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Zoe John

Lecturer in Criminology, Swansea University
Zoe is a lecturer in Criminology in the department of Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy at Swansea University.

She received her doctorate at Cardiff University, undertaking ethnographic research on gender, violence, and embodiment in mixed martial arts (MMA). These themes are still central to Zoe's research, which has interest in the boundaries of humour and violence in interaction.

Zoe is co-founder and co-director of the new research centre, Swansea Centre of Research in Sport and Society (SCORSS), with Dr Victoria Silverwood. SCORSS centralises on topics surrounding athlete mental and physical health, including the crisis of concussion in sport.

Zoe is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.

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Zoe Leinhardt

Associate Professor, School of Physics, University of Bristol
I am a computational astrophysicist. My research interests focus on the formation and evolution of planets and small bodies, such as asteroids and comets through the use of numerical simulations.

Zoë was previously at Cambridge University, and prior to that, Harvard, and the universities of Maryland and Washington.

Among the many accolades and grants she has been selected for, Zoë was awarded the American Association of University Women Ph.D. Award in 2005.

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Zoe Long

Zoe Long is a senior researcher and PhD student with the Sustainable Transportation Action Research Team at Simon Fraser University. She has 7 years of experience leading applied research in low-carbon transport solutions, resulting in over 10 peer-reviewed publications. Most recently she has received a Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship recognizing her academic excellence, research potential, and leadership capability. Her research aims to understand how consumers use low-carbon transport technologies and how policy can ensure that these technologies are compatible with climate change goals – with the goal of producing evidence-based policy recommendations for decision makers.

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Zoe Marshman

Professor/Honorary Consultant of Dental Public Health, University of Sheffield
Professor Zoe Marshman

I am a Professor of Dental Public Health at the School of Clinical Dentistry of the University of Sheffield. I teach undergraduate and postgraduate students and undertake PhD supervision. I provide advice to local and national government and health organisations about improving oral health and evidence-based dentistry.

My main interest is child-centred dental research to improve the oral health and treatment experiences of children and their families. I have led, published and presented internationally and nationally many child-centred research projects and have become recognised as an advocate for involving children in high quality oral health research. I have experience of leading large multi-centred randomised controlled trials, integrating qualitative research into trials and conducting process evaluations with the aim of informing policy and practice.

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Zoe Nay

PhD candidate, The University of Melbourne
Zoe Nay is a PhD candidate with Melbourne Law School and the Melbourne Climate Futures research centre at the University of Melbourne, where she is the recipient of a scholarship for graduate research in the field of human rights. Broadly, Zoe’s research examines the role of law in addressing environmental challenges, with a focus on climate change. Her doctoral research examines the legal issues related to state responsibility for loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change in Pacific small island developing states. Zoe is also part of World’s Youth for Climate Justice (WYCJ)’s Academic Taskforce.

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Zoe Smith

PhD Candidate, School of History, Australian National University
Zoe Smith is a PhD candidate and gender historian in the School of History at the Australian National University. Her doctoral research is a feminist, social, and cultural history of domestic violence in New South Wales, Queensland, and Victoria between 1880–1914, with a focus on both colonial women’s divorce petitions and the fiction and non-fiction writings of Barbara Baynton, Ada Cambridge, Louisa Lawson, and Rosa Praed. She has published and presented prize-winning research on histories of sexual violence, domestic violence, Australian literature and film, colonial literature, masculinity, and gender and race in the context of nineteenth-century Britain and Australia. 

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Zoe Strimpel

From "friendship clubs" and two-line classifieds to flipping through faces on Tinder, the technologies and rituals of dating have changed much in the past 40 years. But how deep do these changes go? Does gender operate as differently within the new courtship realm as the range of new dating technologoies would suggest?

