Senior Lecturer in Cultural Studies and Media, Macquarie University
Chris Muller is a Senior Lecturer in Cultural Studies and Media at Macquarie University, Sydney.
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Post-doctoral Researcher in Ecology, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
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Lecturer in Cyber Security and Computer Science, University of Staffordshire
Chris has served for over 7 years as a Detective Constable before returning to University to complete his Master’s in Cyber Security and PhD in Computer Science. He is a EC-Council Certified Ethical Hacker to Master level and has experience in GNU/Linux OS, Operating System Security, Cyber Security Policy and Governance and Penetration Testing.
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Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering, United States Naval Academy
Christopher R. Anderson is an Associate Professor at the United States Naval Academy. He has over two decades of experience in radiowave propagation measurements and modeling, software-defined radios, and dynamic spectrum sharing. He is the Founder and Director of the Wireless Measurements Group (WMG), a focused research group that specializes in spectrum, propagation, and field strength measurements in diverse environments and at frequencies ranging from 300 MHz to 28 GHz. He is a former Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications and was a Guest Editor of the IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Signal Processing Special Issue on Non-Cooperative Localization Networks. He is currently the Chair of the Electromagnetic Metrology Commission in the U.S. National Committee for the International Union of Radio Science.
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Social Scientist, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University
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Professor of Ethics and Business Law, University of St. Thomas
Christopher Wong Michaelson is a philosopher with 25 years of experience advising business leaders pursuing meaning and providing work with a purpose, and he is the coauthor (with Jennifer Tosti-Kharas) of "Is Your Work Worth It? How to Think About Meaningful Work". He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and then joined the New York office of Price Waterhouse (now PwC) as one of the first five consultants in a business ethics practice. When he accepted a full-time faculty position teaching corporate ethics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, he kept a foot for several more years at PwC working on its Global CEO Survey and as its first Strategy Officer to the World Economic Forum. Christopher went from Wharton to NYU's Stern School of Business, where he still teaches, and later joined one of the largest business ethics faculties in the world at the University of St. Thomas, where he is the Opus Distinguished Professor and Academic Director of the Melrose and The Toro Company Center for Principled Leadership. He lives in Minneapolis with his wife, three kids, and two dogs.
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Associate Professor - Experimental Psychology, UCL
I'm a cognitive scientist with a background in computer science. My research is focused on causation, causal explanation and responsibility attribution. I'm mostly interested in the perception of causation and the relationship between time and causal relationships. I'm also studying how people understand the concept of the unconscious, and the role of unconscious manipulation.
I'm an Associate Professor in Experimental Psychology at UCL, where I'm teaching computer programming and philosophy of mind.
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Christos Kotsogiannis is Professor of Economics at the University of Exeter and a Research Fellow at CESifo, Germany. He was born in Athens and studied for his Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Essex.
His research is primarily in the field of public economics, political economics, environmental economics and international trade, with publications in journals such as,American Economic Review, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Journal of Public Economics, Journal of Public Economic Theory,International Tax and Public Finance, Journal of Urban Economics and Economics Letters. He has been the guest co-editor for a special issue on climate change issues for the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Environmental and Resource Economics and International Tax and Public Finance. He is currently on the editorial board of the Journal of Tax Administration and he is one of the three editors of CESifo Economic Studies.
Kotsogiannis has been a visiting scholar at the International Monetary Fund, and a consultant for the World Bank on issues of fuel subsidies. He was Head of the Economics Department at University of Exeter Business School from 2011-2014 and held a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellowship in 2009-2011. In 2015 Kotsogiannis was awarded the Copernicus International Fellowship from the University IUSS-Ferrara 1391.
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Research director at the Decision Support Systems (DSS) Laboratory, National Technical University of Athens
Christos Ntanos is a research director and senior researcher. He holds a Bachelor's and a Master's degrees in Electronic and Computer Engineering from the University of Birmingham, UK, an MBA from the Athens University of Economics and Business, and a PhD from the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA). His expertise spans the management of Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and cross-cutting research and innovation, as well as implementation projects, which includes coordinating initiatives under the Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe programmes. With extensive experience in various managerial, research, design, and implementation roles, Ntanos specialises in the development of ICT solutions, estimating IT and database systems, context awareness, e-health, disaster resilience and response, cybersecurity, risk management, Decision Support Systems, and Business Process Reengineering.
