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Anna Kvit

Anna Kvit is a visiting research fellow at University College London.
Her research is focused on women in the military of Ukraine, veterans’ reintegration into civilian life, and the gendered impacts of the war in Ukraine. Anna contributed to the development of programs and policies on the implementation of the Women, Peace and Security agenda in Ukraine. She co-taught Military Sociology at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. Anna holds a BA degree in Sociology from the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Ukraine) and MA degree in Global Political Economy from the University of Kassel (Germany).

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Anna Lippman

Sociology Instructor, York University, Canada
Department: Sociology
Dissertation topic: All I Need is One Mic:
Utilizing hip-hop culture for community-based youth knowledge mobilization and activism

RESEARCH INTERESTS
Identity; Youth Culture; Sociology of Music; Gender; Social Movements; Sociology of Education; Qualitative Methods; Racialization; Intersectionality; Gentrification

EDUCATION
York University 2019 - Present
Ph.D. Student, Sociology
Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA): 4.0
Comprehensive Exams: Sex and Gender Systems, Qualitative Methods
Committee: Carl James (supervisor), Elaine Coburn, Lesley Wood
“All I Need is One Mic:
York University 2017 - 2018

Master of Arts, Sociology Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA): 4.0
RRP Committee: Carl James (supervisor), Tania Das Gupta
“Growing Roses from Concrete: exploring how racialized youth build resistance identity through hip-hop culture”
Quest University Canada 2009 - 2013

Bachelor of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Thesis Question: What is the relationship between law and morality?
President’s Honour List

ADDITIONAL TRAINING

Indigenous Community Research Partnership Open Access Training 2022
Queens University

Knowledge Translation Canada Summer Institute 2022
Knowledge Translation Canada

Specialist Knowledge Translation Training Course 2022
SickKids Learning Institute

Innovation York Mobilize YU 2021
York University

Youth Engagement for Research 2019
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

Community Based Research in Social Service Settings 2018
St. Michael’s Hospital, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute

Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training 2017
Toronto Hostels Training Centre

Youth Mental Health First Aid 2016
Canadian Mental Health Association

Motivational Interviewing 2016
Corrections BC

Children Who Witness Abuse Counselling Certification I&II 2014
British Columbia Society of Transition Houses

Mediation Skills Level I 2014
Justice Institute of British Columbia

RESEARCH EXPERIENCE
Research Assistant
“The Story of a Generation” Dec 2020 – Present
Dr. Carl E. James, Dr. Paul Anisef

Research Assistant Nov 2019 – Mar 2020
Canadian Observatory on Homelessness
Dr. Stephen Gaetz

Research Assistant Aug 2018 – Dec 2019
Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation
Dr. Daniel Werb

Research Assistant Sep 2017 – Dec 2017
Dr. Amber M. Gazso

TEACHING EXPERIENCE
Instructor
York University
WRIT Sep 2022-Apr 2023
Teaching Assistant
York University

HREQ 1920: Male-Female Relationships Sep 2020-Sep 2022
(virtual)
Teaching Assistant
York University

SOCI 1010: Introduction to Sociology Sep 2019 – Apr 2020
Teaching Assistant
York University

Guest Lecture
Toronto Metropolitan University
“Do white People Have a Role to Play in Racial Justice?” Feb 21, 2022

Guest Lecture
York University
“Appropriation and Hip-Hop Culture” Feb 8, 2020

Guest Lecture
Quest University Canada
“Youth Political and Community Engagement” March 16, 2015

PUBLICATIONS
Lippman, A. (Mar 10 2023). Students Across ‘Canada’ Are Calling for an End to Genocidal Companies on Campus. The Excalibur.

Lippman, A. “Respect for the North: the sociopolitical significance of Toronto DJ culture” Hancock, M & Marsh, C. (Eds.). We Can Dance If We Want To: Canadian DJ Culture Turns Up Wilfred Laurier Press: Waterloo. (forthcoming)

REFEREED CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

Lippman, A. 2022 “Hip-Hop as a Knowledge Mobilization Tool”. Canadian Knowledge Mobilization Forum, Online.

Lippman, A. 2022. “Who’s Classroom? Disrupting Eurocentricity with hip-hop based pedagogy”. Canadian Society for the Study of Higher Education Annual Conference, Online.

Lippman, A. 2022. “"Who's Streets": Hip-hop as a place-making space for youth in carceral webs”. Canadian Sociological Association Annual Conference, Online.