My research is intended to answer these questions, focussing on how mediated dating platforms (eg lonely hearts adverts, computer dating message boards, introduction agencies) have evolved since 1970 and tracking how singles using these platforms have put to work ideas of gender in their adverts or profiles. The study focusses on the metropolitan environment of London, where new technologies, fashions and experimentalism in relationships were more observably taken up than elsewhere in Britain, and considers the effects on daters of the capital's heightened discourses of consumerism, permissivness, choice and alienation. Crucially, London formed a major (though certainly not exclusive) hub of the Women's Liberation Movement, and the ways in which the newly strident and bounteous discourse generated by the movement was used, played with or ignored by daters is also of key interest to me, raising broader questions of how the political relates to the personal in the domain of gender.

More broadly, I am interested in Anglo-American and global courtship cultures throughout the 20th century (up to the present), and particularly in how new technologies are adopted, used or rejected by daters around the world. I am also extremely interested in historiographical debates, particularly those concering where lie the strengths and weaknesses of contemporary history and its sources, especially live digital ones like Facebook.

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Zoei Sutton

Lecturer in Sociology, Flinders University

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Zoey England

Chief of Staff, Werth Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation, University of Connecticut
With experience in both the private and public sectors, I currently work at The Werth Institute as the Chief of Staff, where a large portion of my role is centered around piloting experiential learning opportunities for unique student populations as well as supporting globally-based entrepreneurship activities.

Passionate about social and creative entrepreneurship as a catalyst for change, I am also a published journalist, covering topics related to climate change, public health, and social networks. I enjoy sharing my ideas with others, especially those outside of my circle through my blog "...And She Writes" as well am a TEDx speaker.

In my free time, I like to relax with my dog, who I am training to become therapy certified. I am also an award-winning cellist and nature photographer.

A proud Husky, I graduated from the University of Connecticut with an individualized B.A.
in Population Health, Disease, & Policy.

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Zoie Magri

Ph.D. Candidate in Immunology, Tufts University
I graduated from Stonehill College in 2018 with a Bachelors in Biology. Currently, I am a 5th year PhD Candidate in immunology at Tufts University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Under my advisor Dr. Alexander Poltorak, I study silent cell death, apoptosis, in immune cells (macrophages and neutrophils). My current work examines a novel role for a surface protein in preventing post-death inflammation and ensuring cell death remains silent. The elimination of these immune cells by apoptosis is crucial for the resolution of inflammation after infection. Interestingly, the apoptosis of these cells can be altered in aggressive cancers, particularly in the tumor environment. I hope that my work will have significant implications in these contexts.

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Zoltán Glück

Assistant Professor of Anthropology, American University
Zoltán Glück is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at American University in Washington, DC. His research focuses on issues of security, cities, development, postcolonialism, environmental crisis and racial capitalism in East Africa. He is currently working on a book manuscript titled, Recolonizing Security, which is an ethnographic study of the war on terror in Kenya. Zoltán was previously an Assistant Professor of Sociology, Anthropology and International Affairs at Northeastern University. He is also an Editor of Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology.

He received his PhD and MPhil in Anthropology from the CUNY Graduate Center, MA in Sociology from Central European University, and BA in Philosophy from Bard College.

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Zoya Tyabji

I am a PhD student at Dalhousie University working with a team to unravel the global shark meat trade. My past work experiences include working in India as a marine education officer for a local NGO, studying the terrestrial behaviour of sea kraits, studying the resilience of coral reefs and associated taxa in the face of climate change, and characterising the shark and ray fisheries of India. I am interested in understanding the complex relationships between fish and humans and how these can inform resource governance and policy.

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Zvi Singer

Associate Professor of Accounting, HEC Montréal
My name is Zvi Singer. I am an associate professor of accounting at HEC Montreal. Before joining HEC Montreal I worked at McGill University. I hold a PhD Degree from University of California at Berkeley. My research interst include financial reporting, audit, gender, and regulations. I published my research in journals such as The Accounting Review, Journal of Accounting Research, Review of Accounting Studies, Contemporary Accounting Research, Accounting, Organizations, and Society, and others.

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