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Goran Roos

Göran Roos is a member of the Economic Development Board of South Australia, a member of the Council for Flinders University and also a Stretton Fellow appointed by the City of Playford at University of Adelaide. Adjunct Professor at Entrepreneurship, Commercialisation and Innovation Centre, University of Adelaide, South Australia; Australia; Adjunct Professor at University of Technology Sydney Business School, Australia; and Adjunct Associate Professor in the College of Business, Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Göran is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (ATSE) as well as of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences (IVA).

He was a member of the Prime Ministers Manufacturing Leaders Group and has been both a member of the board and chairman of the board for VTT International in Finland as well as Visiting Professor of Innovation Management and Business Model Innovation at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland [where he still holds the title of Professor]; Senior Advisor to Aalto Executive Education Academy in Helsinki; Professor in Strategic Design in the Faculty of Design, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia; Honorary Professor at Warwick Business School in the UK; Adjunct Professor at Mawson Institute, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia; Visiting Professor of Intangible Asset Management and Performance Measurement at the Centre for Business Performance, Cranfield University; part-time visiting Intellectual Capital Adjunct at Melbourne Business School, Mt. Eliza Centre for Executive Education and part-time Industrial Professor of Strategy and Internationalisation at the Norwegian School of Management in Oslo. He has also been on the International Advisory Group (IAG) for DesignGov, the Australian Centre for Excellence in Public Sector Design; a member of CSIRO’s Manufacturing Sector Advisory Council; a Visiting Research Associate in technology-based business development at the Institute for Policy Science located at the University of Saitama Campus Kita-Urawa, Japan and in Biotechnology at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala, and in Intellectual Capital at Henley Management College. He has also been a member of Valio’s International Scientific Board and was a member of the editorial board for the Journal of Human Resource Costing and Accounting.

Göran is the founder or co-founder of several companies in many countries and is presently the Managing Director for Innovation Performance Pty Ltd. He has also worked as a consultant in more than 50 countries as well as having served in management positions in several European and US-based corporations and he has been supporting the Prime Minister’s Taskforce on Manufacturing in Australia.

Göran is one of the founders of modern intellectual capital science and a recognised world expert in this field as well as a major contributor to the thinking and practice in the areas of strategy and innovation management as well as industrial and innovation policy.

Göran is the author and co-author of over one hundred books, book chapters, papers and articles on Intellectual Capital, Innovation Management, Strategy and Industrial Policy many of which have been recognised with awards. He is a member of the editorial board of the International Journal of Strategic Change Management; the International Journal of Learning and Intellectual Capital; the Journal of Intellectual Capital; and 设计 She Ji: The Journal of Design, Economics, and Innovation.

Göran was named one of the 13 most influential thinkers for the 21st Century by the Spanish business journal “Direccion y Progreso” and was appointed “Manufacturing for the Future” Thinker in Residence by the South Australian Premier for the year 2011 and an appointed member of the Prime Minister’s Manufacturing Leaders Group 2012/2013. He was selected for Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) Top 10 Speeches 2013: A collection of the most influential and interesting speeches from the CEDA platform in 2013 for the speech: “The future of manufacturing in Australia: Innovation and productivity” at the launch of CEDA’s major research publication for 2013, Australia Adjusting: Optimising national prosperity.

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Gordon Conochie

Adjunct Research Fellow, La Trobe University
I'm the author of 'A Tiger Rules the Mountain - Cambodia's Pursuit of Democracy', a narrative non-fiction book published by Monash University Publishing in July 2023. It's available in bookstores generally and online.

Praise for 'A Tiger Rules the Mountain':
"Intriguing, enriching" - Prof. Gareth Evans AC KC, former Australian Foreign Minister
"A must read, remarkable" - Prof. Sophal Ear, Arizona State University
"Extraordinarily compelling" - Mary Ann Jolley, Senior Reporter, Al Jazeera
"Vital readings" - Sebastian Strangio, Editor, The Diplomat

I often provide comment and analysis on Cambodia appearing on ABC and SBS TV and radio and in various newspapers (e.g. Associated Press, Reuters, The Age/Sydney Morning Herald).

I've conducted extensive research in the education sector in Cambodia and published articles in Great Britain on health and care in the community.

