Menu

Search

Linda Bishai

Adjunct Professor of International Affairs, George Washington University
Dr Linda Bishai joined the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) in April 2020, working on a wide range of international security issues including African regional economic communities, security cooperation in Africa, and monitoring instability in central and southern Africa. She has twenty years of experience in teaching, training and writing on international law, peacebuilding and security sector reform, and preventing/countering violent extremism. In her previous positions at the American Bar Association and at the U.S. Institute of Peace, Bishai designed and delivered workshops on teaching human rights in Iraq, teaching peacebuilding and election violence prevention in Sudan, women’s roles in preventing violent extremism in Nigeria and Kenya, and developing effective responses to radicalization and violent extremism in Kosovo. As Director of North Africa programs at USIP, Bishai facilitated dialogues on just and sustainable security sector responses to violent extremism and border security with high-level officials and civil society actors from the Sahel and the Maghreb. As Director of Research, Evaluation and Learning at the ABA Rule of Law Initiative, Bishai oversaw the activities of a team of legal researchers and monitoring & evaluation professionals. Her recently edited volume on Law, Security and the State of Perpetual Emergency explores the blurring of law enforcement and defence activities in the counter-terrorism context. Bishai holds a B.A. in history and literature from Harvard University, a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center, an LLM in international law from the University of Stockholm, and a PhD in international relations from the London School of Economics.

  More

Less

Linda Ferrell

Professor of Marketing, Auburn University
Linda Ferrell is the Globe Life Professor of Marketing. She served on the faculty at Belmont University, University of New Mexico, University of Wyoming, University of Northern Colorado, Colorado State University, and University of Tampa. She co-managed two, $1.25 million grant for business ethics education through the Daniels Fund Ethics Initiative at the University of New Mexico with her husband, O.C. Ferrell. She was also jointly responsible for securing over $5 million for the first Bill Daniels Distinguished Professor Chair of Business Ethics at the University of Wyoming.

Ferrell earned a doctorate from the University of Memphis. She holds an MBA and a bachelor's in fashion merchandising from Illinois State University. Her research interests include marketing ethics, ethics training and effectiveness, the legalization of business ethics as well as corporate social responsibility and sustainability.

She has published in Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, AMS Review, Journal of Business Ethics, Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, Journal of Business Research, as well as others. She has co-authored numerous books including Business Ethics: Ethical Decision Making and Cases (12th edition), Business and Society (4th edition), Management (3rd), and Introduction to Business (12th edition).

Professionally, Ferrell served as an account executive in advertising with McDonald's and Pizza Hut's advertising agencies in Houston, Indianapolis, and Philadelphia. She was recently honored as the Innovative Marketer of the Year for the Marketing Management Association. Ferrell is on the board of directors of Mannatech, Inc., a NASDAQ-listed health and wellness company. She serves on the Board of the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy-Center for the Public Trust. She serves on the Executive Committee, Board, and Academic Advisory Committee of the Direct Selling Education Foundation. She is on the Cutco/Vector College Advisory Board. She is immediate past president of the Academy of Marketing Science and past president of the Marketing Management Association. Ferrell also serves as an expert witness in ethics and legal disputes.

  More

Less

Linda Goldman

Linda Goldman has a Fellow in Thanantology: Death, Dying, and Bereavement (FT) with an MS degree in counseling and Master's Equivalency in early childhood education. Linda is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor (LCPC) and a National Certified Counselor (NBCC). She worked as a teacher and counselor in the school system for almost twenty years. Currently she has a private grief therapy practice in Chevy Chase, MD. She works with children, teenagers, families with prenatal loss, and grieving adults. Linda shares workshops, courses, and trainings on children and grief and trauma and currently teaches as adjunct faculty in the Graduate Program of Counseling at Johns Hopkins University. She has also taught on the faculty at the U. of Md. School of Social Work/Advanced Certification Program for Children and Adolescents and lectured at many other universities including Penn. State University, Buffalo School of Social Work, University of North Carolina, The National Transportation Safety Board, and The National Changhua University of Education in Taiwan as well as numerous schools systems throughout the country. She teaches the course on “Working with LGBT Youth” at Johns Hopkins Graduate School, the University of Maryland School of Social Work, and the Child Welfare Administration. She has written many articles, including Healing Magazine’sHelping the Grieving Child in the Schools, The Bullying Epidemic, Creating Safe Havens for Gay Youth in Schools (2006) and Parenting Gay Youth (2008). Some of her articles on children and grief and trauma have been translated into Chinese for the Suicide Prevention Program of Beijing. She appeared on the radio show Helping Gay Youth: Parents Perspective (2008) and has testified at a hearing before the MD Joint House and Senate Priorities Hearing for Marriage Equality (2007) and the MD Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for the Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Protection Act (2008).