Lippman, A. 2022. “Sensitive Thugs: reformulating masculinity and vulnerability through rap music”. Canadian Sociological Association Annual Conference, Online.

Lippman, A. 2022. “Straight from the Streets: hip-hop culture, masculinity, and homeless youth” Popular Culture Associate Annual Conference, Online.

Lippman, A. 2022. “We the North: The Sociopolitical importance of Toronto Rap History”
Global Conference on Hip Hop Education, Online.

Lippman, A. 2021. “Hip-Hop Hope: utilizing hip-hop to mobilize youth for social change”. Child and Youth Performance Conference, Toronto, ON.

Lippman, A. 2020. “Hip-Hop Culture as an Agent of Social Change”. York Sociology Graduate Association 9th Annual Symposium. Toronto, ON.

Lippman, Anna. 2020. “Engaging Youth in Community Based Research: The Squamish Teen Action and Advisory Group”. Health Xchange Conference. Vancouver, BC. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. “Hip-Hop Based Activism and Youth Engagement”. Annual Meeting of the Canadian Sociological Association Conference, London, ON, June. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. “Hierarchical Masculinities amongst Homeless Black Youth”. Annual Meeting of the Canadian Sociological Association Conference, London, ON, June. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. “Homelessness, Hip-Hop, and Black Masculinity in Toronto”. Canadian Association of Social Work Education Conference, London, ON. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. “Hip-Hop Based Youth Interventions in Toronto”. Canadian Association of Social Work Education Conference, London, ON. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. Poster Presentation. “Teaching Outside the Classroom: Hip Hop Based Educational Interventions”. National Conference on Race and Ethnicity, New York, NY. (Cancelled).

Lippman, Anna. 2020. Poster Presentation “Pathways to Education: Hip-Hop Based Inquiry”. Research Centre for Public Sociology Open House. Toronto, ON. (Cancelled).

INVITED TALKS
Masri, L., Lippman, A., Sebei, M. 2023. “The Labour Movement and International Solidarity”. Labour4Palestine: Online, January.

Lippman, A. 2022. “Identity, Intersectionality, and Understanding Our Social Location”. Showing Up for Racial Justice.

Lippman, A. & Tecle, S. 2022. “Reimagining Safety Beyond Carcerality”. Social Planning
Toronto: Online, January.

Alqasem, M., Gill, R., Lippman, A. 2021. “Solidarity with Palestinian People and Workers”
Canadian Union of Public Employees National Convention: Online, November.

Lippman, A. 2021. “Poverty, Policing, and Social Determinants of Health” Health Providers Against Poverty: Online, October

Alqasem, M., Jarrar, Y., Lippman, A. 2021. “Beyond Our Local Borders: Palestine”. Jane and Finch Political Conversations Café: Online, June

Lippman, Anna. 2021. “Jewish Perspectives on the Palestine”. Palestine House Speakers Series: Mississauga, ON, May

Lippman, Anna. 2021. “Online Organizing 101”. Urban Alliance on Race Relations 2021 Workshop Series: Toronto, ON, February.

Lippman, Anna. 2016. “Reconciliation in the Boardroom; Beyond Land Acknowledgments”. British Columbia Library Trustee Association 2016 Conference: Libraries Connect! Richmond, BC, May.

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Anna Localio

Ph.D. Candidate in Health Services, University of Washington
I have a master's in public health from the University of Pennsylvania and am currently a 5th year PhD candidate in health services at the University of Washington School of Public Health.

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Anna Macdonald

Associate Professor, Global Development, University of East Anglia
Anna Macdonald is an associate professor in global development at the University of East Anglia and a senior visiting fellow at the Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa at the LSE. Anna is currently co-investigator on the ESRC-funded Centre for Public Authority and International Development (CPAID), which conducts interdisciplinary research to strengthen knowledge about how governance functions in impoverished and marginalised places across the world. She is co-editor of Humanitarianism: A Dictionary of Concepts (Routledge 2018) and her research has most recently been published in Africa, Development and Change, the International Journal of Transitional Justice, the Journal of Refugee Studies, African Affairs, and Law and Society Review.

