Postdoctoral research associate, Durham University
I am a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience at Durham University. My research centres around developing stakeholder-focused guidance and methodologies to help mitigate landslides and improve slope stabilisation in lower income countries. The methodologies and guidance are developed by working collaboratively with stakeholders (currently in Nepal and India), using a combination of methods including numerical analyses, geotechnical and geological mapping, and qualitative data collection.
I acquired my PhD in Geotechnical Engineering from Newcastle University in 2023, which was sponsored by NERC IAPETUS. My PhD aimed to further understand some of the causes for inadequate road slope stabilisation in lower income country settings, and to develop stakeholder-focused methodologies to aid the planning and design of road slope stabilisation.
During my PhD, I completed a three month internship at the Research and Information Service (RaISe) of the Northern Ireland Assembly. During the intern, I produced a blog post on transport trends during the COVID-19 pandemic in Northern Ireland and a published research article and blog post on climate change risks to transport infrastructure in Northern Ireland.
Prior to my PhD, I received an MSci in Geology from the University of Birmingham in 2017, with a year abroad at the University of Copenhagen. During my undergraduate, I conducted two months of research at the Open University using Pro3D (a 3D image viewer) to examine and measure ripple-like bedforms found along the Opportunity rover traverse of Mars.
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Associate Professor, Faculty of Liberal Arts, Wilfrid Laurier University
My latest work on economic expectations," Keynesian Expectations, Epistemic Authority and Pluralism in Economics: Placebo Effects and Nocebo Effects in Normal and Abnormal Times" is forthcoming in the Cambridge Journal of Economics.
I have been a senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, and I was a Budget Forecaster commissioned by House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance during the establishment of the Parliamentary Budget Office.
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Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Hawaii at Hilo
Alaska-grown sociologist interested in qualitative research, with expertise in social psychology, emotions, and the culinary industry. Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawai'i at Hilo. And a co-creator and co-host of The Social Breakdown, the sociology podcast nobody wants, but everybody needs.
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Climate Science, University of Arizona
Ellie Broadman is a climate scientist who specializes in reconstructing past climate and environmental change using lake sediments, tree rings, and variety of field, laboratory, and data analytical methods. She is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Spatio-Temporal Interactions between Climate & Ecosystems Lab and the Laboratory of Tree Ring Research at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
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Senior Lecturer in Sport Coaching, Bournemouth University
Ellie is a Senior Lecturer in Sports Coaching at Bournemouth University. Her research is focus on enhancing children's wellbeing in sporting environments.
In 2022, Ellie completed a PhD that explored the intricacies of children's wellbeing within the context of sport. Her research aimed to understand adolescent wellbeing and resulted in the development of a psychometric measure of wellbeing. Ellie is now exploring the implementation of this work within sporting spaces. Her expertise lies in adopting a holistic approach to sports coaching, with a specific emphasis on addressing social issues and fostering ethical coaching environments.
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Associate Professor, Marketing Division, Babson College
Ellie J Kyung is currently an Associate Professor in the Marketing Division at Babson College. She was previously a Visiting Associate Professor in the Marketing and Management Communications Division at Cornell University’s S C Johnson College of Business, a Visiting Scholar at The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and an Associate Professor in the Marketing area at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth.
Prior to becoming an academic, Kyung was a consultant with Monitor Group, where she worked on client projects focused on marketing and multi-channel strategy and served as co-director of Marketspace’s Applied Interface Research Lab. She teaches the MBA core marketing course and previously taught an elective research-to-practice seminar, “Time in the Consumer Mind,” on how the psychology of time influences consumer decision making. She was awarded the Tuck Teaching Excellence Award by the Tuck Class of 2021 and was the first female professor to win an elective teaching award at Tuck.
Consumers frequently make decisions reflecting on past experiences or speculating on the outcome of future experiences. Kyung’s research is focused on the critical question of what shapes people’s mental representations when making these reflections and speculations, with the aim of understanding their behavior and decision making. Her interest is in understanding how people’s mental representations are shaped by 1) the way in which we ask questions about these experiences, 2) the response alternatives they are provided to answer these questions, and 3) the context in which these experiences in occur. In particular, she is interested in the effects of perceived time, speed, and distance on these aspects of mental representation, with a focus on implications for technology-based survey, interface, and communication design.