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Professor in Biology and Ecotoxicology, Toxicology Centre, University of Saskatchewan
Professor in the Dept of Biology and an Associate in Toxicology and the School of Environment and Sustainability at the University of Saskatchewan with a research program focussed on the effects of pesticides and other industrial contaminants on birds and aquatic ecosystems
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Professor, Centre for Social Research in Health, UNSW Sydney
Christy Newman is Professor at the UNSW Centre for Social Research in Health as well as Acting Deputy Dean and Associate Dean Engagement and Impact for UNSW Arts, Design and Architecture. They are a queer/bi+ and non-binary person, and use the pronouns they/them.
Christy is a qualitative social researcher of health, sexuality, and gender, with a background in sociology, communications and cultural studies. They have worked in partnership with communities, governments, and clinical services for almost 20 years to understand the social dimensions of bloodborne viruses, sexual and reproductive health, and queer, bi+ and trans health and wellbeing, including their intersections with the related fields of mental health, Aboriginal health, harm reduction, disability, cancer prevention, violence prevention, adolescent health, family wellbeing, and gender and sexuality studies.
Areas of expertise for public/media contributions:
Social aspects of: HIV and viral hepatitis; sexual and reproductive health; LGBTQ+ health and wellbeing; sexuality and gender diversity
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PhD Candidate, Communication Studies, Concordia University
Chrys Vilvang is a PhD candidate in Communication Studies at Concordia University. He is interested in the impact of digital technologies on consciousness and is currently exploring archives, algorithms, artificial intelligence, photography, and memory through research-creation.
Vilvang examines the production of meaning through images and how these processes are being transformed by tools that intervene, remediate, and alter our relationship with our photographic past.
Chrys has a BA in Cultural Studies from McGill University (2011), an MA in Media Studies from the University of Amsterdam (2015), and an MA in Media Production from Toronto Metropolitan University (2017). He has worked as a research assistant with the Montreal Signs Project and the Studio for Media Activism and Critical Thought.
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Associate Professor of Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Dr. Chuanyi Ji's research lies in both basic and applied areas of networking and machine learning. Her research interests include investigating fundamental properties and deriving engineering solutions for modeling and managing heterogeneous large networks, developing learning algorithms and their applications in networks, and seeking knowledge and insights from large-scale network data.
Research she has been involved with includes resilience of the energy grid and communication networks, proactive anomaly detection, scalability of measurement-based network monitoring, and performance and efficiency issues of learning algorithms.
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Research Associate, Loughborough University
Chun Liu is Research Associate in Multimodality working on The Kinesemiotic Body project. Chun’s research is on multimodal semiotics, interpersonal pragmatics, the pragmatics of fiction and the pragmatics of translation.
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McCall MacBain Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, McMaster University
A materials chemist that cooks up metals and minerals, making materials to improve our lives. Intermetallics and inorganic solid-state researcher.
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Senior Research Fellow, School of Health, University of Waikato
Chunhuan is a researcher interested in health economics and the epidemiology of cancer. She had the advanced trainning in health economics and statistics from the University of Waikato, University of Auckland, University of York and the University of Macau. She has substantial experience in the use of national breast cancer register data, and is an expert in big dataset linkages and biostatistics for cancer epidemiology.
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Lecturer in Criminology, University of Sheffield
Ciara’s work lies at the intersection of the criminological and the historical, and her research interests include (though are not limited to) the history of sexual violence, victimology, policing and youth subcultures.
She joined the School of Law in August 2023. Before coming to Sheffield, she worked as Service Coordinator for the Crime Victims Helpline, an independent charity in Ireland which provides information and emotional support for victims of crime. As part of her role with the Crime Victims Helpline she worked as lead researcher for the Republic of Ireland on the BeneVict project. Spearheaded by Victim Support Europe and co-funded by the EU, this project examined the implementation of the Victims’ Rights Directive throughout EU member states.
She completed her PhD in University College Dublin, where she held an Irish Research Council Government of Ireland Postgraduate Scholarship and a Sutherland School of Law Doctoral Scholarship. She is currently working on a monograph based on her PhD research which examines representations of Irish youth subcultures from the 1950s to the present.
Alongside Dr Richard McMahon she is co-editor of the Studies in Irish Crime History book series published by Cork University Press. Since February 2022 she has also acted as the Social Media Coordinator for the British Society of Criminology Historical Criminology Network (#HCNet).
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PhD candidate in Australasian Colonial History, University of Tasmania
Ciara Smart undertook a undergraduate degree in International and Global Studies at the University of Sydney, before jumping disciplines to complete Honours in Australian History. She is now deep in a PhD in History at the University of Tasmania, examining race relations across the colonies of Australia and New Zealand, with a focus on the colonial Irish. Her PhD is supervised by Associate Professor Kristyn Harman.
