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Charlotte Eve Davies

Charlotte's research focuses on the impacts of parasites and disease on marine populations. Since beginning her studies in 2008, Charlotte has traveled extensively, working with collaborators in the USA and Canada, gaining valuable experience in a range of disease detection methods and learning more about marine management strategies. Her doctorate at the Department of Bioscience, Swansea University (UK) focused on determining the health status of commercially important European crustacean populations; susceptibility to disease, the effects of invasive species and how fisheries closure can impact the health of crustaceans. Her current position at the Reef Systems Unit in Puerto Morelos, Mexico, investigates the effects of crustacean disease on coral reef health. She is passionate about the integration of fishermen and marine scientists for the betterment of fisheries management and a sustainable future.

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Charlotte Farewell

Research Assistant Professor of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

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Charlotte Gascoigne

Principal Research Fellow, Cranfield University
Dr Charlotte Gascoigne is a Principal Research Fellow working on an ESRC-funded research project at Cranfield University about part-time working after the pandemic. She has over 20 years’ experience as a researcher and consultant in flexible working. Her PhD explored how managers and professionals craft their part-time working arrangements. In 2021, she completed a nine-month research project for the CIPD: ‘Flexible working – lessons from the pandemic’. Previously, as Director of Research and Consultancy at the Timewise Foundation, she led research on flexible and part-time working, concentrating particularly on how jobs at different levels are designed in sectors including retail, social care, construction, nursing and teaching, and creating impact through partnerships with employer organisations and government departments.

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Charlotte Gauthier

Étudiante au doctorat, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC)
Je suis étudiante au doctorat et mes recherches portent sur les habitudes migratoires du flétan de l'Atlantique dans le golfe du Saint-Laurent. Mon approche consiste à utiliser les éléments chimiques présents dans leurs os d'oreille comme marqueurs de suivi, ce qui me permet de reconstituer l'histoire de la vie des flétans, y compris leurs mouvements et leur croissance. En plus de mes recherches, je participe à divers programmes de sensibilisation visant à éduquer et à informer le public sur divers projets et sujets scientifiques. J'ai une passion particulière pour l'utilisation de l'art comme moyen de communication de mes intérêts scientifiques, en captant l'attention des gens et en rendant des concepts complexes plus accessibles et plus engageants.

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Charlotte Hopkins

Senior Lecturer, School of Environmental Sciences, University of Hull
Dr Hopkins is a Senior Lecturer in Marine Conservation at the University of Hull. Trained in Conservation Science, she has a broad interest in wildlife conservation, with a particular focus on the marine environment. She is particularly interested in understanding human perceptions of nature and wildlife and how these can be incorporated into conservation, wildlife management and sustainable use. Her current research aims to understand how we can better protect and restore ecosystems as part of the REWILD research cluster. Dr Hopkins leads the Ocean Literacy research cluster at the University of Hull and is a core member of the British Ecological Society English Policy Group.

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Charlotte Johansson

PhD researcher, Neuropathology of Alzheimer's, Karolinska Institutet
Charlotte is a PhD student at Karolinska Institutet since 2017. Her research is focusing on the clinical, genetic and neuropathological nature of familial Alzheimer’s disease. She is also a member of the Caroline Graff Group of translational genetics of neurodegenerative diseases, which researches inherited forms of dementia, alongside other inherited neurodegenerative conditions. Charlotte is organizing and assessing participants in the Swedish Familial Alzheimer Disease study, which is a longitudinal prospective observational study that has been ongoing at Karolinska Institutet since the 1990´s.

Charlotte gained her degree in medicine in 2011 at Lund University and finished her specialization in geriatrics in 2018. She is currently working as a geriatrician at Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden.