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Gordon Fletcher

Co-director, Centre for Digital Business, University of Salford
My work and research interests focuses on intersections of the digital and cultural with a particular interest in innovation. My PhD analysed the clusters of popular web search terms. Since then I have written about the economics of online role playing games, the role of conflict in online communities, the concept of thananetworking (social networks based on grieving and mourning) as well as memes and photobombs. More recently I have focused attention on the processes of innovation and the application of Science Fiction Prototyping.

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Gordon Mackenzie

Senior Lecturer, UNSW Sydney
Gordon is a senior lecturer in the School of Taxation & Business Law at UNSW. He specialises in the area of the tax treatment of superannuation funds.He is the convener of the Master of Tax (Tax and Financial Planning) and the Master of Applied Tax (Superannuation). He is also Director of the SMSF Specialization for ICAA and CPA.

Gordon was previously Deputy Chair of the IFSA Tax Committee and was President of Taxpayers Association (now Taxpayers Australia). He was also a member of the tax committee of several organisations, including Property Council of Australia, ASFA and BCA.

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Gordon MacKerron

Gordon MacKerron was Director of SPRU from 2008 until the end of 2013 and is now Professor of Sci8ence and Technology Policy . He was previously Director of the Sussex Energy Group at SPRU from April 2005 to November 2008. Prior to this, he spent four years as Associate Director, NERA Economic Consulting, London and had an earlier career for over 20 years at SPRU. He is an economist specialising in energy and environmental economics, with degrees in economics from the Universities of Cambridge and Sussex. His academic career has specialized in the economics and policy issues of electricity and especially nuclear power, in which he has published and broadcast widely.

He has frequently been Specialist Adviser or invited witness before House of Commons Select Committee inquiries on energy subjects. From June to December 2001 he was on secondment to the PIU, Cabinet Office, as Deputy leader of the UK Government's Energy Review team. He has subsequently assisted the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in its consultation process leading up to a major Energy White Paper released in February 2003 and subsequently advised DTI on security of supply and low carbon technology strategies.

Professor MacKerron has also been the expert witness on economic issues for the Irish Government in its two international court cases on the subject of Sellafield before the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague in 2002 and 2003. Professor MacKerron chaired the Energy Panel, DTI/OST Technology Foresight Programme (1995-98). Between 2003 and 2007 he was Chair of the Committee on Radioactive Waste Management, an independent body charged with recommending the best approach to long-term radioactive waste management to the UK Government. He was a member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution from 2009 until its demise in 2011. He will be a Visting Exchange Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University from March till July 2014, working on proliferation issus surounding the growth in civilain nuclear power around the world.

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Gordon McBean

Professor Emeritus, Department of Geography and Environment, Western University
Professor Emeritus Gordon McBean, Ph.D., has been at Western University since 2000, in the Department of Geography and Environment and with the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction (ICLR). Previously, he was Assistant Deputy Minister, Environment Canada (1994–2000), responsible for weather, climate and air quality sciences and service; professor, atmospheric-oceanic sciences, University of British Columbia (1988–1994); and senior scientist, Environment Canada. Internationally, he was president, International Council for Science (2014–2018); co-chair, Future Earth Governing Council (2016–2018); and chair, Science Committees for Integrated Research on Disaster Risk (2006–2011) and World Climate Research Programme (1988–1994). Since his appointments to ICLR and Western, he has focused on science and policy issues such as climate change, disaster risk reduction and broader environmental issues. He is a Member of the Orders of Canada and Ontario; Fellow of the: Royal Society of Canada; American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Geophysical Union; International Science Council; American Meteorological Society; and other societies; and was awarded the 2023 American Meteorological Society Warren Washington Research and Leadership Medal; 2017 International Meteorological Organization Prize; 2015 University of British Columbia Alumni Award of Distinction; 2015 American Geophysical Union Ambassador Award; 2015 American Meteorological Society Cleveland Abbe Prize; 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, shared for his contributions to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; and 1988 Patterson Medal for distinguished contributions to meteorology in Canada.

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Gordon Noble1

Research Director, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
Gordon is a Research Director with the Institute for Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) focusing on sustainable finance. Gordon has worked across financial systems in a variety of capacities over a thirty-year career and was one of the first employees of the United Nations backed Principles for Responsible Investment, founded what is now the PRI Academy and in 2020 co-authored the Australian Sustainable Finance Roadmap released by the Australian Sustainable Finance Initiative.

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Gordon Peake

Affiliate in the Center for Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Studies, Georgetown University
Gordon Peake is an Affiliate at the Center for Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Studies (CANZAPS).