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Assistant Professor, School of Law, University of Galway
Dr. Ciara Smyth researches in the area of refugee and immigration law at the international, regional and domestic levels and is particularly interested in how these fields intersect with international human rights law. She has published in many of the leading international journals, including the European Law Journal, the Human Rights Law Review, the International Journal of Refugee Law, the European Journal of Migration and Law and the Journal of Refugee Studies. She has written extensively on the Common European Asylum System and her book, European Asylum Law and the Rights of the Child (Routledge, 2014), explores the extent to which the European regional system of refugee protection is consistent with the rights of the child.
Before joining University of Galway Ciara worked for a number of non-governmental and intergovernmental organisations in Ireland and abroad, including the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. She continues to play an active role in civil society and in the influencing of public policy. For example, she was previously Vice Chair of the Board of the Irish Refugee Council and a member of the McMahon Working Group on Direct Provision. She regularly contributes to media discussions on matters relating to immigration, asylum and human rights in Ireland and the UK.
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Assistant Professor in Economics, University of Limerick
Ciarán Casey is an economic historian specialising in Irish economic policy. He is author of 'The Irish Department of Finance, 1959-1999 (IPA, 2022) and 'Policy Failures and the Irish Economic Crisis' (Palgrave MacMillan, 2018). He holds a DPhil from Oxford, where he was awarded a Clarendon Scholarship.
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Senior Lecturer in Social Science, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
My research interests include interdisciplinary work on sexual and reproductive health, particularly sexual behaviour and contraception among young people, as well as maternal and newborn health, health promotion, and involving communities in promoting health. I have an overarching interest in methodology and developing methods to investigate complex social interventions. I hold an undergraduate degree in Human Sciences from Oxford, MSc Medical Demography at LSHTM, and an interdisciplinary PhD and postdoc in young people's sexual behaviour and behaviour change, with fieldwork in Mexico City. I spent some time at Imperial College London where I conducted research and ran a Public Health MSc, returning to LSHTM in 2005.
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Professor of Psychology, College of Charleston
Dr. May is a Professor of Psychology at the College of Charleston who specializes in human memory, aging, and disability. Her research is broadly focused on understanding human cognition, with a specific aim of improving outcomes for individuals who experience cognitive challenges, including older adults and individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Her publications include basic science research on circadian arousal, inhibitory processes in attention, flashbulb memory, and prospective memory, as well as applied work on inclusive education and disability in the workplace. May was named a Fellow for the Association for Psychological Science in 2016 and has been a regular contributor to Scientific American. She also writes a teaching column for the Association for Psychological Science and received the College of Charleston’s Distinguished Teaching Award in 2022.
May is a passionate advocate for initiatives that offer access and opportunity to people with intellectual disabilities. She helped develop inclusive educational programs across the country, including the REACH Program at the College of Charleston, and received a grant from the U.S Department of Education to advance inclusive options in postsecondary education. She was appointed by South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster to serve on the Disability Rights South Carolina Board of Directors and serves on the National Accreditation Team for Inclusive Postsecondary Education. May received her B.A. from Furman University and her Ph.D. from Duke University, and is a 2023 graduate of the Diversity Leadership Initiative at the Riley Institute of Furman University.
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Professionnelle de recherche, biologie marine & écologie benthique, Université Laval
Diplômée d'océanographie, je m'intéresse à la biologie marine, plus particulièrement à l'étude des communautés benthiques, ces animaux qui habitent les fonds océaniques. Des rives aux grandes profondeurs, des zones tropicales aux zones polaires, le benthos est partout! Comprendre ces organismes, leur fonctionnement et leur biodiversité permet de mieux comprendre les effets des changements environnementaux et les impacts des activités humaines sur notre environnement.
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Professor of Forest Ecology, University of British Columbia
PhD in forest ecology,
teach forest ecology, ecological restoration, agroforestry, scientific writing, forest nutrition, soil ecology'
150 articles in scientific journals especially nutrient cycling, decomposition, soil organic matter, restoring soil, effects of forestry practices
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Deputy Vice Chancellor (Indigenous, Diversity and Inclusion), Griffith University
Professor Cindy Shannon is a descendent of the Ngugi people from Moreton Bay. She is an Emeritus Professor with the University of Queensland and was the Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Indigenous Engagement) at the University of Queensland from 2011-2017 and Director of its Poche Centre for Indigenous Health. Prior to that she led the development and implementation of Australia’s first degree level program for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers. Cindy has led major reforms in Indigenous health and played a key role is supporting the establishment of the Institute for Urban Indigenous Health in supporting South-East Queensland.