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Charlotte Lassaline

PhD Student, University of Adelaide
Charlotte Lassaline is a PhD student focused on invasive species

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Charlotte Lloyd

Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Research Fellow and Lecturer in Environmental Chemistry, University of Bristol
My research is driven by a passion to address key questions surrounding the origins and fate of human and agricultural wastes, particularly in relation to their delivery from land to water bodies. This interest has grown out of my MSci degree in Geography, PhD and postdoctoral research in the fields of catchment hydrochemistry and molecular organic geochemistry.

My research to date has combined biogeochemical and hydrological approaches and has investigated the molecular composition, transformation and transport of organic matter by water and sediment flows. My Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Research Fellowship focuses on important emerging scientific questions concerning the fate and transport of plastic-derived compounds and plastic degradation products in agriculture. Using a combination of cutting-edge chemical analytical techniques in conjunction with data modelling provides exciting opportunities for the exploration of agriculture's impact on our environment.

More broadly I have research interests in the transport and fate of pollution, (including plastics and bioplastics) and nutrients in the terrestrial environment.

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Charlotte Markowitsch

PhD candidate in popular music studies, RMIT University
As a second year PhD candidate at RMIT University, Charlotte is researching the status of rock in Australian popular culture. While Charlotte’s work has previously investigated blues appropriations in contemporary popular rock music, her current research explores the rock canon and what positions rock to become understood and upheld as “the best of all time”. She is proud to be a member of the Music Industry Research Collective (MIRC).

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Charlotte O'Brien

Senior Lecturer in Law, University of York

I've been awarded an ESRC 'Future Research Leader' grant, with which I'm PI on the EU Rights Project, www.eurightsproject.org.uk - working with EU migrants, Citizens Advice Services, and other advice agencies around the country, providing an advice and advocacy service while conducting an ethnography on the administrative and legal problems encountered. I have documented the effects of the recent welfare changes targeting EU migrants.

The project was described by reviewers as 'groundbreaking', 'tremendously innovative', 'strikingly original' and said 'the applicant’s background makes her possibly the only person of her generation in a position to credibly offer the opportunity to develop this methodology in this kind of context: access to civil justice, in supranational contexts’.

Having volunteered and worked in Citizens Advice Bureaux for over thirteen years, and specialised in EU legal research for eleven years, I have practical as well as academic expertise in UK welfare law, EU law, (particularly EU social law - welfare, free movement, citizenship and equal treatment), human rights law, equality and non-discrimination law (especially disability), the rights of carers, and child poverty.

I've been appointed an 'analytical expert' on the EU Commission's Free Movement and Social Security Coordination network, producing reports and giving litigation advice and suggestions to the Commission. I am also joint cases editor for the Journal of Social Security Law.

My work has been published in key international journals, such as the European Law Review, the Common Market Law Review, the Maastricht Journal of International and Comparative Law, and the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law.

I've communicated about my research through various media, including the Today Programme on Radio 4, BBC Inside Out, and BBC Breakfast. I have given various public talks, including at the YorkTalks 2016, https://youtu.be/Iz-dY3g-ZAI and in an Open Course lecture series on Law, Government and the Public, 2015.

My PhD in Law (Liverpool) was funded by the AHRC, and focussed on free movement, equal treatment and EU citizenship; during this I took part in two research projects on retirement migration funded by the Spanish Ministry for Employment & Social Affairs and Age Concern. These looked at the access to welfare services for post-retirement EU migrants, particularly UK nationals abroad. My LLM (Leeds) research involved study of the attempts to produce an EU constitution. My work is inherently interdisciplinary; my first degree was a BA in Social & Political Sciences, (Cambridge).

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Charlotte Taylor

Professor of Discourse and Persuasion, University of Sussex
I am mainly interested in how people use language for persuasive purposes. My recent work has researched how emigration and immigration in the UK have been framed over the last 200 years and I am currently working on a project investigating the rhetorical uses of nostalgia.

