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Claire Coulstock

Lecturer in dermal science, Victoria University
Claire Coulstock is a lecturer in the Bachelor of Dermal Science at Victoria University.

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Claire Dambrin

Professor in Management Control, ESCP Business School
Claire Dambrin is Professor in Management Control at ESCP Europe Paris campus. She is currently the director of the PhD Programme on the Paris campus. She earned her PhD from Paris Dauphine University in 2005 and was professor in accounting at HEC Paris from 2004 to 2012. She was a visiting researcher at the Department of Accounting of the London School of Economics (2005) and at the Stan Ross Department of Accountancy of Baruch College (CUNY) in 2008-2009. She serves in the editorial board of Accounting, Organizations and Society, Management Accounting Research and Critical Perspectives on Accounting.

Claire Dambrin’s research is interdisciplinary and deals with the sociology of calculative devices. In particular, she studies the socio-institutional conditions of emergence and consequences of performance measurement systems. Another part of her research deals with gender and professionalization. Recent publications include contributions to Work, Employment and Society; Human Relations; Accounting, Organizations and Society; Critical Perspectives on Accounting and Management Accounting Research.

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Claire Hutchinson

Professor of Experimental Psychology, University of the West of Scotland
Claire is an experimental psychologist with interests in human vision, perception and cognition, with a particular focus on visual perception and cognition in healthy aging, neurodegeneration and disease.

Claire is currently Professor of Psychology at the University of the West of Scotland. She has held previous academic posts at the University of Leicester, where she worked as a lecturer and Associate Professor.

She has an MA (Hons) Psychology, awarded by the University of Aberdeen and a PhD in Visual Neuroscience, awarded by the University of Nottingham.

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Claire Mason

Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO
Dr Claire Mason is principal research scientist with CSIRO's Data61. She leads the Technology and Work team which investigates how technology developments are affecting demand for workers and skills. She also contributes to CSIRO's Collaborative Intelligence Future Science Platform which explores the potential to achieve a step-change improvement in performance by designing applications and workflows that utilise the complementary strengths of human and artificial intelligence (AI).

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Claire Molloy

Claire Molloy is Professor of Film, Television and Digital Media, Director of the Institute for Creative Enterprise (ICE) and Director of the Centre for Human Animal Studies (CfHAS).

Her research interests focus on the critical junctures between media, film and Animal Studies; (un)sustainable consumption; eco-media; American cinema; activism; and, film and politics.

Her recent publications include the books Memento (2010), Popular Media and Animals (2011), Beyond Human: From Animality to Transhumanism (2012) and American Independent Cinema: indie, indiewood and beyond (2013). She is currently co-editing The Routledge Companion to Film and Politics. In addition, her recent work on popular depictions of animal cruelty, industrial-economic analysis of commercial wildlife films, a history of independent nature films, news coverage of dangerous dogs, representations of nature in commercial feature films, farmed animals product advertising, and neoliberal aesthetics have been published in various edited collections and journals.

Her research on news media discourses and the UK coastline forms one of four case studies on non-monetary valuations of nature (WP5) for the National Ecosystem Assessment (2013) and she is a contributing author to a guide on deliberative methods for non-monetary valuations of nature for policy-makers and key decision-makers (2014). She is a Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics, serves on the Vegan Society Academic Advisory Committee and the Minding Animals International Programme Committee, and is an advisor to the Animal History Museum. In addition to reviewing for fourteen different publishers and journals and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Claire is Consultant Editor for the Journal of Animal Ethics and on the Advisory Board for the Palgrave Macmillan Book Series on Animal Ethics.

Her current research examines various aspects of sustainable ethical food production, particularly where these relate to media regulation, meat and dairy consumption, and the tensions between sustainable consumption and neoliberal constructions of consumer pleasure. She is involved in research on women and wildlife filmmaking, media discourses on animal sentience and she continues to write about Christopher Nolan’s films.

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Claire Parker-Farthing

Senior Lecturer in Midwifery, Anglia Ruskin University
Claire is a midwife and Senior Lecturer in Midwifery in Cambridge, UK, at Anglia Ruskin University. She holds a honours degree in Midwifery Studies and Masters degree in Reproductive Health and Population Studies. She is an Associate Trainer with the charity Birthrights, and has been a health worker campaigner for Save the Children. Clinically she has worked in a variety of roles in the UK, including Consultant Midwife, Matron and midwife-led birthing unit manager, and overseas she has worked for medical aid agencies in both Cambodia and Liberia.