Gordon has crossed back and forth between research and practice throughout his career. Initial scholarship on conflict resolution and peacebuilding informed his work as an adviser to governments in Timor-Leste and Bougainville; practical experience working at the coalface helped provide the substance for a body of work that has focused on the human complexities of implementation.

His first book 'Beloved Land: Stories Struggles and Secrets from Timor-Leste' won the 2014 ACT Book of the Year and the People's Choice Award. His second book entitled 'Unsung Land, Aspriring Nation' is about Bougainville and published in 2022

Gordon hosts the 'Statecraftiness' podcast.

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Gordon M. Sayre

Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior, EM Lyon Business School
My research interests focus on the interplay of employees' work and home lives, considering how events, behaviors, and characteristics of the workplace "spillover" to impact the daily health behaviors of employees (e.g., alcohol use, sleep). Most recently, I have begun exploring the impact that various compensation practices have on employee health, extending existing work that focuses predominately on performance outcomes.

My work has been published in top scientific journals, including the Journal of Applied Psychology, Personnel Psychology, Current Directions in Psychology, Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, among others. My research has also been featured in media outlets, including CNN, NPR, Fox, USA Today, U.S. News and World Report, The Telegraph, The Guardian, The Independent, Fast Company, Slate, Yahoo, MarketWatch, and Science Daily.

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Gosia Lipinska

Associate Professor, University of Cape Town
Sleep, memory and emotion researcher, with an enthusiastic interest in the overlap of sleep-cognition-affect and mental health.

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Grace Blackburn

PhD Candidate, The University of Western Australia
I am currently investigating the factors surrounding individual response to anthropogenic noise, a rapidly growing and evasive pollutant. For my PhD, I work with Australian Magpies and try to understand the effects that we as humans are having on these iconic birds.

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Grace McKeon

Postdoctoral research fellow, UNSW Sydney

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Grace McQuilten

Associate professor, RMIT University
Grace McQuilten is a published art historian, curator and artist with expertise in art and health, public art, social practice, social enterprise and community development. Grace's research challenges and transforms conventional understandings of the relationship between margin and centre in relation to the cultural economy, contemporary art practice and art history. She has pioneered work on the field of art-based social enterprise in Australia, with particular expertise in migrant and refugee settlement. Grace is also interested in the relationship between art, craft, design and sustainable communities. She has published widely including several books, journal articles, curated exhibition, creative works in literary journals and authored exhibition catalogues. Her most recent books include Dystopian & Utopian Impulses in Art Making: The World We Want, co-edited with Daniel Palmer (Intellect 2023), Art-based Social Enterprise, Young Creatives and the Forces of Marginalisation, co-authored with Amy Spiers, Kim Humphery and Peter Kelly (Palgrave 2022) and Art as Enterprise: Social and Economic Engagement in Contemporary Art, co-authored with Anthony White (IB Tauris, 2016).

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Grace Melo

ACES Faculty Fellow, Texas A&M University
Behavioral Economist interested in food policy and explaining individuals choices. I am
Assistant Professor and Accountability, Climate, Equity, and Scholarship (ACES) Faculty Fellow at Texas A&M University.

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Grace O'Leary

Research Fellow, University of Waikato

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Grace Waye-Harris

PhD Candidate in History, University of Adelaide
Grace Waye-Harris is a PhD Candidate in the department of history at the University of Adelaide. Her research examines the extensive functions of dress within political and diplomatic action during the reign of Henry VIII. This research aims to advance historical knowledge in the areas of Renaissance fashion, and early modern diplomacy. General areas of interest include, historical and modern fashion, Medieval and Early Modern England, the Tudors, and Italian Renaissance art & culture.

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Grace M. Jaramillo

Lecturer, School of Global and International Affairs, University of British Columbia
Grace Jaramillo is core lecturer at University of British Columbia’s School of Global and International Affairs teaching Public Policy Analysis, Program Evaluation and International Development. She specializes in International Political Economy and, more specifically Latin American Political Economy. Her latest publication, co-edited with Maxwell Cameron, Challenges to Democracy in the Andes was launched officially at the Organization of American States in January 2023. Other recent publications include: “Comparing historical cases: advances in Comparative Historical Research” for the Handbook of Research Methods in Comparative Policy Analysis; “Latin America: Trade and Culture at the Crossroads” for the International Journal of Cultural Policy; and “Rafael Correa’s Foreign Policy Paradox” for the edited volume Assessing the Left Turn in Ecuador. Grace holds Ph.D. in Political Studies from Queen's University in addition to a master’s degree in Public and International Affairs from University of Pittsburgh, thanks to a Fulbright Scholarship. Before moving to Canada, Grace was a professor and Head of the International Relations Program at FLACSO, the largest graduate program in Social Sciences in Latin America.