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Charlotte Wildman

Senior Lecturer in Modern British History, University of Manchester
Dr Charlotte Wildman is Senior Lecturer in Modern British History within the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures at the University of Manchester. Dr Wildman’s research focuses on class, gender, and cities in twentieth century Britain and focuses on two key areas: 1. the experience of ‘deviant’ women and children and the role of the home and family life in facilitating non-violent offences. 2. providing new insights into the history of new North, especially Liverpool and Manchester and challenging entrenched stereotypes about these cities as sites of urban decay. My current research offers a new historical account of working-class experiences of social and economic inequalities through the first study of non-violent offences undertaken by women and children in urban neighbourhoods in England and N. Ireland, 1918-1979. It seeks to understand the range of ‘everyday’ minor illegal activities committed by women and children that became designated criminal through local and national processes.
Dr Wildman is also committed to engaging with public audiences and is on the Board of Trustees for Manchester Histories, a charity that works with disadvantaged communities and school children in Greater Manchester. She has also collaborated with the Pankhurst Centre and their heritage volunteers; delivered public workshops; and made numerous contributions to broadcast media including Sky News and BBC breakfast. She also works to engage policy makers and stakeholders with research including on topics such as poverty, benefit fraud, and women’s offending.

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Charlotte A. Kukowski

Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Climate Change Mitigation, University of Cambridge
Charlotte A. Kukowski is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the Cambridge Social Decision-Making Lab (Department of Psychology) and the Conservation Science Group (Department of Zoology), University of Cambridge. Charlotte received a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Zurich (2022). Her current research investigates how physical and social environments facilitate and obstruct changes in high-carbon behaviours, particularly meat consumption. In adjacent lines of work, Charlotte examines links between the feasibility of behaviour change and policy support, climate and health inequality, climate misinformation, and self-regulation.

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Charlotte Jönsson Sparrenbom

Associate Professor, Geosciences, Lund University
Charlotte J. Sparrenbom is an associate professor and researcher at the Department of Geology, Lund University. She works with focus on groundwater and the occurrence, distribution and fate of organic and inorganic contaminants. Of particular interest are changes in groundwater quality over time, investigation methods, monitoring, remediation and protection of our water resources.

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Charmaine C. Williams

Dean and Professor of Social Work, University of Toronto
Professor Charmaine C. Williams joined the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work in 2002. On January 1, 2023, she was appointed Dean for a five-year term. Professor Williams is also holds the Sandra Rotman Chair in Social Work.

Dean Williams’ research focuses on health equity issues affecting various populations, including racial minority women, LGBTQ communities, and families affected by mental illness. As a social worker in the mental health care system, Dr. Williams worked with individuals, families and groups, and was also active in organizational change initiatives directed at increasing access for racial and ethnic minority populations. She has extensive experience developing and delivering professional education in the areas of anti-racism, cultural competence, mental health and addictions. Recent activities include serving on the expert panel for the Mental Health of Black Canadians Initiative at the Public Health Agency of Canada and serving on the Anti-Racism Advisory Panel that developed the Toronto Police Service’s race-based data collection policy. She is PI for the SSHRC funded project “United we stand, divided we falter: Advancing a family-centred agenda for research on caregiving.”

Prior to taking on the role of Dean, Williams was the Vice-Dean of Students at the School of Graduate Studies, University of Toronto. She has also held positions as the Anti-Racism and Cultural Diversity Officer (2003-2004), the Associate Dean Academic for Social Work (2009-2014), and the Provostial Advisor on Access Programs (2014-2015).

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Charmaine N. Willis

Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Skidmore College
Charmaine N. Willis, Ph.D. is Adjunct Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, University at Albany, SUNY, and Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Skidmore College.

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Charmaine Papertalk Green

Research Fellow, School of Allied Health, Western Australian Centre for Rural Health, The University of Western Australia
Born in Eradu, Charmaine is a proud Wajarri, Badimaya and Wilunyu woman of the Yamaji Nation. A visual artist, author, poet, storyteller and social science researcher, she shares her cultural knowledge in many different spheres. Charmaine has written five books, won several awards including the prestigious Australian Literary Society Gold Medal, and her poetry is studied as part of primary and school curriculum. Involved with the Yamaji Art Centre in Geraldton for over 22 years, she is currently their Chairperson. Charmaine was awarded the 2022 Magabala Fellowship 2022 and 2023 Red Room Poetry Fellowship and is a member of the national First Nation Aboriginal Writers Network .

