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Amanda Lotz

Amanda D. Lotz is professor of Communication Studies and Screen Arts & Cultures at the University of Michigan. She is the author of The Television Will Be Revolutionized (New York University Press, 2014, 2007), Cable Guys: Television and American Masculinities in the 21st Century (New York University Press, 2014), and Redesigning Women: Television After the Network Era (University of Illinois Press, 2006), and editor of Beyond Prime Time: Television Programming in the Post-Network Era (Routledge, 2009). She is co-author, with Timothy Havens, of Understanding Media Industries (Oxford University Press, 2017, 2011) and, with Jonathan Gray, of Television Studies (Polity, 2011).

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Amanda Mergler

Lecturer, Queensland University of Technology

Dr Amanda Mergler is a Lecturer in the School of Cultural and Professional Learning at QUT. As a registered psychologist, Amanda teaches undergraduate and postgraduate students in human development, educational psychology, and behavior management. Amanda has been involved in research projects examining the values of teachers, pre-service teachers and school chaplains. A key interest area for Amanda is the role of ‘personal responsibility’ in the lives of young people, and her recent research in this area builds on her previous work in which she created an education program and survey to assess and enhance this construct in adolescents.

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Amanda NeMoyer

Assistant Research Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Drexel University
Amanda NeMoyer, JD, PhD, is an assistant research professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at Drexel University and a member of the Juvenile Justice Research & Reform Lab. NeMoyer earned her PhD in clinical psychology with a forensic concentration from Drexel University, completed a clinical internship in Health Service Psychology at Emory University School of Medicine/Grady Health System and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Disparities Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, with support from Harvard Medical School and the National Institute of Mental Health.

With training in both psychology and law, Dr. NeMoyer conducts interdisciplinary research aimed at helping to create a more developmentally appropriate approach to juvenile justice that promotes positive youth outcomes. She has a passion for evaluating current juvenile justice practices and advocating for evidence-based policy change, with a particular focus on alternatives to detention and incarceration, including youth diversion and probation reform initiatives. Dr. NeMoyer has authored and co-authored more than 35 professional publications and more than 35 conference presentations. Her work has been funded by the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention, the William T. Grant Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, the National Institute of Mental Health, and other national and local organizations.

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Amanda Pyman

Amanda is the Head of Department of Management at Deakin University. She has experience in higher education in both Australia and the UK, holding previous appointments at Monash University (MBA Programs Director) and the University of Kent (Deputy Director, MBA Programs).

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Amanda Rasmussen

Assistant Professor, Faculty of Science, University of Nottingham
Plant physiologist, working with trees, crops and horticultural species. In particular investigating adventitious (stem-formed) roots to understand how they develop and function - how are they triggered in normal development or by stressful environments, how do they take up nutrients and water and what that means for the whole plant. Currently funded by the Forestry Commission Tree Production Innovation Fund, Innovate UK Knowledge Transfer Partnership with Whetman Plants International and Royal Society International Exchange grant.

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Amanda Reichelt-Brushett

Professor Environmental and Marine Science, Southern Cross University
Professor Amanda Reichelt-Brushett has a Bachelor of Applied Science in Coastal Management from the University of New England, a Master of Science in Marine Chemistry from James Cook University and a PhD in Ecotoxicology from Southern Cross University. Amanda has published numerous scientific journal articles on catchment management and aquatic pollution and is editor and co-author of a new text book titled: Marine Pollution -Monitoring, Management and Mitigation. She has 30 years of experience in investigating human impacts on the environment. Amanda has worked with communities in the Asia-Pacific region to help understand various local pollution issues and improve environmental outcomes. She was President of the Asia-Pacific geographic unit of Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC A-P) from 2020-2022 and continues to play an active role in the global Society. Locally she is motivated to use her expertise to work within the community to improve the health of the Richmond River through leadership in the Richmond RiverKeeper organisation.

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Amanda Reilly

Senior Lecturer in Commercial Law, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

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Amanda Ridley

Associate professor, behavioural ecology, The University of Western Australia
A/Prof Amanda Ridley is a behavioural ecologist based at the University of Western Australia whose research focusses on the behaviour and population dynamics of animals living in the wild.

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Amanda Scardamaglia

Amanda Scardamaglia is a Senior Lecturer and Deputy Department Chair at Swinburne Law School. Her area of research and expertise is intellectual property law, especially trade mark law and its history. Amanda is currently a State Library of Victoria Creative Fellow and author of the book: 'Australian Colonial Trade Mark Law: Narratives in Lawmaking, People and Place'.