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Grace Marie Jones

Associate Professor, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Touro University
Dr Grace Marie Jones is an assistant professor at Touro University California, where she teaches biochemistry and works to understand the role of fructose and carbohydrate consumption on lipid synthesis, insulin sensitivity and chronic disease. Dr Jones is a co-investigator on several NIH-funded studies and supervises laboratory analyses at TUC's Mass Spectrometry Core Lab. She recently published a paper in the Journal of Lipid Research outlining a method to study postprandial lipoproteins. She holds a PhD focused in molecular genetics from Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

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Graeme Austin

Chair of Private Law, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
Chair in Private Law, Victoria University of Wellington; Professor of Law, Melbourne University.

Academic interests include private law and intellectual property, particularly copyright and trademarks.

Recently appointed to the Yong Shook Lin Visiting Professorship in Intellectual Property at the National University of Singapore.

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Graeme Fairchild

Reader in Developmental Psychopathology, University of Bath
Dr. Fairchild’s current research is funded by the European Commission, the Medical Research Council, and the Economic and Social Research Council, and in the past he has been funded by the Wellcome Trust, the British Academy, and the charity Kids Company. The majority of this work has involved using neuropsychological or neuroimaging approaches to understand individual-level factors that contribute to risk for developing antisocial behaviour and aggression, such as facial emotion recognition difficulties and changes in brain structure or function.

The aim of Dr. Fairchild’s main research project, FemNAT-CD, which is a multi-site study taking place across several European countries, is to understand the causes of sex differences in antisocial behaviour in children and adolescents. This is an important issue because there are substantial sex differences in the prevalence of severe antisocial behaviour, and antisocial behaviour is extremely costly for the affected individuals, as well as their families, and society in general.

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Graeme Hoddinott

Socio-behavioural Scientist and Senior Researcher, Stellenbosch University
Dr. Graeme Hoddinott is a Socio-behavioral Scientist and a Senior Researcher at Stellenbosch University in South Africa. He is also a fellow of the African Research Initiative for Scientific Excellence (ARISE) project. His ARISE research is focused on optimizing care for adolescents with Tuberculosis. The ARISE project is implemented by the African Academy of Sciences (AAS) with support from the European Commission and the African Union Commission. Graeme has 17 years’ experience working in communities of highest TB and TB/HIV co-morbidity in South Africa. Much of his work has focused on young people.His research expertise (that bridges between public health and social science) is focused on explicating the structural, systemic and operational processes underpinning public health interventions in high-burden contexts through rigorous mixed-method design and analyses.

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Graeme Oxby

Senior Lecturer/Programme Leader BA & MA Photography, University of Lincoln
Graeme Oxby is Programme Leader for BA Photography and MA Photography at the University of Lincoln and a documentary and portrait photographer who concentrates on class politics, entertainment and religion in the UK and abroad. Graeme is represented worldwide by Institute Artists.

In recent years, he was Artistic Director of The Hull International Photography Festival in 2015 and was commissioned by Hull City of Culture 2017 to deliver the Hull Beermat Photography Festival with winners chosen by Martin Parr.

Graeme is an External Examiner at the University Of The Arts, London and at Cardiff Metropolitan University and an external panel member for a photography degree validation for Open University.

Graeme Contributed a portrait to the 2018 book "Invisible Britain" published by Policy Press and supported by The Young Foundation, a charity that tackles major social challenges by working alongside communities, using the tools of research and social innovation. He also contributed to the book A River Full Of Stories in 2019

Graeme has been regularly published in national and international publications including Stern, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, Vice, Huck Magazine, Metro, BBC, and The Times Literary Supplement.

Graeme’s five year project on Elvis Impersonators entitled "The Kings Of England” was published as a monograph by Bluecoat Press in October 2018

The Kings of England project was selected for exhibition at Format International Photography Festival 2019 where Graeme was also selected as The Photography Show Award winner.

Graeme was part of the group exhibition Photography On A Postcard in Somerset House at Photo London 2019 and selected as one of the images for publication in the 2019 box set.

In 2019 Graeme Oxby began working on a photography and poetry project entitled "Red White & Black" funded by Arts Council England and Hull City Council.