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Charmine Hartel

Distinguished Professor, Associate Dean Research Impact, Director Opportunity Tech Lab, Monash University
Professor Charmine E. J. Härtel (PhD, FASSA, FAHRI, FCHRI, FAIM, FANZAM) is Distinguished Professor, Associate Dean Research Impact, and Founding Director of the Opportunity Tech Lab at Monash University Business School in Melbourne, Australia. She is an Honourary Professor at The University of Queensland Business School, Brisbane, Australia and Co-Director of the Queensland Neurodiversity Employment Incubator©. She is an acknowledged preeminent scholar-practitioner in her field, evidenced by election as a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia (ASSA) and Queensland Academy of Arts and Sciences (QAAS), the (US) Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP), the Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management (FANZAM), as well as an elected member of the Society for Organizational Behavior in Australia (SOBA) and Professional Fellow of the Australian Institute of Management (FAIM) and Australian Human Resources Institute (FCAHRI). Her awards include the inaugural AHRI HR Academic Award, Australian Psychological Society’s prestigious Elton Mayo Award for scholarly excellence, the Martin E. P. Seligman Applied Research Award, and the Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management (ANZAM) Research Supervision Excellence Award. She is the awardee of more than AUD$3.3million in Australian Research Council (ARC) grants and over $1.3 million for commissioned research. She is past President of ANZAM, Founder and Chair of the Senior HRM Executives Roundtable, Co-Founder of the Key Centre for Human Factors and Applied Cognitive Psychology, Co-Founder and Co-Organizer of the International Conference on Emotions and Organizational Life, and Past Division Chair and Executive Team Member of the Gender and Diversity in Organizations Division of the U.S. Academy of Management (comprising 770 U.S. members & 401 non-US members).

Professor Härtel is a leading global authority on workplace diversity and inclusion, co-founder of the study of emotions in organizations, and pioneer in the newly developing field of fostering employment and entrepreneurship of under-represented groups. Her internationally recognized research program is building holistic theory and evidence-based practice on ways to address disadvantage in employment and entrepreneurship. Her work appears in over 100 book chapters and encyclopedia entries and over 600 refereed journal articles including Academy of Management Review, Journal of Applied Psychology, Leadership Quarterly, Journal of Business Venturing, Human Relations, and Journal of Management. She is Series Co-Editor of Research on Emotion in Organizations. She is primary author of a wholly original Australian HRM textbook, shortlisted across all university disciplines for the Australian Awards for Educational Publishing; the book emphasizes HRM as a process and viewing the employment relationship from a wellbeing perspective. She is past Editor in Chief of Journal of Management & Organization (the official journal of the Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management), past Associate Editor of Academy of Management Learning & Education and Journal of Managerial Psychology, and current editorial board member on numerous journals including Organizational Psychology Review, Human Relations, and British Journal of Management. The scholarly impact of her work is demonstrated by 15,508 citations in Google Scholar, an h-index of 58, i10-index of 158), and 4,062 citations in Scopus (h = 32), receipt of 19 best paper awards and inclusion of her 2002 piece in the top 50 most cited articles of the decade for Leadership Quarterly.