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Claire Parsons

Researcher, Centre for International and Defence Policy, Queen's University, Ontario
Claire Parsons is a researcher with the Centre for International and Defence Policy where she works on quantum technology’s effects on the defence strategies of the Five Eyes alliance and the relationship between cybersecurity and climate change. Her research interests pertain to military affairs and international relations with her Major Research Project focusing on reducing the recruitment and retention of far-right radicals, white supremacists, and neo-Nazis into the Canadian Armed Forces. Claire holds a Master’s of Arts in Political Studies with a specialization in Nationalism, Ethnicity, Peace, and Conflict from Queen’s University. She was also recently appointed a 2024 Capstone Laureate of the Canadian Defence and Security Network. She holds a Bachelor's (Honours) Undergraduate degree in Political Studies and a Certificate in Law from Queen's University.

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Claire Szostek

Marine Ecologist, Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Claire has over a decade of research experience in marine fisheries ecology, more recently focusing on the environmental and ecosystem service outcomes of offshore renewables. Claire works closely with industry, government and third-sector organisations and across the science/policy interface. She has an MSc and PhD from Bangor University.

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Claire Wendland

Claire Wendland is a professor in the Departments of Anthropology and Obstetrics & Gynecology at University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is the author of A Heart for the Work: Journeys through an African Medical School, the first ethnography of a medical school in the global South, and Partial Stories: Maternal Death from Six Angles. Trained as a cultural anthropologist and obstetrician-gynecologist, she researches medicine, metrics, and women's health in cross-cultural perspective.

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Claire Wicks

Senior Research Assistant, University of Essex
I achieved my PhD in Health Studies at the University of Essex. My research focusses on the psychological health benefits of green exercise, nature-based public health interventions, and green social prescribing. I have been involved in evaluating various nature-based initiatives at local and national level.

https://www.essex.ac.uk/people/WICKS38804/claire-wicks

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8330-5373

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Claire Wofford

Associate Professor of Political Science, College of Charleston
Claire Wofford, J.D., Ph.D., currently holds the rank of Associate Professor and is also the Director of the Pre-Law Advising Program at the College of Charleston. She offers courses on American Government, Constitutional Law, Civil Liberties, and Equality and the Law at the undergraduate level. 

Wofford’s research interests are in the field of American politics, with a particular emphasis on the U.S. legal system. Her work has appeared in Law & Society Review, Journal of Law & Courts, Justice System Journal, Political Science Quarterly, Politics & Gender, American Politics Research, and Journal of Political Science, among others. She is currently exploring whether and how litigants constrain judicial decision-making and how gender shapes the civil litigation process. Wofford has also offered commentary and opinion pieces for a variety of print, radio and television media, including The Baltimore Sun, The Post & Courier, Christian Science Monitor, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Politico, and National Public Radio.

She earned her Ph.D. in Political Science from Emory University in 2011. She also holds a J.D. from Duke University School of Law and a B.A. in Political Science from Wellesley College.

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Claire Seungeun Lee

Associate Professor of Criminology and Justice Studies, UMass Lowell
Claire S. Lee, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the School of Criminology and Justice Studies and a Member of the Center for Internet Security and Forensics Education and Research (iSAFER). She is a Core Personnel of the Center for Asian American Studies and a Fellow of the Center for Public Opinion. Using her interdisciplinary and multilingual background, Lee’s research focuses on deviance and crime in cyberspace, cybersecurity, cyberterrorism, social media, and the social implications of social and new technologies. She studies these issues using quantitative, qualitative, computational, and mixed methodologies.

Lee conducts research focusing on comprehending the mechanisms and networks of deviant behaviors at both the state and individual levels, with a particular emphasis on those facilitated by cyber-resources or located in cyberspace. Additionally, she explores the online and offline behaviors and patterns of various social phenomena, as well as the behaviors of terrorists, extremists, and the general public.