Kyung’s research has been published in journals such as Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Research, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, and Psychonomic Bulletin and Review. She serves on the Editorial Board of Journal of Consumer Research and recently received an Outstanding Reviewer Award (2019). She is an Associate Editor for Journal of Consumer Research was a co-chair of the Society for Consumer Psychology Conference in 2022.
Kyung holds degrees from Yale University (B.A. in Economics, International Studies) and New York University (M. Phil, Ph.D in Marketing). She lives in New Hampshire with her husband and two daughters.
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Senior Research Fellow, Faculty of Law, Bournemouth University
Dr Ellie Smith is Senior Research Fellow at the Mass Grave Protection, Investigation and Engagement project at Bournemouth University. She is a lawyer and victimologist with 20 years’ experience of interdisciplinary research design, conduct and management in the field of international human rights, humanitarian and criminal law, relating to both conflict and post-conflict justice contexts, within both academia and practice, with a focus on working with victims
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Senior Lecturer of Criminology, Nottingham Trent University
Elliot Doornbos is a Senior Lecturer of Criminology in the Criminal Justice Department, In addition to his teaching and research roles Elliot is First Year Criminology Tutor and module leader for the year three module International crime. He is also a supervisor for third year dissertations. Elliot is currently studying for his doctorate at Nottingham Trent University, which focuses on whale shark fin trafficking
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PhD student, School of Biosciences, The University of Melbourne
Elliot Gould is a PhD candidate at the School of BioSciences, and a Quantitative Research Assistant on the repliCATS project at the School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne. Their PhD investigates the transparency and reproducibility of ecological models in applied ecology and conservation decision-making. Elliot seeks to use data science techniques to advance the open-science movement by improving the transparency and reproducibility within their home discipline of ecology and conservation science. Within this field, Elliot’s primary interest is in building ecological models for aiding ecological management and conservation decisions. Other research interests include decision-theory, Structured Decision Making, and plant ecology (especially grasslands of the Victorian Volcanic Plains). They have an enthusiasm for teaching and skill-sharing, particularly with regard to building a strong community of practice in emerging open-science methodology and computational biology within ecology and conservation.
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PhD in English Literature, University of Sheffield
Ellis Walker is a PhD English Literature candidate at the University of Sheffield. Her research excavates the digital and material spaces and places where black British authors and their books are discussed. As a member of the Black Writers' Guild she is invested in raising awareness of racial inequalities in the publishing industry, which forms a large part of the thesis. In 2017 she completed her MA in Black British Writing from Goldsmiths University, with a research project that became a survey of blackness in Britain from the Windrush era to present day.
Post-PhD, Ellis hopes to open a publishing imprint in the north of England to help other curious minds become more aware of the blackness in Britain outside of the major cities.
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Lecturer and Research Fellow in Ocean Governance, University of Melbourne and Postdoctoral Researcher, UEF Law School, University of Eastern FinEllycia Harrould-Kolieb, PhD (University of Melbourne) is a Postdoctoral Researcher on the TRANSCLIM project, based at the UEF Law School. She is also a Visiting Academic at the Climate and Energy College of the School of Geography, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Melbourne and an Advisor at Rationale Advisors. In her PhD, Ellycia examined how the role of problem framing interacts with treaty interpretation to open new avenues for addressing the emergent problem of ocean acidification under existing multilateral agreements.
Ellycia has over two decades of experience working in environmental conservation and governance, primarily focused on issues related to international ocean governance and the intersection of climate, ocean and biodiversity governance. Prior to her PhD, Ellycia worked in Washington DC as a Marine Scientist for Oceana, the largest NGO focused on marine conservation. In this role, Ellycia sat at the science-policy interface, advocating on Capitol Hill, at multilateral negotiations and at the state goverment level for stronger policies to protect the ocean from climate change.