The high social impact of her translational research is evidenced by numerous international awards, including 5 awards for innovation in organisational practice. Examples include, co-development of PCC Method to improve physiological and psychological wellbeing of medical students and doctors, patients and their caregivers; business applications of her methodologies for quality decision-making in stressful environments (e.g., U.S. Naval Training Center’s cockpit crew decision-making training; AirServices’ degraded modes procedures and training), effective execution of change strategy (e.g., Palladium’s 4C Model), health-focused leadership and safety climate (e.g., Queensland nursing program; U.S. Federal Aviation Administration crew resource management guidelines), positive workforce integration (e.g., Australia Post’s diversity climate practices, Rio Tinto Iron Ore’s procurement system to support Aboriginal contractors in Pilbara), talent management (e.g., Australian Public Service), ethical leadership development program (e.g., Victorian Department of Transport), development of psychological capital (e.g., Victorian SES), organisational culture transformation (e.g., Victorian State Service Authority’s Positive Work Environments Toolkit to address workplace bullying). Other examples include her appointment as an expert advisor for the European Union workplace diversity forum, publication of Diversity at Work: The Practice of Inclusion in the prestigious SIOP Professional Practice Series, and frequent invited keynotes at leading events (e.g., APEC, Autism @ Work Summit, Diversity Council Australia, Australian Institute of Management, Australian Human Resources Institute, ADC Future Summit, Pride in Diversity).

Professor Härtel is widely regarded as a leader in the development of early career scholars, which has been formally recognized with the prestigious Janet Chusmir Service Award from the (US) Academy of Management, supervisor awards from two universities (Monash, Deakin), and the ANZAM Research Supervision Excellence Award. Her former PhD students hold key positions in both academia (e.g., UQ, Monash, Griffith, Deakin, Swinburne, Flinders, RMIT, Macquarie, Sunway, University of Edingburgh) and practice (e.g., Infosys, Amcor, Australian Centre for Corporate Social Responsibility). She has taught in university and executive programs in the USA, Australia, Germany, Italy, Singapore, and Sweden.

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Chau Minh Nguyen

PhD Candidate in Marketing, HEC Montréal
Chau Minh Nguyen is interested in ethics, Big Data and textual analysis in marketing research. She aspires to produce works that address social issues and contribute to the well-being of the community.

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Chaynee Hodgetts

Barrister & Honorary Lecturer in Emergency Medical Law, Queen Mary University of London
A criminal defence and inquest practitioner, with a reputation for looking at cases differently, and her focus on each client as an individual. Chaynee practises predominantly in crime and inquests. Her further sub-specialisms include forensic science, maritime criminal law, maritime inquests, Higher Education inquests, and medical and mental health inquests. She currently accepts instructions nationally, with a focus on London and North Wales.

Chaynee is an Honorary Lecturer in Emergency Medical Law at QMUL and the Blizard Institute – and has been involved with providing legal teaching on their MSc Emergency & Resuscitation Medicine since 2019.

Chaynee is also Honorary Lecturer in Criminal Law (Department of Law), and Honorary Lecturer in Medicine: Medical Law (Department of Medicine) at Bangor University.

She was the second contributor to the 5th edition of the leading national Undergraduate textbook in Criminal Law – Smith, Hogan and Ormerod’s Essentials of Criminal Law – assisting the principal author, Professor David Ormerod CBE KC.

Prior to practice, Chaynee spent over a decade as a University Law Lecturer and academic, teaching Criminal Law, Evidence, and Media Law, working as Head of Admissions for Law (Law Admissions Tutor), and as Director of an Innocence Casework Unit.

As a member of Middle Temple since 2012, she was Called to the Bar in 2019, and qualified as a Pupil Supervisor with Middle Temple in 2024.

She is the Adviser (Lay Non-Medic) in Teaching & Learning and Examinations for the Royal College of Pathologists (RCPath), and Full Member of the British Academy of Forensic Sciences (BAFS).

She is also a member of the Criminal Bar Association (CBA), the Inquest Lawyers’ Group (ILG), the Female Fraud Forum, the Honourable Society of Middle Temple, the Society of Legal Scholars (SLS), Women In Criminal Law (WICL), the Peer Review Panel of the International Journal of Emergency Services (IJES), and a Fast-Track Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA).

Before lecturing, she was a Deck Rating in the Merchant Navy, and, as a member of the Cruising Association, Young Cruisers’ Association, Royal Burnham Yacht Club, and Bar Yacht Club, she maintains a keen interest in getting afloat whenever possible. Her seagoing qualifications and experience also provides useful insight in trials or inquests in maritime cases.

