Professor of Geography, Macalester College
As an urban social geographer, I am particularly interested in ways that social, political, legal, and economic processes influence city life and landscapes, as well as the ways that people and organizations create meaningful places and landscapes through participation in such processes. I am also a qualitative researcher. I pursue this interest through interview and observation research that investigates the constructed and contested nature of city life. I developed an interest in qualitative methods while completing my undergraduate degree in Anthropology. And I later honed these interests in my graduate work, pursuing advanced degrees in geography (MA at SUNY Buffalo and Ph.D. at the University of Colorado at Boulder). I continue to specialize in qualitative research and its use in mixed-methods research.
My scholarship focuses on the themes of access and exile and relates specifically to the roles of city planning and public policy in shaping urban development. Two questions are at the core of my scholarly inquiries: How does the way societies shape and use space contribute to the marginalization of particular social groups? How can spaces be produced in ways that serve goals of social justice and equity?
My research engages these questions by exploring the interactions between the built environment and social inequality and support efforts to promote more just, equitable, and inclusive cities. I am especially interested in supporting community-engaged projects. I have advanced my scholarly interests through three main projects:
(1) understanding citizenship formation under welfare state restructuring in the United States.
(2) investigating the ways in which urban planning and design fields contribute to social justice in cities. I have focused this inquiry on a project examining the geographies of the New Urbanism planning movement, which advocates for creating compact, mixed-use, and mixed-income neighborhoods. I have been following the ways in which social equity concerns are integrated into different instances of the movement in North America, Sweden, and South Africa.
(3) supporting the creation of inclusive public spaces through public scholarship. Many of my efforts in this vein are available through A Field Guide to Public Spaces, which is focused on the Twin Cities Region of Minnesota. In addition, I have been working with public engagement artist Amanda Lovelee to create digital resources that enable members of the public to learn about and reflect upon how differently situated people interact with Lake Phalen Regional Park, a well-used public park in St. Paul, MN that attracts a diverse mix of communities from across the broader metropolitan region. Our goal is to catalyze conversation and action that supports the development of public parks as places where everybody feels they belong.
My scholarship and teaching are deeply intertwined. My scholarship directly informs the courses that I teach. And I make a point of bringing my research into relevant courses. This helps me stay current, relevant, and enthusiastic about what I teach. Furthermore, I am always keen to involve students directly in research through course-based civic engagement and action research projects, hiring students to assist me in collecting data for my own scholarship and advising students in independent projects.
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Gastroenterologist and cancer scientist, South Australian Health & Medical Research Institute
Dan Worthley, M.B.,B.S.(Hons), MPH, PhD, FRACP, AGAF. I am a gastroenterologist and cancer researcher. I started my career as a medical student and gastroenterology trainee in Adelaide. I moved to Brisbane to complete my PhD and MPH at the University of Queensland, then to Columbia University in New York for a 4 year post-doctoral fellowship in stem and cancer cell biology. When I returned to Australia I established a research program in synthetic biology and a clinical practice that would, together, reduce bowel cancer death in our community. We are dedicated to detecting, preventing and treating bowel polyps and cancer. I work at Colonoscopy Clinic (Queensland). There is a future where no Australian will die of bowel cancer.
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Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond
Dana El Kurd holds a Ph.D. in government with concentrations in comparative politics and international relations, and has focused her work on authoritarian regimes in the Arab world, state-society relations in these countries, and the impact of international intervention.
She has published in peer-reviewed journals such as PS Political Science & Politics, Journal of Global Security Studies, Middle East Law and Governance, Siyasat Arabiya (an Arabic peer-reviewed journal), Contemporary Arab Affairs, Parameters, and more. Her book titled Polarized and Demobilized: Legacies of Authoritarianism in Palestine was published in 2020 with Oxford University Press.
Theoretically, Dana is interested in the conflicts between states and their societies and the contentious politics they produce. She examines how authoritarian regimes try to implement policies and how external intervention may affect their success. Her research lies at the intersection of comparative and IR research, particularly with regards to international influence on regime development.
Substantively, Dana is interested in international involvement and authoritarianism within the Arab world. Her multi-method research focuses on how authoritarian regimes in the Arab world have maintained durability, as well as the societal impact of this authoritarianism on political engagement.