In 2020 Graeme contributed a section to the book "Photography Rules: Essential Dos and Don'ts from Great Photographers" edited by Paul Lowe.

Graeme’s work is held in the collection of the Michael Komechak O.S.B. Art Gallery, Benedictine University in Chicago IL

https://staff.lincoln.ac.uk/goxby

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Graeme Shannon

My research interests are in the fields of animal behaviour, ecology and conservation, with particular focus on the effects of human activities on wildlife, animal cognition and the behavioural ecology of large herbivores. I have studied African elephants for over a decade, addressing questions on foraging and movement ecology as well as investigating the detailed social and ecological knowledge of elephant family groups and their matriarchs. The research that I have conducted on elephant cognition has involved extensive use of acoustic playbacks, whereby animal vocalisations are broadcast to study the responses of elephants to social and ecological threats. More recently, I have applied these playback techniques to understand the effects of anthropogenic noise - a growing source of environmental disturbance - on animal behavior and wildlife ecology. I am also interested in the role that large herbivores play in ecosystem function and structure in natural and human altered habitats.

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Graeme Wells

University Associate, School of Economics and Finance, University of Tasmania

Graeme Wells teaches and publishes in a variety of areas in macroeconomics and economic policy. He has also held teaching and research positions at ANU and universities in Wellington, Oslo, Santa Barbara and Guelph. In addition to his academic work, Dr Wells has been a consultant to a variety of policy-making agencies such as the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, The New Zealand Treasury, The Australian Treasury and EPAC. For a number of years was Co Editor of the journal 'Agenda', which provides a forum for debate on current policy issues in Australia and New Zealand.

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Graham Cross

Senior Lecturer in History, Manchester Metropolitan University
Graham Cross researches the way the United States has interacted with the world through military, diplomatic and cultural means and the intersection of their military operations and societies during the first half of the twentieth century and the era of the world wars.

He has expert knowledge of the American air campaigns in Europe and the social history of the "Friendly Invasion" of Britain by American forces during the Second World War. He has written extensively on the history of the American Eighth Air Force that conducted a strategic bombing campaign against Germany. His current research includes a British Academy funded project looking at the African American 923rd Engineer Aviation Regiment and a further project on the experience of the Women's Army Corps (WACs) in wartime Britain.

His previous research publications have covered the impact of the First World War on the foreign policy of Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson and he maintains an active research interest in presidential foreign policy, particularly that of the FDR era and air power.

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Graham Gardner

Assistant Professor of Economics, Texas Christian University
I am an Assistant Professor of Economics at Texas Christian University. I study applied microeconomics, with a special interest in sexual and reproductive health. My current research focuses on the health effects of restricted access to abortion in the United States.

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Graham Kendall

I am a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Nottingham (UK). I am currently the Vice-Provost (Research and Knowledge Transfer) at our campus in Malaysia. I am also CEO of a commercialisation company (MyResearch Sdn Bhd). Prior to entering academic , I worked in industry for almost 20 years.

I am Editor-in-chief of the IEEE Transactions of Computational Intelligence and AI in Games, as well as an Associate Editor of nine other journals.

My research interests include:

Operational Research
Evolutionary Computing
Scheduling
Games

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Graham Martin

Emeritus Professor of Avian Sensory Science, University of Birmingham
Professor Graham Martin is an Ornithologist with an international reputation built upon his research into the sensory worlds of birds. In recent years he has used his expertise to focus on problems concerned with the functions of vision, especially binocular vision, in foraging behaviour, and in understanding why some bird species are particularly vulnerable to collisions with human artefacts, such as wind turbines, power lines and fishing nets.

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Graham Wright

Associate Research Scientist, Maurice & Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies, Brandeis University
Graham Wright is an associate research scientist at the Steinhardt Social Research Institute and the Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies. He received his PhD and MPP from the Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University.

Graham has published articles on American political attitudes and political theory in the journals Political Behavior and The Journal of Public Deliberation, articles on survey methodology in the journals Survey Practice and The Journal of the International Association for Official Statistics, and has co-authored a number of articles related to Israel attitudes and Jewish life in Contemporary Jewry, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, and The Jewish Journal of Sociology.

His work at CMJS primarily focuses on the ongoing evaluation of Birthright Israel and studies of US undergraduates. He teaches classes in quantitative design and analysis, survey research methods, and multilevel modeling at the Heller school.

His other research interests include American public opinion and ideology, social science research methods, and epistemology.