Chaynee also has a keen interest in pre-hospital care and pre-hospital emergency medicine. In addition to her legal work in this area, she successfully completed the British Association for Immediate Care (BASICS) Pre-Hospital Emergency Care (PHEC) Course, and is now an Associate Instructor on the PHEC. She is also a First Responder with GoodSAM for out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. Again, her qualifications and experience in pre-hospital care also provide valuable additional insight in trials or inquests of a medical nature.

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Chee Meng Tan

Assistant Professor of Business Economics, University of Nottingham
I hold a Ph.D in Business Administration from the ESSEC Business School of Paris-Singapore and a doctorate in economics from the University of Cergy-Pontoise in France. My research interest is interdisciplinary and delve into the intersections between political economics, social psychology and cultural studies. I have expertise on Chinese foreign policy and have worked and publish pieces on panda diplomacy. I have appeared on media outlets such as the Washington Post, NBC News, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, etc., and have also appeared on a radio documentary entitled "How 'Panda Diplomacy' Led To Conservation Success" on the well-known US Radio Program, Science Friday.

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Chee Yew Wong

Professor of Supply Chain Management, University of Leeds
Chee Wong is a professor of supply chain management at Leeds University Business School. Prior to this, he held a chair in logistics and supply chain management at Hull University Business School. He teaches logistics, supply chain and operations management at undergraduate, MSc, MBA, PhD and executive levels. He has also more than nine years of industrial working and consultancy experience in operations, purchasing, production, inventory and distribution management and supply chain design with SMEs and multinational companies specialised in beverage, retail, consumer goods, toys, engineering, metal production, and polymer distribution.

His research interests lie in the areas of supply chain integration, digital supply chain, supply chain analytics, green supply chain. He has published more than 70 academic and practitioner articles, including high quality journals such as Journal of Operations Management (JOM), International Journal of Operations and Production Management (IJOPM), Journal of Supply Chain Management (JSCM), International Journal of Production Economics (IJPE), Supply Chain Management: an International Journal (SCMIJ), Production Planning and Control (PPC), International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management (IJPDLM), etc.

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Chelsea Black

Ph.D. Candidate in Marine Ecosystems and Society, University of Miami
I earned a Bachelor of Science from the University of North Carolina Wilmington in Marine Biology, a Master of Science in Marine Conservation from the University of Miami, and am now a PhD Candidate at the University of Miami. My work focuses on the movements of highly mobile shark species and identifying how their habitat use and migration corridors will shift under future global change.

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Chelsea Butkowski

Assistant Professor of Communication Studies, American University School of Communication
Dr. Chelsea Butkowski is an Assistant Professor of Data, Media & Identity in American University's School of Communication. Their research examines the relationship between media technologies and identity, including the social practices and effects of everyday social media use. Butkowski's research interests include feminist and queer media studies, platforms and algorithms, visual cultures, and political communication.

Recent work has involved analyses of digital popular culture during U.S. elections and legacies of gender stereotyping in selfies. They are currently undertaking a multi-year study of social media and identity during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Butkowski draws from a background in art history, material culture, and museum studies to situate contemporary digital and visual media within wider historical contexts of communication practice. They also specialize in social scientific media research methods, including content analysis and in-depth interviewing.

Butkowski's research has been recognized with support from major funding organizations and awards at national and international conferences. Their work can also be found in a number of leading communication journals, including New Media & Society; Social Media + Society; Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication; Communication, Culture & Critique; and Feminist Media Studies. Butkowski is also affiliated with the UNC Center on Information Technology and Public Life (CITAP) and the UPenn Center on Digital Culture & Society (CDCS).

