development and successfully led the national Dementia training initiative: Dementia Skills Elevator, aiming to develop dementia skills capacity in services and communities. Kate has led several European research consortiums in dementia prevention and approaches to care and support. Kate currently teaches the practice development module in Dementia and Ethics in Nursing on the under graduate curriculum.
Kate’s research interests include Dementia prevention/delay (Principle investigator FP7 Funded: Innovative Midlife Intervention for Dementia Deterrence), timely intervention in dementia care (Partner in FP7 funded Dem@care Ambient assisted living for dementia and JPND Actifcare, care pathways post diagnosis). Feasibility of a dementia register for Ireland (NGO commissioned). Dementia and sensor technology (Partner Demcare FP7 Funding).
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Senior Lecturer in Architectural History and Theory, University of Westminster
I am a senior lecturer in History and Theory in the School of Architecture and Cities at the University of Westminster. My research focuses on modern and contemporary faith architecture and inclusive heritage practices. I founded and co-lead the MA Architecture and Sustainable Heritage, which was established to explore holistic ways of understanding the relationship between tangible and intangible heritage.
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Senior Lecturer, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide
Kate is the Curator of the Waite Arboretum and Waite Conservation Reserve, a position that enables her to implement her knowledge of trees and Australian native plants, her skills in working with volunteers and community groups, and grow her various research interests. Kate’s main interest is improving Australian native plants for horticulture by research into propagation, cultivation, and breeding and selecting new varieties and species. She also has interests in supporting indigenous knowledge of food/medicines from plants; renewing the Urban Forest, sustainable agriculture and the environment; amenity horticulture (nursery, cut flower, garden design), and general horticulture (in particular small fruits and new crops such as essential oils, herbs, spices and Asian vegetables).
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Climate Program Manager, Institute of Climate, Energy and Disaster Solutions, Australian National University
Kate joins ICEDS from Deloitte’s Sustainability and Climate Change Team where she supported the development of the methodology for the ongoing National Climate Risk Assessment, and worked closely with federal government clients on their assessment of physical climate risk.
Kate also worked closely with ASX20 diversified mining companies to embed Environmental, Social and Governance policies at an operational level.
Prior to her role at Deloitte, Kate worked for ISS ESG as a controversy analyst, where she investigated corporate breaches of human rights and environmental norms, with a focus on the metals and mining sector.
As part of this work she engaged with ASX300 companies and their investors to better understand ongoing remediation efforts, and wrote several thought leadership pieces on behalf of ISS ESG, focusing on the Australian mining industry and its relationship with cultural heritage law.
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Postdoctoral research fellow, Queensland University of Technology
Dr Kate Letheren is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the QUT Business School. Prior to joining QUT, she spent time studying at Griffith University and also working in marketing roles on a consulting basis for a number of clients.
She is an active researcher in the areas of consumer psychology and communications, with a specific focus on anthropomorphism, anthropomorphic tendency, spokes-characters and robotics.
Dr Letheren also holds a research interest in marketing education, and sits on the editorial board for the Journal for the Advancement of Marketing Education.
In 2015, Dr Letheren was awarded a Fellowship from the Higher Education Academy in recognition of her approach to teaching and learning.
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Associate Professor, Political Science, The University of Melbourne
I joined the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne in January 2009. Before coming to Melbourne, I did my DPhil in the Department of International Development at Oxford (jointly supervised in the Department of Politics and International Relations), and I worked as a Fellow of Government (Global Politics) at the London School of Economics and Political Science, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics at the Australian National University and a Research Officer at the Department of Politics and International Relations at Oxford University.
My research focuses on transnational governance and accountability systems, especially in relation to transnational business regulation, and accountability in the international development sector. I have conducted research and consultancy work on these topics for a range of Australian and international organisations including the Forest Stewardship Council, Amnesty International, ActionAid Australia, Oxfam Australia and the UK’s Corporate Responsibility Coalition, and I am currently on the advisory board of the Jubilee Australia Research Foundation.
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Associate Dean, Faculty of Arts, The University of Melbourne
Qualifications
Doctor of Philosophy (University of Melbourne, 2007)
Post Graduate Diploma in Art History (University of Melbourne, 2002)
Graduate Diploma in Art History (University of Melbourne, 2000)
Postgraduate Diploma in Economics (University of Melbourne, 1991)
Bachelor of Law and Commerce (University of Melbourne, 1981)
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Casual Academic and PhD Candidate, Macquarie University
Kate is a PhD Candidate and Casual Academic at Macquarie University. Their PhD research explores lesbian and queer women's place in the Australian HIV/AIDS landscape.
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Researcher, Southern Cross University
Dr Kate Neale is a childhood studies and disability studies researcher who explores the benefits of time spent gardening and in greenspaces on wellbeing and social connection. She has a particular interest in how gardening and greenspaces can help change the dominant narratives and common perceptions of vulnerable or priority populations. She believes gardening is a wonderful way to demonstrate meaningful participation on issues that affect us all and is passionate about the design of greenspaces that are truly accessible and inclusive to all. Her groundbreaking work has illuminated the positive impacts of horticultural activities on physical and mental health, social inclusion and access to support services. Her dedication to this field not only contributes to advancing our understanding of the positive effects of nature on wellbeing, but also empowers communities to create nurturing environments that foster growth and healing among communities.
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PhD student, Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Newcastle
Kate O'Hara is an experienced pharmacist and pharmacology researcher. She is the current Vice President of SHPA
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Senior Lecturer School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University
Kate O’Reilly is a Senior Lecturer with the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Western Sydney University and teaches into both the undergraduate and post graduate programs. Kate’s research interests are related rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury, perimenopause and menopause and women's sexual and reproductive health.
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Associate Professor in Economics and Public Policy, University of Oxford
I am an Associate Professor in Economics and Public Policy and Senior Research Fellow at the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford. I am an affiliate at the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab and the Centre for the Study of African Economies. My work has been published in leading journals including the American Economic Review and Journal of the European Economic Association.
I have an MPhil and PhD in International Development from Oxford. I was a Rhodes Scholar, a Proctor Fellow at Princeton University and a Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Cambridge.
My work is in labour, public, behavioural and development economics. I create new public policy interventions with NGOs and governments which aim to reduce poverty or improve employment and earnings. I test these programmes in large-scale field experiments, producing both papers relevant to academic debates and findings which can be applied in policy and programme design.
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