Linda has worked as a consultant for the National Head Start Program, National Geographic, and was a panelist in the National Teleconference: When A Parent Dies: How to Help The Child. She has appeared on the Diane Rehms show to discuss children and grief and Dan Roderick’s Baltimore NPR Show to discuss gay youth. She was named by the Washingtonian Magazine as one of the top therapists in the MD, VA. DC area (1998) and again named by The Washingtonian Magazine as a therapist to go to after the terrorist attacks in 2001. She has served on the board of ADEC, The Association for Death Education and Counseling, and has served on the advisory board of SPEAK, Suicide Prevention Education Awareness for Kids, RAINBOWS for Our Children, Academic Advisory Board of Annual Editions/Death, Dying and Bereavement/ McGraw Hill, and the advisory board of TAPS (The Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors) as their Children’s Bereavement Advisor. Linda is the recipient of the ADEC Clinical Practice Award 2003.

Linda Goldman is the author of Life and Loss: A Guide to Help Grieving Children (First edition, 1994/Second edition 2000, Third edition, 2014) Taylor and Francis Publishers. Her second book is Breaking the Silence: a Guide to Help Children with Complicated Grief (First edition, 1996/Second edition 2002, Chinese Edition, 2000). Her other books include Bart Speaks Out: An Interactive Storybook for Young Children On Suicide (1998) WPS publishers, a Phi Delta Kappan International fastback, Helping the Grieving Child in the School (2000), and a Chinese Edition of Breaking the Silence: A Guide to Help Children With Complicated Grief (2002), the Japanese Edition of Life and Loss: A Guide to Help Grieving Children (2005), and Raising Our Children to Be Resilient: A Guide for Helping Children Cope with Trauma in Today’s World (2005) and a children’s interactive story and memory book Children Also Grieve: Talking about Death and Healing (2005), Chinese translation of Children Also Grieve (2007) and Coming Out, Coming In: Nurturing the Well Being and Inclusion of Gay Youth in Mainstream Society (2008). She has also authored contributing chapters in resources including Loss of the Assumptive World (2002), Annual Death, Dying, and Bereavement (2001-2013), Family Counseling and Therapy Techniques (1998), and The School Services Sourcebook: A Guide for School-Based Professionals (2006, 2012, 2nd edition). She has also written two books to be included in a series, Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death (2009, Polish translation, (2012), Korean translation, 2013) and Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Sex (2010).

Linda also created a CD-ROM “A Look at Children’s Grief” (2001) published by ADEC, The Association for Death Education and Counseling, and she was a part of ADEC’s Webinar series, Children and Grief, 2009. Her op/ed “Cut Out Guns, Bullying” appeared in the Baltimore Sun, March 2001. She was an important part of the Washington Post Article, How To Talk to Kids about Suicide and has participated in other interviews for articles in the media including the Washington Post, The LA Times, USA Today, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, the Associated Press, Seventeen Magazine, ABC News and US Magazine.

Linda contributed in many ways after 9/11. She authored the chapter about children, “Talking to Children about Terrorism” in Living with Grief: Coping with Public Tragedy,Published by the Hospice Foundation of America 2003. She contributed to The Journal for Mental Health Counselors in their special grief issue in the article “Grief Counseling with Children in Contemporary Society” 2004. She was a strong part of the TAPS (Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors) response team at the Pentagon Family Assistance Center, conducted a workshop about children and grief at the 2002/2004/2005/2006,2010 TAPS National Military Survivor Seminar, authored articles including, “Helping Children With Grief and Trauma” (2002/ 2003) and Fostering Resilience in Children: How to help kids cope with adversity (2005) TAPS Journal, Children Coping with a Military Death (2008) TAPS Journal.