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Anna Mariguddi

Lecturer in Education (music specialist), Edge Hill University
Dr Anna Mariguddi is a Lecturer, specialising in music education, in the department of Primary and Childhood Education, Faculty of Education, Edge Hill University. Anna has achieved a BMus (Hons), PGCE (secondary music education with specialist instrumental teaching), MA and PGCTHE before completing her PhD (focused upon perceptions of informal learning, secondary music education). Anna is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a Fellow of Learning and Teaching at Edge Hill University. Prior to joining the University, Anna has taught instrumental lessons to primary-aged children and secondary school classroom music lessons.

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Anna Markovska

Deputy Director, PIER; Associate Professor, Criminology, Anglia Ruskin University
Anna joined Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at Anglia Ruskin University in 2005 and in January 2023 Anna moved to PIER.

Anna has been successful with a number of externally funded projects, including British Academy Small Grants (investigating drug related issues in Ukrainian prisons, the experience of migrant workers in Eastern Europe).
In May 2013, the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences hosted the 14th Cross-Border Crime Colloquium, welcoming leading European criminologists. Anna has collaborated on a number of research projects with Karazin Kharkiv National University and National University of Internal Affairs (Kharkiv, Ukraine).

Research interests
Countries in transition
Organised crime and corruption
Transnational policing
Police reforms in Ukraine
Legitimacy and trust
Policing in war time
War crimes in Ukraine
Environmental crimes and war
Areas of research supervision
Organised crime and corruption

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Anna Matheson

Associate Professor in Public Health and Policy, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
I am based at Victoria University of Wellington and teach about health policy and health systems. I am currently leading the evaluation of Healthy Families NZ - a multi-community policy intervention to prevent chronic illnesses. I have a keen interest in complexity theory and its application to social systems and the empirical evidence on health. My research focus to date has mainly been examining interventions to address population health challenges, including the social determinants and equity, to better understand their potential effectiveness. I am an Principal Investigator with Te Pūnaha Matatini, the Aotearoa New Zealand Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE) for complex systems.

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Anna McKay

Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellow in History, University of Liverpool
My research focuses on prisoners, their lives, and experiences across the British maritime world, spanning the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. My particular focus is on prison hulks, disused and partially dismantled warships used to house convicts and prisoners of war across this period.

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Anna Nicholas

PhD Candidate in Nutrition & Metabolism, University of Bath
Anna is currently doing a BBSRC-funded PhD in nutrition and metabolic physiology at the University of Bath. Here she is researching the effects of exogenous ketones on immune, metabolic and cognitive health in older adults. Before moving into nutrition, she worked in the sustainability sector in London for five years, both in communications and as a business consultant. She holds an MSc in Human Nutrition from the University of Surrey, an MSc in Environmental Technology from Imperial College London and a BA in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge.

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Anna Schwabe

Associate Lecture Professor of Modern Cannabis Science, University of Colorado Boulder
Anna Schwabe is a researcher and educator with expertise in Cannabis genetics and biology and has considerable experience in a variety of scientific fields. She holds a BS, an MS and Ph.D. from the University of Northern Colorado and was awarded both the Dean's Citation of Excellence and The Dean's Award for Outstanding Dissertation for her research evaluating genotypic and phenotypic variation in Cannabis. She is an established presenter, grant writer, and has published primary research spanning several disciplines, including genetics, conservation, and education. Her research has been featured in multiple media articles and she has been interviewed in several podcasts and webcasts. She serves as a consultant for the Agricultural Genomics Foundation, Advisory Board Member for Agricultural Genomics Foundation, Scientific Advisory Board member for Bace Health, an Adjunct Faculty member at the University of Northern Colorado, and an Associate Lecture Professor at the University of Colorado. Her previous professional and academic positions over the last two decades encompass both laboratory and business management, and she is skilled in advising and coordinating multiple concurrent projects. She is passionate about Cannabis science and facilitating consistency in the cannabis industry.

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Anna Sobek

Professor of Environmental Chemistry and Head of Department of Environmental Sciences, Stockholm University
My research is about organic contaminants. I am interested in how contaminants distribute in the environment, with emphasis on the aquatic environment, and how processes in the environment affect where contaminants end up and what risk they pose to organisms and ecosystems. Much of my research therefore bridges between environmental chemistry, ecotoxicology and biogeochemistry, and sometimes even environmental law and social sciences. I am interested in the organic carbon cycle and how it contributes to determine environmental fate and risk of hydrophobic organic contaminants. A recent example of this is the work we did to study how the origin of organic matter in Baltic Sea sediment affects the sediment sorption capacity of PCBs and PAHs, and thereby also the release of these chemicals to the water column.