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Chelsea Fisher

Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of South Carolina
Dr. Fisher is an Assistant Professor of anthropological archaeology at the University of South Carolina who studies the deep histories of environmental justice conflicts through community-engaged archaeology. Since 2013, she has been conducting research in and with the community of Yaxunah, Yucatán, Mexico. Her research investigates the historical-ecological dynamics of colonial and modern cattle farming in Yucatán, as well as the history of gold mining in the Carolinas. Her research interests also include the entangled histories of global food systems, interactions among Indigenous and colonial ecological knowledges, and the application of archaeological approaches to environmental justice conflicts.

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Chelsea Liu

Dr Chelsea Liu is a Lecturer at the University of Adelaide Business School. Her research interests are in the areas of corporate governance, corporate litigation, mergers & acquisitions, and corporate social responsibility. Chelsea holds Bachelor degrees in Law and Commerce from the University of Adelaide, and a PhD specialising in the corporate governance consequences of lawsuits against public companies. Chelsea is a legal practitioner and has worked in inner-city law firms prior to joining academia.

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Chelsea Sherlock

Assistant Professor of Management, Mississippi State University

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Chen Hou

Associate Professor of Biology, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Dr. Chen Hou is Associate Professor of Biological Sciences at Missouri S&T and Director, Laboratory of Animal Physiology. He joined S&T in 2011 as Assistant Professor. Dr. Hou received Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Physics from the University of Missouri and a B.S. in Physics from Sichuan University.

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Chen Liu

Associate Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Clarkson University
Dr. Liu's research has been focusing on capturing, modeling and monitoring the software behavior at run-time using hardware-level information.

Electrical and Computer Engineering Ph.D. - 2008 University of California - Irvine
Electrical Engineering M.S. - 2002 University of California - Riverside
Electrical Engineering B.E. - 2000 University of Science and Technology of China

Research Interests:
Processor architecture: multi/many-core multi-threading architecture
Embedded Systems
Power/Energy-aware computing
Interaction between operating system and micro-architecture
Hardware acceleration techniques and reconfigurable computing

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Chenghong Gu

Professor in Smart Energy Systems, University of Bath

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Chengsheng Wu

Postdoctoral Scholar in Pathology, University of California, San Diego
Chengsheng Wu, graduated from the University of Alberta, Canada, with a Ph.D. degree in 2017. He has joined David Cheresh’s lab as a post-doctoral fellow since 2018. He is currently working on how pancreatic cancer cells adapt to cellular stress.

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Chengwei Liu

Chengwei Liu is an Associate Professor of Strategy and Behavioural Science at Warwick Business School, UK. He is a Cambridge trained PhD who held a fellowship position at Jesus College Oxford. Chengwei's research programme addresses a fundamental question in strategy, innovation and entrepreneurship: should successes be attributed to skill or luck? His research (luckily) won several awards and are published in management and interdisciplinary journals such as Organization Science and PNAS, gaining media coverage worldwide in the New York Times, Financial Times, and BBC. Chengwei has also won multiple research grants and teaching awards.

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Chenkai Chi

PhD candidate, Faculty of Education, University of Windsor
Chenkai Chi is a Ph.D. candidate in educational studies at the Faculty of Education, University of Windsor. His PhD supervisor is Dr. Shijing Xu. He was awarded SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship and Ontario Graduate Scholarship. His research interests include teacher education and professional development, mathematics and literacy education with cross-cultural perspectives, West-East Reciprocal Learning, curriculum integration, and English as Second Language Acquisition. He worked as a research assistant in Xu and Connelly's SSHRC Partnership Grant Project from 2016-2022 and in Xu's Canada Research Chair Program from 2019-now. He received his Master's Degree from the University of Windsor, where he worked with Dr. Sefton to integrate arts into English language learners’ English learning.

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Cherice Escobar Jones

PhD Candidate, Northeastern University
Cherice is a PhD candidate at Northeastern University in the Department of Writing & Rhetoric and a research assistant in the Bouvé College of Health Sciences.
jones.ch@northeastern.edu

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Cherish Watton-Colbrook

Archives Assistant, University of Cambridge

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