Ellycia's publications can be found in top ranked journals, including Climate Policy, Conservation Biology, RECIEL, Environmental Science & Policy and Marine Policy.
land, The University of Melbourne
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Doctorante en histoire de l'architecture contemporaine, Centre Chastel, Sorbonne Université
Élodie Bitsindou poursuit actuellement ses recherches en histoire de l’architecture contemporaine sous la direction de Jean-Baptiste Minnaert au sein du centre André Chastel, un laboratoire affilié à Sorbonne Université, au CNRS et au ministère de la Culture.
Sa thèse en cours se concentre sur la création de "nouveaux-villages" pavillonnaires en France des années soixante à quatre-vingt. Elle y explore les dynamiques de l'habitat individuel en France à travers sa thèse intitulée "Logés à l’américaine : Émergence, évolution et perception de la maison individuelle en France. Histoire croisée autour de la firme Levitt And Sons (1962-1981)". Cette recherche offre un regard original sur l'évolution de la construction, de l'aménagement du territoire et des modes d'habiter à l'échelle nationale, européenne et mondiale.
Précédemment, ses travaux de master portaient sur les réalisations de Ricardo Bofill dans les villes nouvelles franciliennes, marquant ainsi le début de ses études sur l’architecture et l’urbanisme du XXe siècle, avec une attention particulière portée à leur dimension utopique.
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I am interested in how political parties and voters adapt to new situations, in particular how parties and voters have responded to devolution in the UK and beyond. I have conducted research on party organisational changes in Spain and Britain, investigating and codifying the relationship between the central level of statewide parties and their ‘regional’ branches. In the context of devolution, I am increasingly interested in the issue of citizens’ response to devolution and citizens’ understanding of devolution, and what they mean for democratic accountability.
In addition, I have recently developed an interest in ‘unusual’ voting situations such as external voting (expatriate vote in national elections) and the vote of non-national EU citizens in the local, devolved and European elections (EU citizens voting in a country other than their own).
Finally, I remain interested in French politics. I have become country co-ordinator (France) for the Political Party Database Working Group, a research network that studies and gathers comparative quantitative data on the organisation of political parties across 19 countries.
I am the co-convenor of the ECPR Standing Group on Federalism and Regionalism and book review editor for Regional and Federal Studies. I am also on the editorial board of the journal Fédéralisme et Régionalisme.
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Maître de Conférences en Sciences de gestion, Université Savoie Mont Blanc
Diplômée de l'IEP d'Aix-en-Provence et titulaire d'un doctorat en Marketing, j'ai commencé ma carrière dans le financement de startup par crowdfunding avant de me tourner vers la recherche avec l'étude des mécanismes de micro-financement et de micro-donation. Avec une approche par le comportement des consommateurs, je cherche à comprendre les réactions des individus aux sollicitations monétaires (investissement et dons) et non-monétaires (bénévolat) dans des contextes marchands et touristiques. Je suis affiliée au laboratoire IREGE de l'Université Savoie Mont-Blanc.
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Research Officer, Murdoch Children's Research Institute
Dr Elodie O'Connor has completed a Bachelor of Arts (Professional Writing), Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Psychology, and PhD in Psychology. Elodie works as a Research Officer in the Centre for Community Child Health at Murdoch Children's Research Institute. Her research aims to reduce inequities in chilren's health, development and wellbeing.
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Chercheure en archéologie préhistorique et paléoécologie, University of Aberdeen
Je suis préhistorienne et paléoécologue, et mes recherches s'attachent particulièrement à comprendre les relations entre les grands carnivores du passé et les sociétés de chasseurs-cueilleurs préhistoriques.
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PhD Candidate, Université Laval
After completing his undergraduate studies in biomedical sciences (2016-2019) and his master's degree in psychology at Université Laval (2019-2020), Éloi began his doctoral studies in Benoît Arsenault's laboratory in 2021. Éloi is involved in several projects related to cardiometabolic diseases. These include the link between gut microbiota and chronic disease, the link between fat distribution and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and the link between brain proteins and obesity. All his projects have one thing in common: the use of Mendelian randomisation. In his day to day life, Eloi uses genetics to answer causal questions, plays basketball and loves hanging out around a beer.