In my research group we currently have several projects to study the effects of organic contaminant mixtures on various aquatic organisms by using passive dosing and the chemical activity concept.

We have projects to study processes that affect the release of contaminants from sediment to water and how to use passive samplers for improved risk assessment of contaminated sediments. In a collaborative project with researchers on hadal systems, we study the occurrence of organic contaminants in hadal trenches (the deepest parts of the global ocean). Here we are particularly interested in how degradation of organic matter in the trench affects storage of contaminants in these extreme places.

In our research we combine theory and methods from various disciplines. We work in the field, perform experiments in the lab, develop methods for chemical analysis and use literature surveys and apply models.

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Anna Storm

Professor of Technology and Social Change, Linköping University
Anna Storm is Professor of Technology and Social Change at the Department of Thematic Studies at Linköping University in Sweden. Her research interests center on “industrial afterlives”, that is, the lingering effects of industrial activities and their social, cultural, and environmental expressions. In focus are often industrial and post-industrial landscapes and their transformation in physical and imaginary sense. Such landscapes challenge the way we understand ecology, aesthetics, memory and heritage, and trigger concerns about power relations. She is the author of Post-Industrial Landscape Scars (Palgrave Macmillan 2014). Currently she is the principal investigator of three research projects exploring nuclear history, heritage and futures from an international and interdisciplinary perspective: Nuclear Natures, Nuclear Memory and NuSPACES.

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Anna Story

Senior Clinical Lecturer, University of Sydney
Dr Anna Story is a clinical endocrinologist who specialises in thyroid disease, with a particular focus of thyroid cancer. She is part of the Endocrine Tumour Multidisciplinary Team at Royal North Shore Hospital and works closely with the Nuclear Medicine Department and Endocrine Surgical Unit of Royal North Shore Hospital. She is an honorary VMO at Royal North Shore Hospital and North Shore Private Hospital.

She undertook undergraduate medical training at the University of Queensland, graduating in 1997. She completed physician training at Royal North Shore Hospital in 2001 and advance training at Royal North Shore and Prince of Wales Hospitals with fellowship awarded in 2005.

In 2013 she became director of the Northern Sydney Endocrine Centre, a large multidisciplinary private practice. Anna has a passion for education and her focus within the practice is to mentor new endocrinologists as they continue their research and establish themselves.

She is a Senior Clinical Lecturer of the Sydney Medical School (Northern) of the University of Sydney. In 2020 she received the Pathology North Excellence in Teaching Award in recognition of her efforts across the University of Sydney medical student program.

Anna is heavily involved in the Endocrine Society of Australia. She was Chair for the ESA Clinical Weekend in 2019. The same year she was part of the program organizing committee for the Asia and Oceania Thyroid Association meeting held in Sydney. For 2020 till 2022 she is Co-Chair of the ESA Seminar meeting.

She has written courses in Thyroid Ultrasound for the Australian School of Medicine (ASUM) and her current interest is to promote the use of thyroid ultrasound for endocrinologists.

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Anna Talbot

PhD Candidate, Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW Sydney, UNSW Sydney
Anna teaches and researches in public international law, focusing on international human rights law and international refugee law. She is completing a PhD with the Andrew & Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW Sydney, focusing on how the right to life can protect people at risk of displacement (or already displaced) in the context of climate change. She also coordinates the Strategic Litigation Network for the Kaldor Centre, connecting lawyers and academics to support litigation relevant to refugees.

Prior to commencing her PhD, Anna worked as a litigation solicitor, having conducted complex strategic human rights litigation in various courts throughout Australia, the United Kingdom and Europe. She has been involved in precedent-setting cases, including to secure urgent, life-saving medical care for refugee children detained offshore by the Australian government, release from indefinite immigration detention, and compensation for survivors of torture and sexual violence in Kenya. Earlier, while living in London, Anna represented Amnesty International at the United Nations in Geneva and New York, focusing on expert human rights mechanisms.

Anna has appeared as an expert witness before Australian Parliamentary inquiries and served as a member of the Law Society of NSW’s Human Rights Law Committee. She has published widely, including on refugee and human rights issues and presented at conferences on domestic and international law.