Linda contributed on the Public Broadcasting Series Program “Keeping Kids Healthy” on Children and Grief, which aired in October 2006, and KNBP Channel 5 Public Broadcasting –“You’ll Always Be With Me”, Nevada Children and Grief, 2010. She consulted with Sesame Street for their program and materials on Children and Grief andChildren and the Military (2010). She also is the recipient of the “The Tenth Global Concern of Human Life Award 2007”.

  More

Less

Linda Hassall

Senior Lecturer Humanities, Griffith University
LINDA HASSALL: is Deputy Convenor BA in Humanities and Field Study Coordinator Drama. She has held roles as Program Director for Creative Industries, School Humanities and Program Director Contemporary and Applied Theatre School Education and Professional Studies, Griffith University. Her practice research focuses on devising and producing contemporary performance and explores the relationship between theatre and climate change. She further explores developing sustainable production technologies in response to theatre’s carbon footprint. She is author of Theatres of Dust: Climate Gothic Analysis in contemporary Australian drama and performance landscapes (2021). She is an award-winning playwright Post Office Rose (2008) and director Salvation (2012). In association with Dr Tanja Beer and Dr Natalie Lazaroo, she is a co-chair of the Performing and Ecologies Research Lab (P+ERL) associated with the Climate Action Beacon (CAB) and Creative Arts Research Institute (CARI) Griffith University.
Links

  More

Less

Linda Pagani

Professor, School of Psychoeducation and researcher at CHU Sainte-Justine, Université de Montréal
Linda Pagani is a professor with the University of Montreal's School of Psychoeducation, a researcher at the Research Centre at CHU Sainte-Justine (University Hospital Centre), and a member of the Groupe de recherche sur les environnements scolaires (School Environment Research Group) of the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture.

  More

Less

Linda Truong

PhD Candidate, Rehabilitation Sciences, University of British Columbia
Linda is wrapping up her PhD in Rehabilitation Sciences at the University of British Columbia. Her research focused on identifying and integrating social support into rehabilitation after a sport-related knee injury to help optimize recovery. Linda has more than 12 years of clinical experience working with patients with traumatic knee injuries, specifically those with ACL injuries.

  More

Less

Linde Arentze

Researcher into AI and Remote Warfare, NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Linde is a PhD candidate in Conflict Studies and a member of the Intimacies of Remote Warfare (IRW) and Realities of Algorithmic Warfare (RAW) research programmes at Utrecht University. Her research focuses on the global development of advanced military technology and its effects on military-industrial relations, civil-military relations, and the character of warfare. Besides her work at Utrecht University, Linde is part of the interdisciplinary core team at the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust, and Genocide Studies tasked by the Dutch government with investigating twenty years of Western interventionism in Afghanistan.

  More

Less

Lindsay Bodell

Assistant Professor of Psychology, Western University

  More

Less

Lindsay Broadbent1

Lecturer in Virology, University of Surrey
Dr Lindsay Broadbent joined the Section of Virology at the University of Surrey as a lecturer in July 2022. Previously, Lindsay was a Wellcome Trust ISSF fellow in the Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine at Queen’s University Belfast. Her research focuses on respiratory virus-host interactions and subsequent innate immune responses. Dr Broadbent's expertise in developing well-differentiated human primary airway epithelial cell cultures (WD-PAEC) facilitates investigation of virus infection in a physiologically and morphologically relevant model. Her current research is directed towards the role of respiratory viruses in longer term lung damage and the development of chronic lung disease.

In addition to her research Dr Broadbent is actively involved with science outreach and engagement and has been involved in hundreds of media appearances.

  More

Less

Lindsay Helwig

Lindsay Helwig

Lecturer in Pathways, University of Southern Queensland
Dr Lindsay Helwig is a Lecturer in Pathways, teaching academic communication skills, critical and creative thinking, and English language. Her research is in the areas of Welsh historiography, popular culture, literature and postfeminism,

  More

Less

Lindsay Kobayashi

Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan, University of Michigan

  More

Less

Lindsay Middleton

Food Historian and Knowledge Exchange Associate, University of Glasgow
Dr Lindsay Middleton is a literary historian of nineteenth-century food writing, and Knowledge Exchange Associate for the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Glasgow.

Dr Middleton's research focuses on the literary qualities of recipes and cookbooks, analysing the representation of culinary technologies in order to understand how nineteenth-century authors situated themselves in the past, present, and future. Her work ranges from the history of tinned foods to the publications of Victorian chefs Agnes Marshall, Alexis Soyer, and Georgiana Hill. She also researches Scottish food history, and invalid cookery in the Scottish context.