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PhD Candidate, SOAS, University of London
I am Project Coordinator at SOAS University of London's Strategic Concept for the Removal or Arms and Proliferation Project (SCRAP Weapons) and a PhD candidate in Global Diplomacy at the Centre for International Studies and Diplomacy, SOAS University.
I have served for years as speechwriter for a government's Ambassador to the United Nations and have worked in the Vatican Dicastery for Communications as Executive Project Assistant on Internet Governance issues and Social Media Editor.
My research interests include international relations, cultural diplomacy, the United Nations, and general and complete disarmament. I have recently co-authored an article with H.E. Maritza Chan Valverde, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Costa Rica to the United Nations in New York, titled "Represented but not always heard: an analysis of the progress of gender equality at the United Nations through the lens of the Treaty on the Prohibition on Nuclear Weapons", published on the Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung Journal in April 2023 (DOI: 10.1007/s42597-023-00095-x).
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PhD Candidate, Bangor University
PhD researcher interested in injury risk in female athletes. I am currently working on the Welsh Injury Surveillance in Girls' Youth Rugby (WISGYR) Project assessing injury risk in grassroots girls' rugby.
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Postdoctoral Researcher, Deakin University
Eloise is an Early Career Research Fellow passionate about public health. Eloise's research interests include early childhood nutrition, family and individual behaviour change, participatory research, and reducing socioeconomic inequities and health related stigma. Eloise has worked as researcher within Deakin University's Faculty of Health since 2012, and recently completed her PhD exploring the use of screens during shared mealtimes.
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Host, The Conversation's Curious Kids podcast
Eloise Stevens is the host and creator of The Conversation's Curious Kids podcast, and sound designer of The Conversation Weekly podcast. Outside of The Conversation, she produces audio for the BBC, ABC and The Guardian, among others, and has recently received an Arts Council grant to write a novel.
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Assistant Professor, Sociology, Athabasca University
My area of research is precarious migration and health, foreign workers; and social movements and global citizenship. I am part of a team working on a research project titled: Collective Care, Renewal, and Resurgence for the Post-Pandemic Future.
On those topics I have co-authored a book, The Epicenter : Democracy, Eco*Global Citizenship and Transformative Education (DIO Press), 12 book chapters and 8 journal articles.
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Associate Professor, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth
My research focuses on the neurobiology of decision-making and learning, both in healthy adults and in patients with psychiatric disorders. After working as a biomedical engineer, developing brain-related clinical devises, I pursued an academic career in computational neuroscience at the universities of Glasgow and Oxford. My previous research focused on the proof of principle that transcranial ultrasound neuromodulation can safely and transiently change neural activity in precise parts of the brain, particularly deep regions of the brain, repsonsible for core cognitive and motivational processes. I am now working towards bringing this technology forward and apply it to mental health challenges.
Do you know how incredible the different applications of therapeutic ultrasound can be for mental health disorders? I created this cool video with @Animate_Science
https://youtube.com/watch?v=KsuqRldCspU… Enjoy!
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PhD candidate, Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet
I am a PhD student at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, interested in exploring genetic and environmental factors to better understand complex phenotypes.
My doctoral research, and my primary research aim entails going beyond studying only body mass index and explore how adiposity influence the risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes in light of unmeasured confounding and potential mediating factors. I am also interested in the life-course perspectives in aging and health.
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Lecturer in Organisational Behaviour, University of Sussex Business School, University of Sussex
Elsa Chan is Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Organisational Behaviour at the University of Sussex Business School. She received her PhD in Management and Entrepreneurship from the University of Colorado, Boulder. Elsa's research examines leadership, entrepreneurship, and motivation. She studies how leader behaviours influence workplace outcomes and how psychological factors shape entrepreneurial outcomes. Her work also explores diversity in the workplace.
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Professor in Civil Engineering, University of Pretoria
I graduated with a degree in civil engineering from the University of Pretoria in 1984 and I am registered as a professional engineer with the Engineering Council of South Africa (ECSA). I am a past president of both the South African Institution of Civil Engineering (SAICE) and the South African Academy of Engineering (SAAE). I have been a National Research Forum (NRF) rated researcher since 2007 and my research is focused on reducing the environmental footprint of the cement and concrete industry. I have been an author of 126 peer reviewed accredited journal and conference papers and to date supervised 35 research Masters and PhD graduates.