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Anna Tarrant

Professor of Sociology, University of Lincoln
Anna Tarrant is Professor of Sociology and a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow at the UNiversity of Lincoln. Her research expertise broadly focuses on men’s care responsibilities, welfare and support needs, in low-income families and contexts and across the lifecourse. She is author and co-author of several books exploring marginalised fatherhoods including: 'Fathering and Poverty: Uncovering Men's Family Participation in Low income families' (Policy Press, 2021), 'Men, Family and Poverty' with Prof Kahryn Hughes (Palgrave Macmillan, 2023) and 'The Dynamics of Young Fatherhood' with Emerita Professor Bren Neale (Policy Press, 2024).

In recent years, she has also led and/or co-edited several edited collections, including 'Men and Welfare' with Linzi Ladlow and Laura Way (Routledge, 2022), 'Covid-19 Collaborations' with Garthwaite et al. (2021, Policy Press) and 'Qualitative Secondary Analysis' with Kahryn Hughes (Sage, 2020).

She is currently the Director of the UKRI funded Future Leaders Fellowship study, 'Following Young Fathers Further' (FYFF). This qualitative longitudinal and comparative study extends existing evidence concerning the parenting trajectories and support needs of young fathers (aged 25 and under). Using novel methods of co-creation the study involves the implementation and capture of a novel community-based intervention called the Young Dads Collective that promotes father-inclusive and gender-equal parenting through partnership working with young fathers and national family and youth support organisations. Establishing a new collaboration between UK charities (including NSPCC, Coram Family Childcare and YMCA Humber) and international academic partners in Sweden, FYFF represents a significant investment in research, and policy and practice development for young parents.

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Anna Tringham

Senior Lecturer in Movement and Acting, University of Surrey
Senior Lecturer in Movement and Acting at the Guildford School of Acting, University of Surrey. Teaching Practices include physical and psycho-physical techniques, Laban, Storytelling, collaborative ensemble practice, mask-work, movement and intimacy direction.

Professional performance credits include; Cabaret and Funny Girl at the Chichester Festival Theatre, Rat Pack: Live From Las Vegas (Savoy Theatre, London/UK & USA Tour), Jailhouse Rock: The Musical (Piccadilly Theatre, London), Joseph and His Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat (New London Theatre, London/UK Tour), Pirates of Penzance (Kilworth House Theatre) and Three Phantoms (UK Tour).

A teacher of movement and acting, Anna is the Director of Student Experience at the Guildford School of Acting and programme leader of the BA (Hons) Applied and Contemporary Theatre. Anna was Course Leader of the Professional Musical Theatre Diploma at Bodywork, Cambridge and has taught at Mountview and the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama.

Anna has been on the faculty at the Guildford Theatre School and the Guildford Summer Youth Projects since 2011. She has also been a part of the creative team for the Easter Theatre School and the Summer Theatre School at The Theatre at the Mill, Newtownabbey, Belfast since 2012.

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Anna Walas

Honorary Research Fellow and Community Archaeology Liaison Officer, University of Nottingham
I joined the University of Nottingham as a Faculty of Arts Knowledge Exchange and Impact Officer in 2017. I oversee and provide advice on knowledge exchange, research impact and public engagement within the Faculty of Arts. My areas of specialism include heritage and place-based KE, community engagement in research and collaborations with galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM sector). I am also an Honorary Research Fellow at the Department of Classics and Archeology and I am currently the Community Archeology Liaison Officer as part of the AHRC Nottingham City of Caves project.

Born in Poland, I completed my first degree in Archaeology at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland and then received an MPhil from the University of Cambridge in Roman Archaeology and a PhD in Roman Archaeology at the University of Leicester. During my PhD, I taught fieldwork and and acted as the finds officer during University of Leicester student excavation of the Iron Age hill fort of Burrough Hill. I worked at the University of Leicester first as a Graduate Teaching Associate teaching Roman archeology and archeological theory. Later, I worked in the area of schools engagement activities with Humanities disciplines and taught A Level Summer Schools in Archeology for Widening Participation students, before joining the University of Nottingham.

Since 2019, I am the Deputy Director of the Honor Frost Foundation, British Academy (as a Co-I) and the Levantis Foundation funded Ancient Akrotiri Project, which through fieldwork aims to better understand the maritime history of the Akrotiri peninsula in the Imperial and Byzantine periods. My work involves heading up the community engagement work, working across the RAF military, local Cypriot and ex-pat communities in the area. In 2017, AAP was the runner up for Ministry of Defence's Sanctuary Award in the Heritage category.