Professor Shannon has contributed to Indigenous health and education policy in Queensland and nationally. She served on the Council of NHMRC from 2005-12 and is currently the Chair of the Queensland Ministerial Advisory Committee on Sexual Health, Co-Patron of the Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Foundation and sits on a number of not-for profit boards, including as the current chair of the Brisbane South Primary Health Network and Board Member to the Gold Coast Health and Hospital Board.
In 2017, Professor Shannon was recognised as a Queensland Great for contributions to Indigenous Health and Education and in 2020 was made a Member of the Order of Australia (in general division) for contributions to Medical Education and Indigenous Health. Professor Shannon was awarded the AMA Queensland Excellence in Health Care medal in 2022.
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Senior Lecturer, Bioethics Centre, University of Otago
I have two fellowships from of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in General and Acute Medicine and Geriatrics. I graduated from the intercalated MBChB PhD program at the University of Otago and hold a BSc with high honours from Idaho State University (completed on an NCAA tennis scholarship).
I am a Senior Lecturer at the University of Otago Wellington School of Medicine. I work as an Internal Medicine physician and Geriatrician at Wellington Hospital and am the Clinical Ethics Advisor for Te Whatu Ora, Wellington and Hutt Valley.
My research interests currently focus on patient safety and patient rights. I have a special interest in a rare disease - acute hepatic porphyria.
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Associate Professor in Environmental Engineering, Universitas Indonesia
Cindy is associate professor in the Environmental Engineering Study Program, Universitas Indonesia since 2011. With other passionate colleagues and students, she co-creates and runs courses, research, publications, entrepreneurial start-ups and projects related to environmental monitoring, resource recovery and Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) in Indonesia to improve the well being of the people and the planet, particularly focusing urban aquatic ecosystems.
She has been granted a technology patent, co-founded tech startup, awarded best evaluated lecturer in her department and took up various leader roles, such as Vice Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and currently Head of Environmental Engineering Study Program and Vice Head of Center for Engineering Education.
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Associate Teaching Professor, Geography, University of Victoria
CindyAnn Rose-Redwood is an Associate Teaching Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Victoria. Originally from the Caribbean, she grew up in New York City and was trained as an urban social geographer and educational theorist with an interest in international migration, urban social life, the politics of identity, educational policy, and contemporary geopolitics. Her research examines the social experiences of international students in higher education settings, the social geographies of immigrant communities in North American cities, and the Caribbean diaspora. She is the author and editor of numerous scholarly works, including International Encounters: Higher Education and the International Student Experience (2019) and International Student Activism and the Politics of Higher Education (2024). She also teaches and conducts research related to social justice and anti-racism.
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Research Director at the UNH Sales Center and Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of New Hampshire
Dr. Cinthia B. Satornino is the Research Director for UNH Sales Center and an Assistant Professor of Marketing at the Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics at the University of New Hampshire. After earning an MBA at the University of Florida and spending more than a decade in corporate and institutional settings as a business professional and consultant, she attended Florida State University and earned her Ph.D. She has coauthored several publications, including award-winning articles in the Journal of Marketing, the Journal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, and the Journal of Marketing Education. Most recently, she and her coauthors earned the Marvin Jolson Award for Best Contribution to Selling and Sales Management Practice from JPSSM. Her work has been cited by media outlets including Fast Company and Fortune. She was invited to serve as a panelist for the Fulfilling America's Future: Latinas in the U.S. summit held at the White House in Washington, D.C., and was recognized as one of the Top 40 Undergraduate Business Professors by Poets & Quants in 2017. Cinthia is a frequent speaker and panelist at practitioner and academic conferences, continues to be an active consultant, and conducts marketing management and strategy workshops for both private and public organizations.
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Professor of International Commercial Law, University of Exeter
Clair joined Exeter Law School in 2022 as Professor in International Commercial Law and took up the role of Head of School in April 2023. As a scholar of international trade law and development, Clair’s research focuses on the diverse ways that trade law and governance intersects with sustainable development, gender, human rights, labour and environment. Her research is concerned with the relationship between international trade and power, and identifying the regulatory and governance gaps that exist in the multilateral trading system. Clair’s specific expertise lies in the implementation of regional trade agreements and their social, economic and cultural effects for stakeholders in developing countries. Her forthcoming monograph, Women and Trade: Promoting Gender Equality and Social Justice through the International Trading System, will be published with Bristol University Press in 2025.