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Amanda Weltman

Prof Amanda Weltman is a theoretical physicist who came to the University of Cape Town after earning her PhD in Physics from Columbia University under the supervision of Brian Greene, and working as a postdoctoral Researcher at Stephen Hawking's research group at the Center for Theoretical Cosmology at Cambridge University. Weltman’s research focus is on the fundamental physics that underlies the nature of the Universe. The goals of her research are to study the Universe as a whole, while gaining insight into its origin, composition, structure, evolution and ultimately its fate. Weltman has recently been awarded a SARChI in Physical Cosmology, and is the first woman in the mathematical or physical sciences to win the prestigious award. Weltman has won several prestigious awards including a Next Einstein Fellow award(2015/2016), the South African Institute of Physics Silver Jubilee Medal (2013), the Elsevier Young Scientist Award (2012) and the NSTF-BHP Billiton, TW Kambule Award (2012), the Women in Science award (2009) amongst many others. She is a member of the Cape Town Science Centre Scientific Advisory Board, the South African Royal Society and on the executive of the South African Young Academy of Sciences. “My training and my interests lie in both high energy particle theory and in cosmology,” says Weltman, “and my research is focused on developing bridges between the two.”

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Amanda C. McClain

Assistant Professor of Nutrition, San Diego State University
Amanda McClain’s mixed methods research employs community-based and social science perspectives to investigate how the stress of marginalization, especially food insecurity, shapes food choice and dietary intake and gets ‘under the skin’ to impact allostatic load and cardiometabolic risk among low-income and historically-marginalized populations, particularly Hispanic/Latine communities. Simultaneously, her research aims to identify and leverage existing cultural, social, human, and material capacities (i.e., assets), as a part of behavior-change interventions embedded in existing infrastructure (e.g., federally-qualified health centers, food assistance programs), to mitigate the stress of marginalization and promote food security, nutritious diets, and cardiometabolic health equity. She is the Primary Investigator for several research projects funded by the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Dr. McClain serves on the advisory committees for two San Diego community-based organizations addressing food access and food insecurity, including Project New Village, a BIPOC-led, grassroots nonprofit. Dr. McClain is also a core member of Project New Village’s Urban Agriculture Workgroup, which has developed necessary infrastructure to promote equitable access to local produce in an historically-marginalized area of San Diego through support from Danone Institute and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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Amanda Joyce Hall

Assistant Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara
I am historian of twentieth-century social movements with a specialization in Black internationalism, transnational movements, and radical organizing throughout North America, Africa, and the broader Black world. I am interested in conceptual and political histories of anti-apartheid, decolonization, African diaspora, Blackness and Black consciousness, anti-colonialism, and abolition.

I earned my doctorate in History and African American Studies from Yale University in 2022 where I was awarded the Sylvia Ardyn Boone prize for best dissertation in African and African American art and culture. I was formerly a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Black Studies at Northwestern University, a dissertation fellow in UCSB’s Department of Black Studies, and a History Workshop fellow at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. I hold master’s degrees in International and World History from Columbia University and the London School of Economics, where I wrote my thesis on the international student anti-apartheid movement. I also earned a master’s degree in Education from Fordham University in New York City, where I worked as a special education teacher for the U.S. Department of Education at a middle school in the South Bronx. I received my AB in Classics and International Studies from Dartmouth College in 2011.

My research has been supported by the Black Studies Department at Northwestern University, the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University, the Black Metropolis Research Center, the Newcombe Foundation at the Institute for Citizens & Scholars, the UCSB Department of Black Studies, the U.S. Fulbright Program, the Ford Foundation, the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Foundation, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR) as well as the History Department, the African American Studies Department, the MacMillan Center, and International Security Studies at Yale University.

Since 2020, I have been a host of the New Books in African American Studies podcast channel on the New Books Network.

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Amanda L. Robertson

Adjunct Research Fellow - Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University
Dr Amanda Robertson is a postdoctoral researcher with prior industry experience in the NSW education sector supporting schools to manage various aspects of child protection and safeguarding. It was in this capacity that she became interested in the phenomenon of female-perpetrated sexual abuse and subsequently pursued research on the topic. Amanda’s doctoral project focused on adult-perpetrated sexual abuse against adolescents in Australian schools, including consideration of women’s perpetration and gender bias. It examined the nature of the problem, its antecedents, and the ensuing institutional responses to ultimately recommend a series of prevention strategies for secondary educational settings. Her research interests broadly encompass sexual offending, child sexual abuse, institutional settings and organisational safeguarding.