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Claire Williams Bridgwater

Research Professor in Environmental Science, American University
Although a research professor at American University, I recently completed a MA degree in Global Studies at UNC-Chapel Hill. This I did after being inspired as a AAAS Fellow in Science Diplomacy at State Dept where I served as a science advisor at State’s Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs. Tenured full professor at Texas A&M, I have published over 100 articles and three books. My career has mostly been academic but I have worked for corporate R&D, federal government and a consulting company specializing in solving problems at the research-policy interface. My interests are atmospheric biology, ecology and evolution - and now science diplomacy.

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Clancy William James

Senior Lecturer (astronomy and astroparticle physics), Curtin University
I got my PhD from the University of Adelaide in 2009 for my thesis entitled "Ultra-High Energy Particle Detection with the Lunar Cherenkov Technique", in the field of astroparticle physics.
I then worked from 2009-2011 at Radboud University, the Netherlands, on the LOFAR radio telescope, before moving to Erlangen, Germany at the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg to work on the ANTARES and KM3NeT neutrino detectors. Since 2017, I have been based at Curtin University, Perth as part of the International Centre of Radio Astronomy Research. My current formal position is "senior lecturer".

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Clara Carrera

PhD Candidate in Technology and Operations Management, INSEAD
Clara Carrera is a PhD Candidate in Technology and Operations Management at INSEAD. Her research interests include circular economy, renewable energy operations, and behavioral operations. Prior to joining INSEAD, she worked in Paris at the Boston Consulting Group and at Amazon.

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Clara Eroukhmanoff

Senior Lecturer in International Relations, London South Bank University
Clara is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations and the Associate Dean for Research & Enterprise in the School of Law and Social Sciences (London South Bank University). Her current research lies at the intersection of feminist writing in International Relations, gender and foreign policy, with a particular focus on feminist foreign policy, the remasculinisation of international politics and anti-genderism.

She is currently co-editing a book (with Hannah Partis-Jennings) on 'Feminist Policymaking in Turbulent Times: Critical Perspectives' (Routledge) which explores the growing integration of feminism and gender equality agendas in various areas of policy. In her chapter on 'French feminist diplomacy', Clara critically engages with this policy as a narrative and a strategic tool for France to re-brand itself as a 'feminist actor' on the international stage.

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Clara Zwack

Lecturer in Physiotherapy, Swinburne University of Technology
Dr Clara Zwack is a qualified physiotherapist, researcher and educator. She has been working as a physiotherapist for eight years in a variety of settings, including community, post-acute care, sports, aged care and hospital. More recently, she completed her PhD at the Iverson Institute at Swinburne University of Technology, whereby she undertook a study exploring the cardiometabolic risk profile of young adults with intellectual disability. Following, she completed two years of post-doctoral studies at the University of Sydney, looking at modernising cardiovasuclar rehabilitation practices. Clara has since returned to Swinburne University in a lecturing capacity and is currently teaching Masters of Physiotherapy students in multiple subjects.

Clara's ongoing research focus is in the areas of disability, digtial health, cardiac rehab, science of science and physical actvity during complex pregnancy. In recent projects she has collaborated with the the National Heart Foundation Australia, Medibank and Yooralla, with whom she has ongoing industry partnerships.

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Clare Alley

Lecturer in Psychology, University of Salford

Clare Allely is a Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Salford in Manchester, England, and is an affiliate member of the Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre at Gothenburg University, Sweden. Clare is also an Honorary Research Fellow in the College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences affiliated to the Institute of Health and Wellbeing at the University of Glasgow.

Clare holds a PhD in psychology from the University of Manchester and has previously graduated with an MA (hons.) in Psychology from the University of Glasgow, an MRes in Psychological Research Methods from the University of Strathclyde and an MSc degree in Forensic Psychology from Glasgow Caledonian University. Between June 2011 and June 2014, Clare worked at the University of Glasgow as a postdoctoral researcher.

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Clare Ardern

Assistant Professor in Physiotherapy, University of British Columbia
Clare is an Australian-trained physiotherapist. Her research work brings researchers, patients, clinicians and health policy makers together to find and build new solutions to challenging problems in musculoskeletal health. Clare’s expertise in sports medicine, rehabilitation and meta-research has been honed over more than a decade working in clinical and research environments in Australia, Qatar, Sweden and Canada. She is interested in (i) using everyday technology in clever ways to break down barriers to people accessing quality musculoskeletal health care, (ii) measuring the impact of health research on public policy, the economy and society, and (iii) equity in research funding and health care.