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Lecturer in Psychology and PhD Researcher in Psychology and Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin
Elva Arulchelvan is completing a PhD in psychology and neuroscience for the Lab for Clinical and Integrative Neuroscience in Trinity College Dublin (TCD), Ireland. She is also a lecturer in psychology for social work students in TCD. Elva's PhD research focuses on memory and forgetting processes. In particular, her PhD research involves investigating peripheral nerve stimulation's effect on memory and forgetting in both clinical and non-clinical groups. Elva has a keen interest in making research accessible to everyone, and loves sharing her research through writing or giving talks and presentations.
Prior to her work in the field of psychology, Elva completed a Bachelor of Commerce International with Chinese in the University College of Dublin. After graduating from that degree, she spent several years working in tech companies (incl. Deliveroo and HubSpot) helping commercial clients grow their sales using these platforms' services. She also spent time working as a project manager launching an Italian restaurant, an Italian import company and an immigration via investment company, before recognizing that her real passion lay in understanding people, and how our decisions and wellbeing can be influenced by much more factors than most people realize. This led her to pursue a degree in psychology, and subsequently to her current PhD research and lecturing work.
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Researcher, Department of Economics, Macquarie University
Elyse has recently graduated from the University of Queensland with First Class Honours in the Bachelor of Advanced Finance and Economics.
Elyse honours thesis focused on understanding the spatial dispersion of firm-level productivity in Australia using BLADE microdata from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
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Professor and Director of Space and Drone Remote Sensing Lab, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Dr. Ghoneim received her PhD in 2002 from the School of Geography, University of Southampton, United Kingdom. In 2003, she joined the Center for Remote Sensing at Boston University, USA and worked as Research Assistant Professor until summer 2010. Her primary interest is in the application of Geographical Information Systems (GIS), Remote Sensing and the use of hydrologic modeling in Flash flood hazard, Groundwater exploration in desert environments and present Sea Level Rise simulation. She has conducted research on the flash flood potential and vulnerability in the arid Red Sea coast of Egypt. She has worked on projects for groundwater exploration in the northern United Arab Emirates (UAE), Sudan, Libya and southwestern Egypt. Dr. Ghoneim also uses satellite images (thermal infrared data) for detecting groundwater discharge inland and into the sea in the Arabian Peninsula. She is currently involved in the reconstruction of the Paleohydrological map of the Great Sahara using numerous remote sensing techniques and satellite data such as SRTM and SAR radar imagery data.
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Professor of General Linguistics, Stellenbosch University
Emanuel Bylund is Professor of General Linguistics at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. His research concerns age effects in language acquisition and language attrition, and the role of linguistic categories for the cognitive processing of reality. His work has covered languages such as Afrikaans, German, Spanish, Swedish, and isiXhosa, and has appeared in outlets such as Applied Linguistics, Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, Cognition, Developmental Science, and Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. He is the founding member of the African Psycholinguistics Association, and director of the Multilingualism and Cognition Laboratory at Stellenbosch University.
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Associate Professor and Director of the Institute of Behavioral Science and Technology, University of St.Gallen
Emanuel de Bellis is Associate Professor of Empirical Research Methods and Director of the Institute of Behavioral Science and Technology (IBT). Before joining the University of St.Gallen in 2021, he was an Assistant Professor at HEC Lausanne and spent visits at Columbia Business School and the University of British Columbia. He holds a PhD in Management and a Master in Cognitive and Decision Sciences.
As a behavioral scientist, Emanuel de Bellis examines the underlying mechanisms that drive our behavior, combined with his interest in current technological and societal developments. In a series of research projects, he seeks to improve the understanding of how consumers perceive and use new technologies, including barriers to their consumer adoption. His findings show, for example, that the relationship between humans and technology is changing fundamentally, as shown by the humanization of autonomous products, and that these products need to be designed in a way which provides meaning to consumers. In addition, he is an expert on mass customization and personalization and a thought leader in crypto-marketing and NFTs.