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Amanda Margaret Narvali

PhD Student, Philosophy, University of Guelph
I am currently working towards my doctorate of philosophy at The University of Guelph. My doctoral research is focused on the gendered harms of Artificial Intelligence through Deepfakes and Stable Diffusion, as well as within the realm of healthcare. I am interested in AI Ethics, Epistemology, Healthcare Ethics, and Bioethics.

I graduated in October 2022 with an MA in Philosophy from Western University. I graduated in June 2021 with a BA in Philosophy and Creative Writing from The University of Guelph.

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Amandine Cornille

Research associate professor, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
Amandine Cornille's academic journey includes a Master's at ENS Ulm (France) and a PhD at Université Paris Sud (2009-2012). She completed postdocs at Uppsala University (2013-2015) and ETH Zurich (2015-2017). In 2017, she became a CNRS researcher at Université Paris-Saclay. In 2024, she is appointed Associate Professor at NYUAD to continue her work on the ecology and (epi-)genomic bases of the response of crop trees and their wild relatives to global changes (climate change and parasite outbreak).

Amandine Cornille integrates laboratory experiments, fieldwork, modeling, and population genomics to study plant diversity and adaptation to their environment, focusing on domesticated fruit trees and their wild relatives. Her work has been published in top journals, including Trends in Genetics, Trends in Plant Science, PloS Genetics, Nature Communications, and Molecular Ecology, Evolutionary Applications. She actively engages in outreach and participative science programs.

Amandine Cornille received the PhD Young Researcher award (2009) and multiple national and international research grants (ATIP-CNRS Inserm, ANR JCJC, BNP Fondation Paribas “Climate and Biodiversity Initiative,” European LEADER, Europe H2020…). She was awarded the CNRS Paoletti Prize in 2020 for her contributions to biology.

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Amar Laila

Post-doctoral Fellow, EAT-Lancet 2.0 Commission, Stockholm Resilience Centre, University of Guelph
Amar is a post-doctoral fellow with the EAT-Lancet 2.0 Commission researching food system justice.

Amar's primary research interests are in the food system determinants of healthy eating with a focus on the intersection of food system sustainability and justice and healthy eating.

Amar received his PhD in Applied Human Nutrition from the University of Guelph, where his thesis explored the interplay between food literacy and food waste.

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Ambarish Karmalkar

Assistant Professor of Geosciences, University of Rhode Island
Ambarish Karmalkar, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of Geosciences at the University of Rhode Island. His research focuses on global and regional climate change, climate modeling and downscaling, quantification of uncertainty, climate impacts and risk assessment.

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Amber Gwynne

Sessional Lecturer in Writing, The University of Queensland
Amber Gwynne is a stakeholder advisor in the Queensland public service, production editor for the Journal of Australian Studies, and an adjunct lecturer in the Writing, Editing and Publishing program at The University of Queensland. Her research focuses on self-help books, reader reception, publishing ecosystems, and content production in the neoliberal capitalist environment. Her creative non-fiction essays have been published in Griffith Review, Overland, Kill Your Darlings, and others.

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Amber Keegan

PhD Candidate, Chemical Engineering, University of Sheffield

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Amber Lascelles

Lecturer in Global Anglophone Literature, Royal Holloway University of London
Amber Lascelles is Lecturer in Global Anglophone Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London. Her current research explores embodied solidarities in contemporary Black feminist African diasporic fiction.

Research interests
My research and writing has been published in African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, the Journal of Postcolonial Writing and Wasafiri. I am currently developing my first monograph, Radical Bodies: Reimagining Solidarity in Contemporary Black Feminist Fiction, which traces how contemporary Black women writers intervene in global conversations about Black feminism by transforming the theory and practice of solidarity. Examining writing by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Dionne Brand, Tsitsi Dangarembga and Bernardine Evaristo, my book is concerned with how fictional bodily encounters spark moments of tension and rapport that generate solidarity.