Topics of interest: the effect of international involvement on domestic politics, state-society relations, repression, political mobilization, strategies of authoritarianism, US foreign policy in the Middle East, Palestinian politics
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Associate Dean, Interaction, Technology and Information, RMIT University
Dr. Dana McKay is associate dean, interaction, technology and information at RMIT's School of Computing Technologies. Dana's primary interest is in ensuring that advances in information technology make the world fairer and more equitable. To do this she focuses on how people interact with information, and how technology shapes that interaction. Recent projects include studying the role of technology in family violence (and how to prevent it), how online information affects people’s views, and how to improve browsing tools so you can finally find something good to watch on Netflix. Before completing her PhD in 2019 Dana spent 10 years working as a UX professional.
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Associate Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary
Dr Dana Olstad is a Registered Dietitian and an Associate Professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at the University of Calgary. Her research program investigates the impact of policy on socioeconomic inequities in diet quality and health. She is currently leading several randomized controlled trials to examine the impact of healthy food subsidies on the dietary patterns, food insecurity risk and mental and physical health of adults with low incomes.
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Dana Ruggiero is a Senior Lecturer in Learning Technology in the School of Education at Bath Spa University. She is involved in research initiatives from various European research institutes including the EU TEMPUS and ERASMUS programs.
Dana completed her Ph.D. in Learning Design and Technology from Purdue University and earned an M.A. in Education from Augsburg College. Her research interest focuses on praxis in design for persuasive technology, multimedia installations, and affective knowledge, including the application of games for social issues such as homelessness, juvenile offenders, children in care, and healthcare. In addition to speaking at international conferences and publishing in peer-reviewed journals she has edited a book on societal effects of persuasive games and is currently writing two other manuscripts around game design and learning.
Currently, Dana is involved in research focusing on player experience in social impact games, Bayesian statistical models to predict behaviour in serious games, and designing games for e-learning in teacher education.
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Assistant Professor of Law, University of Windsor
Danardo Jones joined the Faculty of Law as an Assistant Professor in January 2021. Professor Jones comes to the Faculty with years of criminal law experience, having worked as a staff lawyer at various Legal Aid organizations across Eastern Canada (Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia) and Ontario. He was also the Director of Legal Services for the African Canadian Legal Clinic. In that role, he intervened in precedent-setting cases before the Supreme Court of Canada (Tran v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2017 SCC 50; British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal v. Schrenk, 2017 SCC 62).
Professor Jones's research interests include criminal law, criminal procedure, criminal sentencing, and race and the law. His research draws on scholarly literature from law and cognate disciplines, including penology and criminology, law and geography, philosophy of law, critical race theory, and prison abolitionist and restorative justice literature.
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CEO, UNSW Energy Institute, UNSW Sydney
Dani is a passionate advocate for reshaping our energy system to be clean, affordable, reliable and equitable. Her experience in the energy sector is broad having held roles in universities, government, and industrial co-operative research centres. Her background is multi-disciplinary in science and business, reflecting the nature of her work bridging the gap between new technology and transitioning markets.
Dani has a deep and broad knowledge of the energy transition, including energy system flexibility, renewable energy generation, clean fuels, energy storage, grid integration and energy consumers and markets. Her own research focuses on mainstreaming energy innovation across the value chain, accelerating the technology and commercial maturity of new technologies.
Outside of her work, Dani is a mother, and an ultimate frisbee coach and athlete
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Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Queensland, The University of Queensland
Dr Dani Linder is a Bundjalung/Kungarykany/Yorta Yorta woman from Grafton, New South Wales, a public lawyer and legal academic at the University of Queensland.
Dr Linder's research interests include:
-Electoral law and policy reform;
-International human rights law;
-Indigenous people and Australia's criminal justice system
- Indigenous cultural identity;
-Indigenous political participation and disenfranchisement; and
-Indigenous constitutional recognition.
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Aquatic Ecology, University of Exeter
I am an aquatic ecologist interested in understanding the ecological effects of global change and other stressors, and their interaction, on aquatic ecosystems.
I use a combination of field research, mesocosms and controlled experiments to test how communities respond to stressors. I am particularly interested in plankton communities. At the University of Exeter I am a Postdoctoral Research Fellow on the NERC grant QUAMTUM, where I aim to quantify livestock impacts on freshwaters. Previously, I have worked at the University of Oxford investigating the effects of sewage pollution, warming, chemicals (e.g., pyrene and microplastics) on freshwater and marine communities.