Clair has consulted for the UK government on trade matters and she has provided expert evidence before both the UK government and EU parliament. In 2022, she was appointed to the UK government Trade and Domestic Advisory Group as a member of the Trade and Public Policy (TaPP) network. In 2023, Clair has delivered expert-level training to UK government officials on trade and development and she has previously acted as an expert reviewer for Chatham House in its work on free trade agreements and human rights. Clair is currently an Advisor to the Independent Commission on UK-EU Relations and is working with the organisation to generate research on the social and ethical implications of post-Brexit industrial legislation and policies for regional communities in the UK.
Clair has taught across the core law subjects (Constitutional Rights, Trusts and EU law) and specialist subjects (advanced EU law, World Trade Law, and International Trade and Investment Law) at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. She has successfully supervised PhD students to completion and welcomes expressions of interest from new doctoral candidates who have a shared interest in international trade law, development and power.
Clair holds a LLB and LLM International Law (Nottingham), and a MSc Socio-Legal Studies and PhD in Law (Bristol). She was formerly Associate Professor/Reader at the University of Bristol, where she also acted as the Faculty Education Director for Undergraduate Studies in Social Sciences in Law (2021-2), School Education Director in Law (2020-1) and the Director for Employability (2015-18).
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Research Fellow in Animal Ethics, University of Oxford
Clair gained an MA in Theological Studies at the University of St Andrews, followed by an MTS at Harvard Divinity School. She then returned to St Andrews to complete her PhD in theology. She is also the deputy director of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics, and the Frances Power Cobbe Professor of Animal Theology at the Graduate Theological Foundation. In addition, she is Director of the Annual Oxford Animal Ethics Summer School, an interdisciplinary event attended by academics and students from around the world held at Merton College, University of Oxford.
She serves as co-editor of the Journal of Animal Ethics published by the University of Illinois Press, and is co-editor of the Palgrave Macmillan book series on Animal Ethics, which comprises more than 40 multidisciplinary books on animal related issues.
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PhD Candidate in Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Canada
I am an advanced manual practitioner including RMT, CAT(C), ATC, DScO, DOMP, Medical Acupuncture, HEP. I'm currently pursuing my PhD at York University in Kinesiology and Health Science. I'm also a partial load faculty professor at Sheridan College and work with multiple national sport organizations including CSIO, GymCan, Diving Canada, and Lacrosse Canada. I was the former Manager of Player Health and Safety in the CWHL and the PWHPA Dream Gap Tour for roughly 15 years.
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Professor of Gene Therapy and Paediatric Immunology, UCL
Claire is Professor of paediatric immunology and gene therapy at UCL Great Ormond Street Hospital Institute of Child Health in London and leads the clinical stem cell gene therapy programme at Great Ormond Street Hospital. She is a clinical academic leading an expanding number of gene therapy clinical trials for patients with immune deficiencies, haematological and metabolic disorders. Her research is focused on developing novel therapies for immune system disorders using innovative gene modification techniques. She has extensive experience of translating, leading, and delivering first in human clinical trials and the commercialisation pathway. As an attending physician she oversees the clinical management of patients with immune deficiencies, including hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and maintains a strong interest in HLH disorders.
Claire is an elected board member of the European and American Societies of Gene and Cell Therapy, serves on the editorial board of several journals and grant review committees and holds an honorary position at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
She is also the co-founder of the AGORA initiative (Access to Gene therapies fOr Rare disease) which brings together European academic developers and patient organisations, aiming to facilitate access to effective gene therapies for treatment of patients with ultra-rare diseases.
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Senior Lecturer in Education (Pedagogy and Curriculum), Deakin University
Claire is a senior lecturer in the School of Education at Deakin University. Her research is concerned with how education operates as a site where young people and educators navigate broader social and cultural conditions that address them, and how their identity work might perpetuate and/or challenge forms of power and inequity. Applying feminist cultural theory to the study of education, she is internationally regarded for her work on gender issues in schooling, and particularly the gendered cultures of elite private schools.
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Claire Corkhill is a Vice Chancellor’s Research Fellow in the nuclear waste materials-focused NucleUS Immobilisation Science Laboratory at the University of Sheffield. Previously, she was a post-doctoral research associate in the Departments of Materials Science and Engineering and Civil Engineering at the University of Sheffield. Claire obtained an MEarthSci in Geology and a PhD in Mineralogy and Geochemistry at the University of Manchester, working in the Mineral Physics and Chemistry research group.
Her research focuses on understanding the geological disposal of nuclear waste, specifically in understanding the durability of glass, ceramic and cement materials in groundwater. She is also interested in how radioactive elements interact with cement and the environment.
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