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Amber Moore

Assistant Professor of Teaching in Language & Literacy Education , University of British Columbia
I just began working as an Assistant Professor of Teaching with the Department of Language & Literacy Education at The University of British Columbia this year. Prior to taking on this position, I was the first Banting-funded postdoctoral fellow to conduct my research with the Faculty of Education at Simon Fraser University. I also hold two masters degrees (in English literature and literacy education), as well as a BAH in English and a Bachelor of Education. My research interests include: adolescent literacies; arts-based research; English literature education; feminist pedagogies; teacher and teacher librarian education; representations of youth in popular culture; rape culture; and young adult (YA) trauma literature. All these foci are deeply informed by my previous career as a secondary English teacher and I aim for my scholarship, which includes 39 refereed publications, to speak to many audiences.

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Amber Mosewich

Associate Professor, Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, University of Alberta
Dr. Mosewich’s research interests focus on the examination of stress, coping, emotion, and resultant cognitive and behavioural responses within the sport domain. The sport context can present many challenges, and ensuring that athletes have the skills and resources to effectively manage different issues in sport is essential to promote adaptive responses to stress and emotion and foster successful sport experiences that are also positive and healthy.

A key directive of her work is to understand the psychological skills and resources necessary to facilitate successful and positive sport experiences and how best to foster their development.

Dr. Mosewich’s research portfolio includes quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods approaches to research.

One area of particular interest for Dr. Mosewich surrounds self-compassion as a potential coping resource for athletes. The premise is that promoting self-compassionate frames of mind might promote acceptance, acknowledgement, and accurate evaluation of sport situations, and attenuate ruminative or avoidant approaches, better allowing an athlete to move forward in pursuit of their goals and highest possible level of performance.

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Amber Polk

Assistant Professor of Law, Florida International University
As a legal philosopher with a primary interest in our collective environmental crises, Professor Polk’s research focuses on rights-based environmentalism, as a legal, political, and moral movement.

Prior to joining FIU Law, Professor Polk was the Teaching Fellow for the Environmental Law and Policy LLM program at Stanford Law School. Professor Polk has clerked for the Honorable Robert W. Trumble in the Northern District of West Virginia and the Honorable Joseph R. Goodwin in the Southern District of West Virginia. She was also an adjunct professor at the University of Illinois College of Law in 2019.

Professor Polk earned her M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She earned her J.D. from the University of Illinois College of Law, and also holds B.S. in Mathematics and a B.A. in Philosophy & Classics from the University of Pittsburgh. Professor Polk is admitted to practice in West Virginia and the Southern District of West Virginia.

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Amber J. Fletcher

Professor, Sociology & Social Studies, University of Regina
Amber J. Fletcher is an interdisciplinary social scientist with expertise in gender, environment, climate change, and agriculture. Her current research examines how social inequality affects people's experience of climate disasters (flood, drought, wildfire) in rural and Indigenous communities in the Canadian Prairie region.

Dr. Fletcher's research is supported in part by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.

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Ambuj Tewari

Professor of Statistics, University of Michigan
My primary area of research is machine learning. My research group focuses on rigorous theoretical analysis of machine learning models and algorithms. We also work on challenging real-world applications of machine learning especially in chemistry and psychiatry. My work has been supported by an NSF CAREER grant (2015), a Sloan Research Fellowship (2017), an Adobe Data Science Research Award (2020), and a Facebook Research Award (2021). I serve on the editorial boards of Journal of Machine Learning Research and Statistical Science. In 2022, I was named as a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics.

My alma maters are IIT Kanpur (B.Tech., 2002) and UC Berkeley (M.A., 2005 and Ph.D., 2007. Advisor: Peter Bartlett). I was a research assistant professor at TTIC from 2008 to 2010. From 2010 to 2012, I was a post-doctoral fellow at UT Austin where I worked with Inderjit Dhillon and Pradeep Ravikumar.

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Ameena L. Payne

Doctoral Candidate, Deakin University
Ameena is an emerging qualitative researcher and former university educator. She has taught within the disciplines of education and business in both higher education and vocational education at Swinburne Online. Within higher education, she specialised in first year, foundation units for mature age students.

Holding a Master of Education, Ameena is currently a PhD Candidate at Deakin University’s Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning (CRADLE). She is a recipient of her alma mater’s Outstanding Young Alumna Award (2022) and is interested in socially just and equitable higher education. Her doctoral research explores the lived feedback experiences of Global Majority university students in Australia. Ameena is a Fellow of Advance HE and a Fellow of Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia (HERDSA).