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Clare Buswell

Adjunct Lecturer, History, Archaeology, Indigenous Studies and Geography, Flinders University

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Clare Carolin

Senior Lecturer, Art and Public Engagement, King's College London
My work focuses on the intersection of contemporary art and various forms of state violence including socially detrimental urban overdevelopment and militarized force. I research how art, artists, architects, and urban planners have been implicated in the exercise of hard and soft state power, ‘inadmissible heritage’ in public collections, and artist monitoring by the state. Conversely, I explore visual histories of interracial solidarity and work to develop revisionist curatorial formats that reinterpret the art of the past.

My doctoral research combined contemporary art history and theory with security, intelligence, and media studies to investigate officially commissioned art during the Irish ‘Troubles’ and the 1982 Falklands/Malvinas conflict. My monograph based on this study 'The Deployment of Art' will be published by Routledge in 2023.

I was Exhibitions Curator at the Hayward Gallery (1999-2007), Senior Curator at Modern Art Oxford (2009-10), and Deputy Head of the Curating Contemporary Art Department, Royal College of Art (2007-2014). Recent projects include 'The Surface of the World: Architecture and the Moving Image' (Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Manila, Philippines, 2014-17); 'Spectres of Modernism: Artists Against Overdevelopment' (Bowater House/Raven Row, London 2017-18) and 'Open Plan: Communities in Contemporary Art' (South London Gallery, 2022) (co-edited with Carey Robinson). I have worked in a freelance and associate capacity with diverse visual arts organisations including Tate; Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge; South London Gallery and the Alytus Biennale (Lithuania).

My doctoral research combined contemporary art history and theory with security, intelligence, and media studies to investigate officially commissioned art during the Irish ‘Troubles’ and the 1982 Falklands/Malvinas conflict. The monograph based on this work appears in 2023 (Routledge) addressed to their art, heritage, intelligence, social movement, and media studies lists. This feeds directly into the design of my next research project which explores interracial solidarity tactics and visual activism linking Northern Ireland and Black America during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. I will analyze contemporary art, political film, murals, and embodied protest actions to investigate how activists in Northern Ireland looked to the visual imagery of Black America as the basis for resistance and solidarity and ask if, and how that ‘look’ was returned. Planned research outputs for that project include a second monograph which will have wide appeal given current interest in interracial solidarity and anti-Imperialist struggle.

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Clare Downham

Senior Lecturer, University of Liverpool
Clare was a student at St Andrews and Cambridge. She worked as a research scholar in Dublin and as a lecturer in Celtic and History in Aberdeen before starting at Liverpool in 2010. Her publications to date have focused on Viking Age history. Her current research interests focus on contact across the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages.

Her research interests include Medieval Europe, especially Britain and Ireland AD 400-1350.

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Clare Eglin

Principal Lecturer in the School of Sport, Health, and Exercise Science, University of Portsmouth
I am a part time Principal Lecturer and leader of the Physiology Division. I am accredited by BASES for physiology research. After gaining my PhD in physiology at the University of Sheffield I worked as a research fellow for six years at the Universities of Surrey and Portsmouth before becoming a lecturer in 2001. My main research interests are in human and applied physiology including thermal physiology and occupational physiology.

My research interests are fairly broad in the area of human and applied physiology. My research in thermal physiology has ranged from the responses to extreme heat, to survival in cold water. In addition, I have also conducted studies on the energy expenditure of playing video games and the IL6 response to exercise. I am currently undertaking studies in non-freezing cold injury.

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Clare Hanlon

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Clare Jackson

Senior Lecturer in Sociology, University of York
I am a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of York. My teaching includes conversation analysis (CA) and modules attached to the social psychology pathway.

My research uses CA to study the interactional accomplishment of decision-making in clinical settings. From 2015-2017 I worked on a project that analysed how choice is offered in neurology consultations. Since 2017, I have been working on how decisions are made in the interaction between labouring women, their birth partners and healthcare practitioners in midwife-led units.