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Doctor Liverpool Women's NHS Foundation Trust, University of Liverpool
Speciality Trainee Doctor and NIHR Academic Clinical Fellow in Obstetrics & Gynaecology at University of Liverpool, researching the endometrium at the cellular level. Dania graduated Medicine with distinction from Imperial College London, where she also completed a BSc in Reproductive and Developmental Sciences. She has worked on projects with the NIHR Global Surgery Unit, UPBEAT consortium and Tokyo Medical University.
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Postdoctoral Teaching and Research Fellow, University of Sydney
Dr Danica Jenkins has a PhD in European Studies at the University of Sydney. Her research areas are the intellectual and cultural history of Russia, Eastern Europe and South Eastern Europe.
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Lecturer, University of Oxford
A biomedical scientist who made the jump into Higher Education, and Health Professions Education, research, theory and practice. A lecturer and researcher at the University of Oxford's Department of Education (Medical Education), and honourary research associate at the University of Johannesburg, Biomedical Engineering and Healthcare Technology (BEAHT) Research Centre, Faculty of Health Sciences.
Academic qualifications: BSc (Human Physiology and Genetics), BMedSc(Hons) and MScMed (both in Medical Cell Biology), PhD (Health Sciences Education)
ORCID: https://orcid.org/my-orcid?orcid=0000-0003-4973-0699
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Behavioural Scientist, CSIRO
I am a behavioural scientist with expertise in social psychology working at the CSIRO, where I completed my Postdoctoral Research Fellow in 2023. I have a PhD in Conservation Psychology from The University of Queensland. My interdisciplinary background and applied research focus on behavioural sciences, energy efficiency, sustainability, psychology, conservation and animal welfare has provided me with unique and extensive opportunity to gain national and international experience working with diverse stakeholders to create real world impact in the environmental field by bridging science and practice.
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Associate Professor of Computer Science, Affiliate Professor of Information Science, University of Colorado Boulder
Daniel Acuña is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He leads the Science of Science and Computational Discovery Lab. He works in science of science, a subfield of computational social science, and A.I. for science. He writes papers and builds web-based software tools to accelerate knowledge discovery.
Daniel’s research aims to understand historical relationships, mechanisms, and optimization opportunities of knowledge production. Daniel harnesses vast datasets about publications and citations and applies Machine Learning and A.I. to uncover rules that make publication, collaboration, and funding decisions more successful. Recently, he has been interested in biases in artificial intelligence and developing methods for detecting them. In addition, he has created tools to improve literature search, peer review, and detect scientific fraud. He has been funded by NSF, DDHS, Sloan Foundation, and DARPA through the SCORE project, and his work has been featured in Nature News, Nature Podcast, The Chronicle of Higher Education, NPR, and the Scientist.
In addition to his research, Daniel enjoys building communities around science of science and research integrity. He co-organizes the Science of Science Summer School (S4), the Computational Research Integrity (CRI-CONF) conference, and the Computational Research Integrity competitions. In addition, he is part of the ACM’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) council, contributing to the social justice initiative on publications, awards, and peer review.
Before joining Syracuse University, Acuña studied a Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities and was a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern University and the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. During his graduate studies, he received a NIH Neuro-physical-computational Sciences (NPCS) Graduate Training Fellowship, NIPS Travel Award, and a CONICYT-World Bank Fellowship. Daniel was born in Santiago, Chile, where he attended the University of Santiago.
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Visiting music lecturer, University of Winchester
I am a highly creative, passionate and hard-working musician with over twenty years of experience writing, recording, and performing music. I currently work for Rocksteady Music School — the UK’s largest and fastest-growing rock school — in the unique role of ‘Arranger’.
In 2019, the Head of Creative Writing at the University of Winchester invited me to guest lecture on my own songwriting process. Following the success of this initial lecture, I have continued to teach at The University Of Winchester every year as a Visiting Lecturer, and have been co-running the module ‘Composing Song Lyrics’ with module leader Glenn Fosbraey for the last three years.
I am also a proud trustee for the music therapy charity George’s Rockstars. In 2023, I wrote and produced a Christmas single (George's Rockstars - Let's Make Christmas Loud!) for the charity, which raised over £3,000 in sales and local performances. In December 2023, the song was announced as the South Coast Number One Single by Voice FM.
I have recently finished work on my first book Exploring Personality and Performance in The Beatles: Becoming the Fab Four. I have co-authored this book with Glenn Fosbraey, and it is due to be published by Cambridge Scholars in 2024.