As Knowledge Exchange Associate, Dr Middleton works with a range of researchers and industry stakeholders to create impact and partnership opportunities. In particular, she is interested in the ways that Arts and Humanities research can help transform the Scottish food industry, and food's potential within heritage properties.

  More

Less

Lindsay C. Sheppard

PhD Student, Sociology, York University, Canada
Lindsay C. Sheppard is a PhD student in the Department of Sociology at York University. She has a MA in Child and Youth Studies from Brock University. Lindsay is curious about questions of gender, age, collective feminist identities, and digital feminism. Using a feminist posthuman framework, her proposed dissertation will explore girls' feminist activism on Instagram, to better understand the materialities and discourses that shape the possibilities for digital feminism and feminist identities. Lindsay's dissertation aims to complicate binaries of online/offline, activism/slacktivism, and individual/collective.

  More

Less

Lindsay Sarah Krasnoff

Research Associate, Centre for International Studies & Diplomacy, SOAS, University of London
Dr Lindsay Sarah Krasnoff is a historian, writer, speaker, and consultant, author of Basketball Empire: France and the Making of a Global NBA and WNBA (Bloomsbury, 2023) and The Making of Les Bleus: Sport in France 1958-2010 (Lexington Books, 2013). She has written on French and global sports for a range of news and sports media outlets, including VICE Sports, CNN International, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and more. She previously served as a historian for the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Public Affairs, with a Europe-centric portfolio, and also worked with the Department's Sports Diplomacy office. Outside of her consulting practice, she is the Founding Director of FranceAndUS, and co-directed the SOAS University of London “Basketball Diplomacy in Africa” oral history project. Dr. Krasnoff holds a PhD in History from The Graduate Center (City University of New York), MA in Journalism and French Studies (NYU), and BA in International Affairs (The George Washington University).

  More

Less

Lindsey Cormack

Associate Professor of Political Science, Stevens Institute of Technology
Created & Maintains DCinbox database of official legislator to constituent e-newsletters.

Author: How to Raise a Citizen & Why It's Up to You to Do It

Areas of focus: American Politics, Political Communication, Congress, Veterans Politics, Women in Politics, Inter-branch Relations

  More

Less

Lindsey Mean

Associate Professor, School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Arizona State University
Lindsey Mean is an associate professor in the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences in the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University. She is also an affiliated faculty members with the Global Sport Institute at ASU.

Mean's research focuses on the intersection of identities, sport, gender and sexuality, ideology and culture, discourses, language and representational practices across multiple sites and levels of enactment.

She received her doctorate in psychology from the University of Sheffield in England.

Education
PhD Social and Applied Psychology, University of Sheffield, U.K.
BSc. Psychology (Honors), Plymouth Polytechnic (now University of the Southwest), U.K.

  More

Less

Line Nyhagen

Line is Reader in Sociology at the Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, United Kingdom. Her research is interdisciplinary and crosses subject areas within sociology and political science. She gained her PhD in Sociology from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA, in 1998.

Line’s main research interests are in the areas of religion, gender, feminism and women’s movements, migration and ethnic relations, citizenship and identities, and public policy. She is an expert in the sociology of gender and in the sociology of religion.

Line's latest book, 'Religion, Gender and Citizenship: Women of Faith, Gender Equality and Feminism' (with Beatrice Halsaa, published April 2016), has already been called a 'landmark contribution to scholarship'. The book explores views and experiences of Christian and Muslim women living in Norway, Spain and the United Kingdom related to their faith, identities and citizenship. It also examines their views on gender equality, women's movements and feminism.

Line’s previous book, Majority-Minority Relations in Contemporary Women’s Movements: Strategic Sisterhood (with Beatrice Halsaa; Palgrave Macmillan 2012), has been reviewed in numerous journals, including The Sociological Review, NORA - Nordic Journal of Women’s Studies, the International Journal of Iberian Studies and more (for links to and excerpts from reviews, click here. The book compares and contrasts contemporary women’s movements in Norway, Spain and the United Kingdom, with particular attention to relations between ethnic majority and ethnic minority women and politics.