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Clare Jouanny

PhD Candidate, Pelvic Health Conditions, University of Stirling
I am an experienced Specialist Physiotherapist in pelvic health, having set up and run a pelvic, obstetric, and gynaecology physiotherapy service in Jersey, Channel Islands. My particular clinical interests are in prolapse, pelvic floor dysfunction prevention, and persistent pelvic pain.
Having completed my Master of Health Research degree at the University of Stirling in 2019 with a research-based learning prize for best Health Sciences Research Project, I won funding from the ESRC/ Scottish Graduate School of Social Science in 2020, for a PhD to develop an intervention to encourage women to seek help sooner with early prolapse symptoms.
I am passionate about raising awareness of pelvic health conditions in general, and prolapse in particular; to raise awareness amongst women and health care professionals, encourage earlier help seeking, advocate for evidence informed lifestyle and conservative treatments, and prevent negative effects on quality of life.

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Clare Kelliher

Professor of Work and Organisation, Cranfield University
Professor Clare Kelliher is Professor of Work and Organisation at Cranfield School of Management, Cranfield University. She is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and holds a PhD in Organisational Behaviour from London Business School. Her research interests focus on the Changing World of Work, specifically the organisation of work and the management of the employment relationship. She has a long-standing interest in and is renowned for her research work on flexible working arrangements. She has recently directed an Economic and Social Research Council funded project designed to examine how the use of the government’s furlough scheme during the pandemic has influenced opportunities for part-time working. Her research has informed the work of government, policy groups and shaped employer practice, including contributions to the Agile Futures Forum, Engage for Success and the Department of Education’s Flexible Working in Schools project. Clare is the author of numerous journal articles, books and book chapters and is a regular speaker at national and international conferences. She is a member of the International Women’s Forum.

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Clare Littleton

Associate Professor and Deputy Director of the Centre for Healthy Sustainable Development, Torrens University Australia
I am Associate Professor at Torrens University Australia and Deputy Director of the Centre for Sustainable Development (Acting).

I conduct research in the area of public health with a specific focus on children, the social and political determinants of health, health equity, education, and public policy. My research focusses on addressing complex policy issues through cross disciplinary research, specifically public health and political science. Through my research I aim to bring about social change, address equity issues, and contribute to addressing the UN sustainable development goals.

I teach across a range of different topics in the Master of Public Health (MPH) at Torrens University including the social and political determinants of health, health policy and advocacy, qualitative research methods, and Capstone research projects. I am currently subject lead for the Health Policy and Advocacy Course in the MPH. I am also involved in curriculum development and most recently wrote the new Health Policy and Advocacy topic.

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Clare Mumford

Research Associate, University of Central Lancashire
Clare has worked on a number of qualitative research projects relating to work and employment. Her research interests lie broadly in organisation studies with two particular strands of focus: one encompassing concepts of care in work and employment, and the other exploring the role of silence, absence and inaction in organising processes.

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Clare Pastore

Professor of the Practice of Law, University of Southern California
Clare Pastore is an expert on poverty, civil rights, access to justice, and lawyers' professional responsibility. She teaches numerous classes related to her long practice experience in anti-poverty and civil rights organizations, while continuing to practice as a leading member of the California public interest community. She is co-author of the leading Poverty Law textbook and is a regular speaker on poverty, access to justice, and public interest law.

Pastore has received frequent state and national recognition as an outstanding advocate and teacher. In 2020, she won USC Gould School of Law’s Rutter Award for Distinguished Teaching. In 2019, she was honored with the Earl Johnson Equal Justice Award by the Western Center on Law and Poverty for her achievements and leadership in access to justice throughout her career. In 2013, she was one of ten educators nationwide to receive the Elizabeth Hurlock Beckman Award, which recognizes educators “who have inspired their former students to make a significant contribution to society.” In prior years, she was selected as a Wasserstein Fellow by Harvard Law School as part of its program recognizing outstanding public interest lawyers (2005), named one of the nation’s 45 most outstanding public interest attorneys under age 45 (American Lawyer magazine, 1997), one of California’s top lawyers under 40 years old (California Law Business, 1999), and one of Southern California’s “Super Lawyers” (2006-09). She was commended by an official State Assembly resolution in 2004 for her work on behalf of the poor in California.