I have been the sole songwriter and frontman in numerous bands, and have gained a wealth of experience playing my songs in venues up and down the U.K. I am proficient on guitar, bass, keys and drums, and am a strong singer. I currently write and perform my own solo music under the guise of Teenage Waitress. As part of this project, I have released two albums through the record label Colorama Records. My songs have been played frequently on BBC Radio, 6Music and Radio X. My music has also been featured in MOJO and Shindig magazines, and Tim Burgess awarded my 2020 album Love & Chemicals its own Tim’s Twitter Listening Party. I have been described as a “great young songwriter” by a musical hero of mine, Paul Weller, who has frequently invited me to his recording studio to create music and to open for his band on tour. I have also performed in various other tribute bands such as The Silver Beatles and Lasagna For One (a tribute to Flight Of The Conchords). I have had the pleasure of performing as a frontman in venues such as London’s Eventim Apollo, The Cavern Club, Plymouth Pavilions, and the main stage at Victorious Festival 2019. I am currently working on my second book, titled Ten Songs which focuses on my experiences and memories of both songwriting and performing.
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Senior Lecturer in Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences, Brunel University London
Dr Daniel Bailey is a Senior Lecturer in Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences in the Division of Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences, Department of Life Sciences. He is Co-Director of the Centre for Physical Activity in Health and Disease after previously establishing and leading the Sedentary Behaviour, Health and Disease Research Group. Dr Bailey's research investigates the relationship between sedentary behaviour and chronic health conditions, with a particular focus on non-communicable disease. This research includes the epidemiology of sedentary behaviour and associations with non-communicable disease risks, controlled laboratory studies examining the acute effects of breaking up prolonged sitting on cardiometabolic biomarkers, and the development and evaluation of interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour and increase physical activity in a range of population groups at risk of adverse health such as people with Type 2 diabetes, office workers, individuals with a spinal cord injury, and older adults with frailty.
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Postdoctoral Fellow in Space Physics, University of Saskatchewan
Dr Daniel Billett is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Saskatchewan, studying the effects of space weather on Earth's upper atmosphere. He mainly works with the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN), a collection of high-frequency radars - located all over the world - that measure the dynamics of the ionosphere.
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Master's Student in Entomology, Penn State
B.S. in Biology from Urisnus College
Areas of expertise: Ecology, Entomology, IPM, Spiders, Carabid Beetles
I am interested in the ecology of arthropods--how they interact with plants, with each other, and with us. My research looks for ways to use arthropod ecology to benefit agricultural efficiency, specifically through the process of biological control. Biological control is a strategy of pest management which uses natural enemies (predators and parasitoids primarily) as killing agents, reducing our reliance upon chemical insecticides. My projects are focused on improving this process, identifying new control agents and increasing the effectiveness of those we already use. I recently began studying spiders with the hopes of using them to control problematic pests in alfalfa, a common forage crop. The results so far are very promising.
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Professor in Mental Health, Charles Darwin University
Professor Dan Bressington is a Professor in Mental Health at the Faculty of Health, Charles Darwin University. He is also an Adjunct Professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (Hong Kong) and Chiang Mai University (Thailand). He previously worked at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, the Institute of Psychiatry (King's College London) and Canterbury Christ Church University (UK).
Dan is a UK registered Mental Health Nurse with 30 years of experience, he publishes extensively and is an active journal editor and reviewer. He has around 150 publications in international peer-reviewed journals and is Associate Editor for Frontiers Public Mental Health (specialty section of Frontiers in Psychiatry). He is also is an Editorial Board Member for the Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, BMC Psychiatry, British Journal of Mental Health Nursing and Nursing Reports (MDPI).
His research interests include trauma, multimorbidity in people with severe mental illness, developing/testing psychosocial interventions to improve mental health and mental health literacy/stigma
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Senior Lecturer in Psycholinguistics, University of Central Lancashire
Daniel’s teaching and research go hand in hand, covering language variation across various aspects as well as the psychological underpinnings of language. He teaches, conducts research, and supervises and advises research students (undergraduate and postgraduate) in these areas.
Daniel mostly contributes to teaching in the various English Language undergraduate courses at the University of Central Lancashire. These contributions are united by his Humboldtian ideals of education and by research-based teaching practice: Creative ideas of doing so can come from well-established researchers just as well as from students, and so Daniel believes it is important to teach recent and empirically-founded results and to involve students in research – from having research projects as part of module assessments to projects in the annual Undergraduate Research Internship scheme.