Both of Line’s most recent books have emerged from the research project Gendered citizenship in multicultural Europe: The impact of contemporary women’s movements (see www.femcit.org), funded by the European Commission. Line was Work Package Leader for the theme “Multicultural citizenship: Intersections between feminism, ethnic identity and religion”, and led an international, collaborative team of researchers. Her work within FEMCIT also included a study of how women’s movement activists understand citizenship (see Nyhagen Predelli, Halsaa and Thun 2012).

Line has initiated, worked on and led several research projects that have investigated the experiences of ethnic minorities, including Muslim women and men, ethnic minority women’s organizations, and immigrant organizations. In a project sponsored by the Research Council of Norway, she studied immigrant organizations in Norway with a view to their involvement in political decision-making processes. The project followed on from her previous research on the national political influence of ethnic minority women’s organizations, which was commissioned jointly by the Norwegian Research Programme on Power and Democracy and the Norwegian Ministry of Children and Family Affairs. In the field of migration and ethnic relations, she has also studied the views and practices of Muslim women and men in relation to gender, which involved in-depth interviews with Muslims in Norway of Pakistani and Moroccan backgrounds. She led the evaluation of the Contact Committee for Immigrants and the Authorities in Norway, commissioned by the Norwegian Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development. Line has also engaged in historical-sociological research on gender and religion, published in her book Issues of Gender, Race, and Class in the Norwegian Missionary Society in Nineteenth Century Norway and Madagascar (The Edwin Mellen Press, 2003) and in journal articles.

  More

Less

Line Jee Hartmann Rasmussen

Senior researcher of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University
Line is a Danish researcher with the Dept. of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, and the Dept. of Clinical Research, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark. Line completed postdoctoral training with the Moffitt-Caspi Lab at Duke University, supported by an international postdoctoral fellowship from the Lundbeck Foundation.

With an M.Sc. in Molecular Biomedicine and a Ph.D. in Immunology and Infectious Diseases, both from University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Line is an immunologist and epidemiologist by training. Line has brought together the field of life-course epidemiology with a strong background in laboratory methods and biomedicine to address fundamental questions about health and illness from childhood to old age. Her research integrates theory and methods from immunology, clinical research, and population-based studies to identify the risk factors, measures, and outcomes of systemic chronic inflammation with emphasis on its role in biological aging and disease development. Her work is centered on biomarkers of inflammation and biological aging, with focus on the emerging systemic chronic inflammation marker “suPAR”. This work includes clinical prognostication using suPAR, as well as research into early life risk factors for systemic chronic inflammation, immunosenescence (aging of the immune system), and accelerated biological aging.

  More

Less

Ling Xiao

Senior Lecturer in Finance, Royal Holloway University of London
Dr Ling Xiao is a Senior Lecturer in Finance and Financial Management, the School of Business and Management, Royal Holloway University of London. Her research focuses on developing and applying novel financial econometric models to study carbon finance and sustainable finance issues. Her publications appear in peer-reviewed, international journals including International Review of Financial Analysis, Annals of Operations Research, Resources Policy, Energy Policy etc. Ling takes great delight in helping SMEs to address financial and non-financial challenges such as meeting net zero through innovative immersive storytelling techniques. In addition, Ling is devoted to developing an original transformative learning and teaching framework to foster inclusive education and education for sustainability development (ESD) in Higher Education. She is a member of the Centre for Research into Sustainability (CRIS) and the Digital Organisation and Society (DOS) Research Centre at Royal Holloway, University of London.

  More

Less

Linsey Robb

Associate Professor, Northumbria University, Newcastle
Linsey Robb is Associate Professor in Modern British History at Northumbria University. Her work focuses on cultural, social and gendered histories of the Second World War. Key publications include Men At Work (2015), Men in Reserve (2017), Men, Masculinities and Male Culture in the Second World War (2018) and British Humour and the Second World War (2023). She is currently working on a cultural and social history of conscientious objection in Britain during the Second World War, research which is funded by an Arts and Humanities Research Council Research, Development and Engagement Fellowship.

  More

Less

Linus Girdland Flink

Visiting lecturer at Liverpool John Moores University, lecturer in biomolecular archaeology, University of Aberdeen
I specialise in ancient DNA analysis and am particularly interested in animal domestication and past human demography. I also have a keen interest in wet-lab ancient DNA methods.