Pastore serves on the California Advisory Committee to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and the Steering Committee of the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel. She is a member of USC’s Center for the Changing Family and the Los Angeles County Bar’s Amicus Briefs and Professional Responsibility & Ethics committees. She is a past member of the American Bar Association’s Homelessness and Poverty Commission, a former co-chair of the California Access to Justice Commission’s Right to Counsel Task Force, and a former longtime board member of the Wage Justice Center.

Pastore served for 15 years as a staff attorney at the Western Center on Law and Poverty, where she litigated many state and federal class action cases involving poverty law and disability rights. She received one of the nation’s first Skadden Fellowships to begin her work there in 1989. She was also affiliated with the ACLU of Southern California as Senior Counsel from 2004 til 2007, and Of Counsel from 2007 until 2011.

Pastore holds a BA (Phi Beta Kappa) from Colgate University and a JD from Yale Law School, where she was a senior editor of the Yale Law Journal. She clerked for Judge Marilyn Hall Patel, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Prior to law school, she was a Fulbright-sponsored teaching assistant in a Paris public school.

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Clare Sutherland

Senior lecturer, University of Aberdeen
I am an experimental psychologist who is interested in how we perceive, recognise, and form impressions about faces.

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Clare Wright

Associate Professor in History, La Trobe University

Dr Clare Wright is an award-winning historian, author and broadcaster who has worked in politics, academia and the media. She is the author of Beyond the Ladies Lounge: Australia's Female Publicans (MUP 2003, Text 2014) and The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka (Text 2013), which won the 2014 Stella Prize and the NIB Literary Prize and was short-listed for the Prime Minister's, Queensland, NSW and WA Literary Awards, and long-listed for a Walkley. Clare researched, wrote and presented the acclaimed ABC1 documentary Utopia Girls and devised and co-wrote the ABC documentary series, The War That Changed Us.

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Clarice D. Aiello

Quantum Biology Tech (QuBiT) Lab, Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles
Clarice D. Aiello is a quantum engineer interested in how quantum physics informs biology at the nanoscale. She is an expert on nanosensors harnessing room-temperature quantum effects in noisy environments.

Experiments suggest that nontrivial quantum mechanical effects involving spin might underlie biosensing phenomena as varied as magnetic field detection for animal navigation, metabolic regulation in cells and optimal electron transport in chiral biomolecules.

Can spin physics be established – or refuted! – to account for physiologically relevant biosensing, and be manipulated to technological and therapeutic advantage? This is the broad, exciting question that the Quantum Biology Tech (QuBiT) Lab wishes to address.

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Clark Da​nderson

Assistant Professor of Hospitality Management and Director of Brewing Science and Operations, Auburn University
Clark A. Danderson, PhD, received his B.S. in Plant Biology from the University of New Hampshire and his M.S. and PhD in Plant Biology from the University of Illinois. His previous research focused on plant-insect interactions and the evolutionary relationships of species in the carrot plant family. Most recently, Danderson graduated from the Graduate Certificate Program in Brewing Science and Operations here at Auburn. Prior to joining the Horst Schulze School of Hospitality Management at Auburn in 2021, Danderson was a lecturer and coordinator of the Food, Wine, and Beer Fermentation Program in the Department of Biology and Environmental Science at Auburn University at Montgomery. As coordinator, he developed courses related to food and beverage fermentation and built a ½ BBL brewing lab on campus. Recently, Danderson has broadened the scope of his research to include topics in brewing science. In particular, he is interested in the microbial diversity and ecology of mixed culture fermentations and the evolution of unique farmhouse strains of yeast. Danderson is an avid homebrewer, active in the local homebrew clubs, and sits on the Governing Committee for Free the Hops, the consumer arm of the Alabama Brewers Guild. Danderson is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the program, oversees the practicum and non-thesis research experiences (HOSP 7910 and HOSP 7980, respectively), and teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses within and outside the program.

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Clas Weber

Senior lecturer, The University of Western Australia
Clas Weber is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Western Australia. He currently holds a 3-year fellowship for Early Career Researcher (DECRA) from the Australian Research Council. He works in the philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and metaphysics.

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