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Ameil Joseph

Assistant Professor, McMaster University


I am interested in working with contributions from the perspectives of critical mental health, postcolonial theory, critical race theory, and critical disability studies, to study the historical production of ideas about difference, normalcy, sexuality, eugenics, race, ability and mental “illness” as they cohere, diverge, interdepend and perform within policy, law and practice. My projects have looked at issues of social justice, violence, ethics, confluence, historiography and social work using complimentary theoretical and methodological frameworks to engage respectfully with the complexities of our human condition. I come to this work with over a decade of experience in the mental health field, in supportive housing, settlement, crisis respite, forensic assertive community treatment, community-based early intervention, and governance settings.

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Amelia Austin

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Mathison Centre for Youth Mental Health and Education, University of Calgary
Dr. Amelia Austin is a postdoctoral researcher at the Mathison Centre for Youth Mental Health and Education at the University of Calgary's Cumming School of Medicine. Her research focuses on children and young people's mental health and wellbeing, with a specialty in eating disorders.

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Amelia Clarke

Professor of Sustainability Management, University of Waterloo
Dr. Amelia Clarke has been working on environment and sustainability issues since 1989, including as President of Sierra Club Canada (2003-2006), the first Director of the University of Waterloo's Master of Environment and Business degree (2009-2018) and the Associate Dean Research for the Faculty of Environment (2018-2022). She is now a Full Professor in the School of Environment, Enterprise and Development (SEED) at the University of Waterloo.

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Amelia Dale

Lecturer in English, Australian National University
Dr Amelia Dale is Lecturer in English at the Australian National University, and author of "The Printed Reader. Gender, Quixotism, and Textual Bodies in Eighteenth-Century Britain" (Bucknell University Press) and "Constitution" (Inken Publisch). She is working on a project on "Harris's List of Covent-Garden Ladies" with Nicola Parsons (University of Sydney) and is on the editorial board of The Shandean and the poetry journal Rabbit.

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Amelia Gulliver

Senior Research Fellow, ANU College of Health and Medicine, Australian National University
My research interests include lived experience research, the development and evaluation of online mental health programs, and improving mental health in vulnerable populations in the community.

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Amelia Johns

Associate Professor, Digital and Social Media, School of Communication, University of Technology Sydney
Amelia Johns is an Associate Professor in Digital and Social Media at University of Technology Sydney. Her work spans the fields of digital media and digital citizenship studies, with a focus on young people’s negotiation of digital rights, safety and trust in networked publics and on private messaging platforms. Her most recent projects have examined diaspora youth and digital citizenship education in and beyond school, misinformation and hate speech on social media and WhatsApp as a platform for private and public communication. She is the author of three books: 'Battle for the Flag' (2015), 'Negotiating Digital Citizenship: Control, Contest, Culture' (2016) and WhatsApp: from a one-to-one messaging app to a global communication platform (2024).

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Amelia Louks

Research Supervisor in English Literature, University of Cambridge
I am a supervisor in English Literature at the University of Cambridge. My work is situated in the interdisciplinary field of sensory studies. My interests lie primarily in post-45 literature, but more broadly in literature 1900-present and critical theory. I am currently working to turn my PhD thesis into an academic monograph and a trade book, and I am developing a project on cultures of olfactory dysfunction, which will study the emotional, cognitive, and social effects of olfactory impairment and augmentation.

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Amelia Mardon

PhD Candidate, University of South Australia
Amelia is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Reproductive Health at Western Sydney University and completing her PhD in pelvic pain at the University of South Australia. Amelia's research focuses on investigating the role of pain education and conservative management strategies for pelvic pain.

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Amelia Ruscoe

Lecturer, School of Education, Edith Cowan University
Dr Amelia Ruscoe is an experienced educator and leader in early childhood education in the School of Education at Edith Cowan University with more than 25 years in school and university settings across QLD, NSW and WA. Her research and practice centres on the development of innovative ideas to support, extend and enhance the learning and engagement of young children in the ‘impact zone’ of transition to school. She is a published author and presents to national and international audiences of educators and academics. Her doctoral research explored education discourse, multiplicity of perspectives and affordances in early childhood education and was awarded the National Early Childhood Australia Thesis Award, the Western Australian Institute for Educational Research Award for best higher degree thesis, the ECU higher degree research medal and an Australian Association of Educational Research Doctoral Thesis commendation. Her dedication to making a substantial contribution to education has been fortified through involvement in a number of education research projects across the past 10 years including industry and university funded projects to further evidence-based approaches to literacy learning, school transition and health literacy.

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