My current research covers genome analysis of Early Medieval Picts in Scotland; assessing past biodiversity in Scotland and Ireland via environmental ancient DNA (NERC-funded QUADRAT PhD project at the University of Aberdeen); and past mobility and migration in prehistoric Scotland (University of Aberdeen-funded PhD project in collaboration with Marischal Museum, Aberdeen, and the Crick Institute, London).

  More

Less

Linzi Ladlow

Research Fellow in Family Research, University of Lincoln
Linzi Ladlow is a Research Fellow in Family Research. She is working on the ‘Following Young Fathers Further (FYFF) project. Linzi is interested in family life, young parenthood, youth transitions, housing, and the environment. She enjoys researching collaboratively and has expertise in qualitative longitudinal research, and creative, and participatory research.

  More

Less

Linzi Williamson

Assistant Professor, Psychology & Health Studies, University of Saskatchewan
I am an Assistant Professor in Psychology & Health Studies at the University of Saskatchewan and Credentialed Evaluator through the Canadian Evaluation Society. My research centres the voices of Canadian veterans with disabilities working with service dogs.

  More

Less

Lior Sheffer

Assistant professor in political science, Tel Aviv University
Dr. Lior Sheffer studies elite political behavior. His research focuses on executive decision making, exploring if and how people who run for office differ from non-politicians when they solve problems and reason about the policy choices they have to make. He specializes in fielding large scale experiments with incumbent politicians as participants, across different contexts and countries. His broader substantive interests are in elections and campaigns, the role of personality in politics, and legislative behavior. Methodologically, he is interested in survey and field experiments, survey design, and application of psychological modules and insights in the study of politics.

Lior received a B.Sc. in Mathematics and Cognitive Science and an M.A, in Public Policy from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He earned his PhD in political science from the University of Toronto. His research has appeared in the American Political Science Review, Journal of Politics, Political Psychology, Political Behavior, Electoral Studies, and Political Research Quarterly, among other journals.

  More

Less

Lis Howell

Director of Broadcasting, City University London

Lis Howell is Director of Broadcasting and head of the MA courses in Broadcast and Television Journalism. She is also Deputy Head of the Department of Journalism.

Lis is a major award-winning journalist and broadcasting executive who has worked for BBC, ITV, Channel 4, and Sky News. She was Senior Vice-President at Flextech Television (later Virgin Media) where she founded Living TV, now a key channel on Sky.

Prior to that she was Managing Editor of Sky News where she produced their coverage of the first Gulf War from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. She won a Royal Television Society Award for coverage of the Lockerbie disaster from ITV Border when she was the first female Head of News at ITV.

She was a television reporter and presenter at Granada and Tyne Tees and began her career in journalism as a producer and reporter at BBC Radio Leeds. In 1999 she chaired the Guardian International Edinburgh Television Festival. In 2001 she attended the prestigious Harvard Business School Advanced Management Programme.

Currently Lis is a member of the Royal Television Society where she regularly chairs the News Programme of the Year Awards. She is also a judge for the Broadcast Magazine television Awards. She is a member of BAFTA and a regular contributor to Broadcast Magazine, openDemocracy and OurBeeb. She has appeared several times on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme and on BBC One's Newswatch and is a respected commentator on broadcasting.

  More

Less

Lisa Cooper

Lecturer in Law, University of South Australia
Lisa Cooper is a lecturer in law, specialising in criminal law and procedure. She is admitted as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of South Australia.

  More

Less

Lisa Coulthard

Professor, Department of Theatre and Film, University of British Columbia
Professor of Cinema and Media Studies

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Development Grant 2021-2023
Principal Investigator: Lisa Coulthard
Collaborator: Lindsay Steenberg, Oxford Brookes University
Title: Digital Dark Tourism: a case study of true crime tourism in the digital age

Social Sciences and Research Council of Canada Insight Grant 2018-2022
Principal Investigator: Lisa Coulthard
Collaborator: Lindsay Steenberg, Oxford Brookes University
Title: “Between Blood and Data: Anatomy of the Post-Millennial Hollywood Fight Sequence”

Social Science and Research Council of Canada Insight Grant 2014-2019
Principal Investigator: Lisa Coulthard
Title: “The Sounds of Violence

  More

Less

Lisa De Bortoli

Senior Research Fellow, Australian Council for Educational Research
Lisa De Bortoli is a Senior Research Fellow at the Australian Council for Educational Research.
Lisa De Bortoli is the National Project Manager for Australia for the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which examines reading, mathematics and science of 15-year-old students.