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Graham Wright

Lecturer in Immunology, Edinburgh Napier University

My research focuses on cellular-therapy for the treatment of autoimmune disease. We have shown in models of rheumatoid arthritis that naturally occurring suppressive white blood cells modified using gene-transfer can home to disease sites and actively suppress disease. We are now working on translating this work to the clinic for both rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis. My work utilises many of the approaches developed in the field of cancer cell therapy, an area of research I was involved in during my PhD.

I was awarded my PhD from UCL in 2009, followed by fellowship from Arthritis Research UK at the Centre for Rheumatology Research. I am currently a Lecturer at Edinburgh Napier University.

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Gráinne Donnelly

Associate Perinatal Physical Activity Research Group Team Member, Canterbury Christ Church University
I am an Advanced Practice Physiotherapist specialising in pelvic health physiotherapy with over 15 years of clinical experience. I have furthered my specialist training with a PGCert in Continence for Physiotherapists at the University of Bradford and completed a Masters in Advancing Practice in Physiotherapy at Ulster University. I have independently been involved in several research projects leading to academic publication and look forward to continuing my research journey as I embark upon a PhD. I am also a lecturer at Suspi University in Switzerland on the rehabilitation and women's health module.

I sit on the Board of Trustees for the Pelvic Obstetric and Gynaecological Physiotherapy charitable body and I chair the journal subcommittee and sit as co-editor for the Journal of Pelvic Obstetric and Gynaecological Physiotherapy.

I also engage in peer review for several high impact journals.

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Grant Bollmer

Senior Lecturer in Digital Media, The University of Queensland
Grant Bollmer is a Senior Lecturer in Digital Media at the University of Queensland. He has previously taught at North Carolina State University, the University of Sydney, and Massey University.

He is the author or coauthor of five books: 'Inhuman Networks: Social Media and the Archaeology of Connection' (Bloomsbury, 2016), 'Theorizing Digital Cultures' (SAGE, 2018), 'Materialist Media Theory: An Introduction' (Bloomsbury, 2019), 'The Affect Lab: The History and Limits of Measuring Emotion' (Minnesota, 2023) and, with Katherine Guinness, 'The Influencer Factory: A Marxist Theory of Corporate Personhood on YouTube' (Stanford, 2024).

Among other awards, Grant has been the recipient of a grant from the US National Endowment for the Humanities, a residency at the Media Archaeology Lab at the University of Colorado, Boulder, a fellowship from the e-flux Foundation, and was a contributor to an issue of the magazine esse: Arts + Opinions on “Empathy,” which received an honorable mention for “Best Editorial Package” from the Canadian National Magazine Awards/Les Prix du Magazine Canadien.

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Grant Douglas

Senior Principal Research Scientist (CSIRO Environment) and Visiting Professor (Curtin University School of Molecular and Life Sciences), CSIRO
https://www.linkedin.com/in/grant-douglas-59915024/

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Grant Jarvie

Chair of Sport and Head of the Academy of Sport, The University of Edinburgh
Professor Grant Jarvie MA, PhD, PhD (Honorary) is Chair of Sport at the University of Edinburgh where he is linked to the School of Education, the Academy of Government and the Centre for Cultural Relations.

He is Head of Edinburgh's Academy of Sport [[email protected]]

He has served as Vice- Principal and Acting Principal (for 9 months) within a Scottish University holding key portfolio’s, leading on key strategies, attracting significant income and managing organisational change.

Grant has held visiting appointments at the University of Illinois, Warsaw University and the University of Toronto. He is an associate member of the Centre for Candian Studies. He has experience of leading in large international higher education institutions.

He is currently Chair of the Sportscotland Trust Company with responsibility for thee National Centres.

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Grant Joseph

Research Scientist, FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town
MBChB (UCT); MSc CB (UCT); PhD (UCT)

Dr Grant Joseph is both a medical practitioner and a research scientist. Following 10 years of medical practice, he completed an MSc in conservation biology and a PhD in zoology. Research interests include conservation biology, landscape ecology, community ecology, restoration ecology, ornithology, and the emerging threats to human health from global environmental change. He is presently investigating the influence of termitaria on biodiversity and resilience in dystrophic savannah systems, restoration of semi-arid systems, and the effects of environmental change on bird functional distribution across gradients of aridity and on ecological systems and human health. He believes that through education and shared knowledge with the general public and commercial institutions, scientists can play a decisive role in achieving a sustainable future in which the wonder of four billion years of life is respected, and better understood by all.

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