In his early years in academia, Daniel was intrigued by the possibilities of explanation offered by systematic descriptions of language – for example, syntactic explanations for processes of language acquisition, and patterns of noun gender based on word structure. During his postgraduate years in Germany and New Zealand, Daniel was introduced to the more complex descriptions of language variation as a systematic or statistically describable phenomenon, further revealing the complex knowledge that every competent speaker of a language has. This has led to Daniel’s having research, teaching, and supervision interests in the fields of psycholinguistics and sociolinguistics: How exactly do we understand and use language, and how do expectations and experience affect these processes? In what ways and to what extent does language vary between different users of the same language and between different utterances by the same user? How do language users react to and process this variation? Daniel has also worked on methodological questions in linguistics, such as statistical tests for different types of data, modifying established research methods so they can be used with participant groups like children or people with disabilities, and open-source research technology.
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Lecturer, School of Politics and International Relations, Australian National University
Daniel Casey is a lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University.
His research focuses on responsiveness of political elites to public opinion. His other research interests include government transparency and accountability; public administration; and the training and mentoring of PhD candidates.
Prior to academia, he had an extensive career in the Australian Public Service, working across central and social policy agencies. He has also worked for Members of Parliament and peak NGOs.
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PhD student in statistics, University of British Columbia
PhD candidate in statistics at the University of British Columbia.
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Community Manager Mt Druitt JustReinvest NSW, Indigenous Knowledge
Daniel is a proud Gamilaraay (NSW) man who has family ties to the Gubi Gubi nation (QLD). Daniel has a passion for helping Aboriginal children and youth caught in the criminal justice system and has spent his working life in the justice sector. He worked on the development of the Youth Koori Court (YKC) including consultation with community and development of the program with other stakeholders.
He believes if the appropriate support mechanisms are placed around our young Aboriginal people in the Justice system and we can empower them, then they can and will be among our leaders in the future. He is currently the Manager for Just Reinvest NSW in Mt Druitt. Daniel is also a Director of the Redfern Aboriginal Medical Service board and lifelong member of the organisation.
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Lecturer in Sociology, Trinity College
Douglas' research focuses on student access and success in higher education, specifically at community colleges. His published work discusses alternatives to college remedial placement, the role of mathematics in post-secondary education, and college and career pathways in STEM. He is also interested in the non-degree routes to workforce development. Douglas has worked on research and evaluation for the US Department of Education, US Department of Labor, and National Science Foundation. He has also partnered with the non-profit advocacy group Complete College America.
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Professor emeritus, Department of Politics, York University, Canada
My published work and research is on international political economy and its institutions, global inequality and development, counter-publics, NAFTA, economic integration and social movements. My most recent book, Has Populism Won?The War on Liberal Democracy , is co-authored with Marc D. Froese,ECW, 2022.
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Lecturer in Environmental Health, University of Birmingham
Daniel finished his BSc in Environmental Science in 2009 at the University of Birmingham where he focused his final year on in-stream ecology and environmental chemistry. He remained at Birmingham to study for his PhD, which was awarded in 2013. He investigated the presence of brominated flame retardants and by-product emissions in the steel industry and their fate in the environment – which resulted in several publications in high impact scientific journal
Upon receiving his PhD he accepted a job as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Here he worked on several projects including the modelling of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and emerging contaminants in wastewater and landfills.
Since returning to the University of Birmingham, Daniel has worked on a range of projects funded by the Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland – including WAFER, SAFER and FUEL which have investigated brominated flame retardants (BFRs), organophosphorus flame retardants and perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) in the waste industry, as well as ELEVATE which investigated human exposure to BFRs and PFAS in indoor environments.
Daniel is currently the Programme Lead for MSc Environmental Health and MSc Public and Environmental Health Sciences, both accredited by the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health (CIEH). He is involved in teaching on these programmes as well as the MSc Health, Safety and Environment Management; and BSc Environmental Science.
Daniel is also a Member of the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health (MCIEH), holds a postgraduate certificate in higher education (PGCHE) and is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA).
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A/Prof of Marine Conservation Science & Director of the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science (CBCS), The University of Queensland
I am an Associate Professor in the School of the Environment, and the Director of the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation Science at the University of Queensland. My research focuses on how migratory species use and connect the ocean, how we can use spatial management measures to help conserve them, and how we need to work together on regional and global scales to manage them. I have worked with seven UN Conventions and organisations to try to provide the information and tools necessary to support a healthy ocean.