  More

Less

Lisa de Kleyn

Research Fellow, Centre for Urban Research, RMIT University
Lisa is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at RMIT University in the Centre for Urban Research. Her research takes an environmental justice perspective on a range of issues including urban greening, housing, and natural resource management. Current projects including housing energy efficiency transitions, urban greening governance, and flood justice.

  More

Less

Lisa De Simone

Associate Professor of Accounting, The University of Texas at Austin
Lisa De Simone is an Associate Professor of Accounting at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin, a Public Voices Fellow of The OpEd Project, and cohost of the podcast Taxes for the Masses (available wherever you get your podcasts). Her research examining how multinational corporations and individuals respond to tax incentives worldwide has been published in top accounting and finance journals. She teaches and has taught tax and personal finance courses to students in BBA, MPA, MBA, and PhD programs. She was previously an Associate Professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business from 2013 to 2020. She earned a BA in Economics and German Studies from Stanford in 2002, an MS in Accounting from the University of Missouri - Kansas City in 2008, and a PhD in Accounting from the University of Texas at Austin in 2013. Previous work experience includes transfer pricing consulting for Ernst & Young.

  More

Less

Lisa Dinkler

Postdoctoral Researcher in Psychiatric Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet
Lisa Dinkler is a postdoctoral researcher in psychiatric epidemiology at the Centre for Eating Disorders Innovation (CEDI) with primary research interest in eating disorders and neurodevelopmental disorders. Her current research focuses mainly on avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). Using epidemiological and twin designs as well as genome-wide association studies, I am trying to understand the genetic and environmental causes of ARFID, its comorbidities (e.g., with autism, ADHD, and anxiety), and its course over time.

  More

Less

Lisa Farrell

Professor of Economics (Health Economist), RMIT University

  More

Less

Lisa Garwood-Cross

University Fellow in Digital Health & Society, University of Salford
Dr Lisa Garwood-Cross is a researcher in Digital Health and Society at the University of Salford, Manchester. Her work looks at the impact of social media and digital technologies on society, particularly in relation to health and wellbeing. Her current work explores social media health influencer cultures and how audience trust translates into health influence. Her previous work includes a study of YouTube sex education influencers and the 'COVID Sex Lives' project that looked into the impact of the pandemic on the sex lives and digital habits of men who have sex with men. Lisa also works with health organisations about digital capabilities in the healthcare workforce and social media.

  More

Less

Lisa Goff

Lecturer of English, University of Virginia

Lisa Goff joined the University of Virginia's American Studies faculty in the fall of 2012 and has a joint appointment with the Department of English. A cultural historian who studies the American landscape, she teaches classes in cultural landscapes, public history, theories and methods of American Studies, the history of journalism, and gender and social media. She recently launched a new digital history project, Take Back the Archive, dedicated to the history of sexual violence at the university. She is also director of the Institute for Public History, which places students in paid internships at museums, archives, and historic sites in central Virginia.

Her first book, Shantytown, USA: Forgotten Landscapes of the Working Poor, will be published in April 2016 by Harvard University Press. The book argues that shantytowns constitute an alternative vision of American urban space between 1820 and 1940, and that conflicts over shantytowns as places and symbols of working-poor culture were an essential element in the formation of twentieth-century class difference in the United States. She is currently working on a second book project, which examines restoration as a theoretical concept and a practical application that spans disciplines, geographies, and centuries.

  More

Less

Lisa Graham-Wisener

Lecturer of Health Psychology, Queen's University Belfast
I am a Lecturer in Health Psychology in the Centre for Improving Health-Related Quality of Life (CIHRQoL), in the School of Psychology at Queen’s University Belfast (QUB).

My research interests are broadly in the assessment and management of psychological wellbeing and quality of life in chronic conditions. In particular I am interested in psychological adjustment and quality of life in cancer and palliative and end of life care populations, including intervention development (e.g. music therapy, mindfulness, ACT) and validation and implementation of outcome measures. I am also interested in public health approaches to palliative and end of life care.

  More

Less

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10   
  • Market Data
Close

Welcome to EconoTimes

Sign up for daily updates for the most important
stories unfolding in the global economy.