Since 2020, I am the invited editor of two new discoveries sections for the journal Britannia, covering the areas of Hadrian's Wall and Northern England. Since 2022, I am the chair of Theoretical Roman Archeology Conference. As of 2019, I am also a member of the Bratislava Group, an advisory body to the Frontiers of the Roman Empire World Heritage Site serial property.

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Anna Walker

Senior Arts + Culture Editor
Anna Walker joined The Conversation as senior Arts and Culture editor in November 2022 and was previously the editor of Reader’s Digest UK. She is also an author of non-fiction under the name Anna Lou Walker, including The Little Book of Vaginas. She is based in Yorkshire.

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Anna C. Lewis

PhD Candidate, UNSW Sydney
My research explores the diet and foraging behaviours of the Tasmanian devil, a specialist mammalian scavenger, and the delicate balance they strike with human society. I am interested in how scavenging behaviours have evolved and how the behaviours of species that predominantly scavenge their food may resemble or diverge from those that are primarily predators.

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Anna Mae Duane

Director, University of Connecticut Humanities Institute; Professor of English, University of Connecticut
Anna Mae Duane, Director of UConn's Humanities Institute and Professor of English, is the author or editor of seven books that explore the role of sympathy in political change. Her most recent book, Educated for Freedom, chronicles how the life-long friendships of the children attending the New York African Free School led to a remarkable cohort of Black leaders who shaped the anti-slavery movement in the United States. Together with Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, Professor Duane co-directs the Yale Gilder Lehrman Center's working group on the Future of Slavery and Emancipation.

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Anna Marie Roos

Professor of the History of Science and Medicine in the School of History and Heritage, University of Lincoln
Anna Marie Roos is a historian of early modern English science, noted for her research on the early Royal Society. She is a professor in the School of Humanities and Heritage at the University of Lincoln, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, a Fellow of the Linnean Society, and the Editor-in-Chief of Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science.

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Anna-Louise Milne

Director of Graduate Studies and Research, University of London Institute in Paris
Anna-Louise Milne est directrice de recherches à l’Institut de l’Université de Londres à Paris (ULIP) où elle développe the Paris Centre for Migrant Writing and Expression. Après des études de philosophie et de littérature comparée à Oxford et à Columbia University, New York, elle a publié plusieurs travaux critiques sur le milieu des revues littéraires pendant l’entre-deux-guerres, les écrivains « expatriés » et « réfugiés » à Paris, et plus largement le choix de la capitale française comme lieu d’écriture et de publication. Progressivement à cette approche analytique et historique, elle a intégré une démarche pratique notamment sous forme de laboratoires de traduction et de production de textes avec des personnes récemment arrivées à Paris et en Europe. Actuellement, elle travaille dans et sur le nord-est parisien, au carrefour du monde, dont elle a tiré son plus récent livre (75, Gallimard, 2016).

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Anna-Maria Balbach

Research Project Leader, German Linguistics, University of Münster
Dr. Anna-Maria Balbach is a linguist at the German Department of the University of Münster, Germany. Her research areas are historical and modern socio- and cultural linguistics.
Anna is particularly interested in the connections between language and denominational affiliation and language and cultural-historical influence. Her current projects include a study of language and confession in radio (funded by the German Research Foundation), a study of the linguistic design of alchemical recipe collections (funded by the University of Münster), and a study of the development and specificity of given names in Europe.

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Annabelle Cumyn

Professor in specialized medicine at the Faculté de médecine et des sciences de la santé of Université de Sherbrooke. President of the Research Ethics Board of CIUSSS (Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux) de l'Estrie - Centre hospitalier universitaire de Sherbrooke (CHUS).

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Annalee Coakley

Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine, University of Calgary
As a family physician, I have dedicated my career to caring for vulnerable patients, in particular refugees. In addition to clinical work, I advocate locally, nationally and internationally for refugees. I am the Medical Director of the Calgary Refugee Health Program and in my teaching role at the University of Calgary, I teach medical students and residents about immigrant and refugee health. In 2023, I was appointed as Chair of the North American Refugee Health Conference, an international conference attended by 750 refugee healthcare providers, academics, and policy-makers.