My research focuses on applying ecological and biogeographical theory to develop applied solutions to natural resource management and conservation problems in the ocean across a range of scales. I am particularly interested in developing and disseminating actionable information to inform conservation planning in areas beyond national jurisdiction and improving environmental governance of that “other” half of our planet.
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A/Prof of Marine Conservation Science & Director of the Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science (CBCS), The University of Queensland
I am an Associate Professor in the School of the Environment, and the Director of the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation Science at the University of Queensland. My research focuses on how migratory species use and connect the ocean, how we can use spatial management measures to help conserve them, and how we need to work together on regional and global scales to manage them. I have worked with seven UN Conventions and organisations to try to provide the information and tools necessary to support a healthy ocean.
My research focuses on applying ecological and biogeographical theory to develop applied solutions to natural resource management and conservation problems in the ocean across a range of scales. I am particularly interested in developing and disseminating actionable information to inform conservation planning in areas beyond national jurisdiction and improving environmental governance of that “other” half of our planet.
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Senior Lecturer in Chemistry, Swinburne University of Technology
Dr Daniel Eldridge is a senior lecturer in chemistry at Swinburne University. He teaches in a variety of subjects covering surfaces and colloids, water science and the chemistry of everyday products.
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Assistant Professor of English, Texas Woman's University
I am an Assistant Professor of Rhetoric at Texas Woman's University, where I teach courses in writing, rhetoric, communication, and grammar. My research concerns automated language technologies and generative AI, particularly as they relate to the teaching and learning of writing.
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Emeritus Professor of History, University of Tennessee
Daniel Feller is Distinguished Professor in the Humanities Emeritus and Editor/Director Emeritus of The Papers of Andrew Jackson. Feller came to UT as Professor of History and Jackson project director in 2003 and continued until his retirement in 2020. Previously he had taught for 17 years at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque and before that for three years at Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin.
Professor Feller’s scholarly interests encompass mid-nineteenth-century America as a whole, with special attention to Jacksonian politics and the coming of the Civil War. Besides the publications listed below, he has contributed to reference works and compilations including the Oxford Companion to United States History, Reader’s Guide to American History, Dictionary of American History, American National Biography, The Encyclopedia of American Political History, and the AHA Guide to Historical Literature. Feller’s critical essays and review articles have appeared in Reviews in American History, Documentary Editing, Tennessee Historical Quarterly, and on H-SHEAR. For 14 years Feller served as Conference Coordinator for the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic (SHEAR), and in 2018 he was the recipient of SHEAR’s Distinguished Service Award. His other recognitions include the Knoxville Area Transit Most Valuable Passenger Award and the Thomas Jefferson Prize of the Society for History in the Federal Government, awarded in 2017 for Volume X of The Papers of Andrew Jackson. Feller has spoken widely to public audiences and educators on Jacksonian Democracy, on Andrew Jackson’s presidential banking and Indian policies, and on slavery and the coming of the Civil War. He has given several presentations as a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians, and in 2000 he was a Commonwealth Fund Lecturer in American History at University College London. His major current project is to complete a study of Benjamin Tappan, a Jacksonian politician, scientist, social reformer, and freethinker.
Education
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1981
Selected Publications
Editor, The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volumes VII-XI, 1829–1833 (University of Tennessee Press, 2007–2019)
Editor, Harriet Martineau’s 1838 Retrospect of Western Travel (M. E. Sharpe, 2000), abridged with Editor's introduction, notes and, index.
The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995)
The Public Lands in Jacksonian Politics (University of Wisconsin Press, 1984)
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Candidat au doctorat en océanographie, Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR)
-Baccalauréat (2018-2021) en chimie de l'Université Laval
-Maîtrise en chimie (2021-2023), spécialisation en géochimie aquatique, sous la supervision du prof. Raoul-Marie Couture à l'Université Laval
-Candidat au doctorat en océanographique, spécialisation en géochimie des milieux polaires extrêmes, sous la supervision du prof. André Pellerin à l'ISMER (UQAR).
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Research Fellow in Biological and Physical Oceanography, Earth and Environmental Science, University of Exeter
Daniel Ford is a postdoctoral research fellow based at the University of Exeter Penryn campus in Cornwall, UK. His current research focusses on topics including air-sea CO2 exchange in the global ocean, the biological controls on the CO2 exchange and the ocean processes that drive variations in the global ocean CO2 sink. Internationally, he provides one of the ocean CO2 sink estimates to the Global Carbon Budget.
Daniel has a PhD from the University of Exeter, UK.
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