His research has been published in top-tier marketing journals, such as the Journal of Marketing, the Journal of Marketing Research, the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and the International Journal of Research in Marketing. It has been awarded with the Rigour & Relevance Research Award and has been featured in both international and Swiss media outlets (e.g., Forbes, Harvard Business Review, MIT Sloan Management Review, Neue Zürcher Zeitung). In 2021, he released The Machine Age of Customer Insight, a book on the transformation of customer insights and the growing impact of machine learning.
Emanuel de Bellis is at the forefront of the University’s method training. He teaches method courses at Bachelor, Master, PhD, and executive level, such as the Methods: Empirical Social Research lecture which is mandatory for every business student in the Bachelor program. In addition, he leads the University’s Data and Method Consulting team and is Academic Co-Director of the Global School in Empirical Research Methods, the University’s Academic Plagiarism Adivsor, and the University’s representative at the Federal Commission for Scholarships for Foreign Students.
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Lecturer, University of Southern Queensland
Emerson is a current PhD candidate and lecturer at UniSQ, but in his previous life taught teenagers English and Social Science. He has a Bachelor of Secondary Ed, Master of Ed, Grad Cert in Policy Analysis and his PhD is due for completion mid-2024.
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Addison Wheeler Fellow in the School of Government and International Affairs , Durham University
I am an Addison Wheeler postdoctoral fellow in Government and International Affairs at the University of Durham since January 2024. My research is situated at the intersection of International Security and International Political Theory, and addresses the broad political dynamics shaping remoteness and war in global politics. My main research project engages with democratic contestation of contemporary military practices, particularly the use of military drones and military infrastructure. In addition to this project, I am currently working on a monograph titled Making War Remote, which expands on my doctoral dissertation. Furthermore, I continue to conduct research on non-state actors' use of armed drones. My full research activities can be found on my website.
Prior to my current postdoctoral fellowship, I was a MINDS-SSHRC postdoctoral fellow at the University of Ottawa, Canada. I hold a PhD in Government and International Affairs from the University of Durham and an MPhil in International Political Theory from the University of St Andrews, UK.
Research interests
International security; war studies; remote warfare; military drones; Carl Schmitt; Visual Investigations; Democracy and War
Publications
Book review
Archambault, E. (2020). Book review: Rise and kill first. https://doi.org/10.15664/jtr.1506
Archambault, E. (2019). Imperialism and the Making of Armies. International Studies Review, 21(3), 542-543. https://doi.org/10.1093/isr/viz035
Archambault, E. (2019). Book review: Death machines: the ethics of violent technologies. International Affairs, 95(2), 470-472. https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiz024
Chapter in book
Archambault, E., & Veilleux-Lepage, Y. (2024). The Islamic State's Drone Innovation. In J. P. Rogers (Ed.), De Gruyter Handbook of Drone Warfare (243-254). De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110742039-017
Archambault, E., & Veilleux-Lepage, Y. (2019). The Soldiers of Odin in Canada: The failure of a transnational ideology. In T. Bjørgo, & M. Mareš (Eds.), Vigilantism against Migrants and Minorities (272-285). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429485619
Doctoral Thesis
Archambault, E. (2021). Making Drone Violence Strategic: A Conceptual Genealogy of Remote Warfare. (Thesis). University of Durham. https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2292011
Journal Article
Archambault, E. (2020). A good guy with a drone: On the ethics of drone warfare. Contemporary Political Theory, 19(S3), 169-175. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41296-019-00328-w
Veilleux-Lepage, Y., & Archambault, E. (2020). Drone imagery in Islamic State propaganda: flying like a state. International Affairs, 96(4), 955-973. https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiaa014
Veilleux-Lepage, Y., & Archambault, E. (2019). Mapping Transnational Extremist Networks: An Exploratory Study of the Soldiers of Odin’s Facebook Network, Using Integrated Social Network Analysis
Archambault, E. (2018). Targeted Killing, Technologies of Violence, and Society. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 47(1), 142-152. https://doi.org/10.1177/0305829818779124
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