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Annalisa Bracco

Professor of Ocean and Climate Dynamics, Georgia Institute of Technology
I am a Professor in Ocean and Climate Dynamics in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Tech. My group’s research revolves around climate modes of variability, multiscale dynamics of geophysical flows and their interactions with biological and chemical tracers. Our work is intrinsically interdisciplinary and we use climate and ocean models and data science tools to investigate physical drivers in natural systems.

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Anne Aly

Professor Anne Aly is the author of over 50 journal articles and book chapters on areas including terrorism, Muslim identity, social media and terrorism, radicalisation and extremism. She currently leads several projects on extremism and social media including the role of formers and victims in counter campaigns.

Professor Aly is the Founding Chair of People against Violent Extremism, an NGO dedicated to addressing violent extremism through interventions.

She has authored five books including Terrrorism and Global Security: historical and contemporary perspectives published by Palgrave Macmillan. She was inducted into the Western Australian Women's Hall of Fame in 2011 and in 2013 was named one of Australia's most influential women by the Financial Review/ Westpac 100 Women of Influence awards. In 2016 she was nominated for Australian of the Year Awards. Anne is the editor of the forthcoming Violent Extremism and the Internet published by Routledge.

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Anne Bailey

Associate Member of the History Faculty, University of Oxford, University of Oxford
Anne E Bailey is an associate member of the History Faculty at Oxford University, and teaches courses on medieval and modern pilgrimage at the University’s Department for Continuing Education.

She has published widely on a range of pilgrimage topics including medieval saints’ cults and relics, medieval hagiography, female pilgrimage and contemporary pilgrimage phenomena.

Recent publications include a paper on micro pilgrimages as a new post-secular trend and another on how the pandemic has impacted pilgrimages.

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Anne Bardsley

Deputy Director - Koi Tū: The Centre for Informed Futures, University of Auckland

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Anne Cust

Professor of Cancer Epidemiology, University of Sydney
Professor Anne Cust is a cancer epidemiologist and researcher (NHMRC Investigator Fellow) focused on the prevention and early detection of melanoma and other skin cancers. She is Deputy Director of the Daffodil Centre - a joint venture between the University of Sydney and Cancer Council NSW, and is also a Faculty member of the Melanoma Institute Australia.

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Anne Green

Professor of Regional Economic Development, University of Birmingham
After completing an undergraduate degree in geography, Anne has spent nearly all of her career conducting applied research of relevance to academia and policy in research centres/ institutes in the higher education sector.

She started her career at the Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies (CURDS) in Newcastle. Apart from a short stint at the Department for City and Regional Planning in Cardiff she has spent most of her time at the Institute for Employment Research (IER), University of Warwick. She joined the University of Birmingham as Professor of Regional Economic Development in June 2017 in City-REDI (Regional Economic Development Institute).

Her research interests span employment, non-employment, regional and local labour market issues, skills strategies, urban and rural development, migration and commuting, associated policy issues and evaluation.

She has published in high profile journals and has written numerous reports for UK Government Departments and agencies. Anne is experienced in disseminating the results of her research to academic, policy and practitioner audiences.

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Anne Hellwig

Adjunct lecturer, Literacy, Linguistics and Semiotics, University of Wollongong
Dr Anne Hellwig is a researcher and lecturer in literacy, linguistics and semiotics. Her research interests include multimodality, educational semiotics and systemic functional linguistics. She has worked in literacy education, digital media and visual communication in Australia and in English language education in Germany, with a focus on English for Academic Purposes and English of Architects and Civil Engineers. She is interested in contemporary discourse practices, especially as they relate to education and positive social change.

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Anne Jenichen

Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, Aston University
My research focuses on women's rights, the rights of religious minorities, and LGBTI rights, from an intersectional perspective. I am particularly interested in the areas of political representation and gender-based violence.

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Anne Murphy

Associate Professor, Department of History, University of British Columbia
Anne Murphy (Ph.D. Columbia) is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of British Columbia. Her research focuses on the Punjab region of India and Pakistan, with interests in language and literary cultures, the history of the Punjabi language in South Asia and beyond, religious community formations in the early modern and modern periods, oral history, commemoration, historiography, and material culture studies. Current research concerns modern Punjabi cultural production in the Indian and Pakistani Punjabs and in the Diaspora, and the early modern history of Punjabi's emergence as a literary language. She has published one monograph, edited or co-edited three volumes and three special journal issues, one book-length translation, and articles in the Journal of Commonwealth Literature, History and Theory, Studies in Canadian Literature, South Asian History and Culture, the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, and other journals.

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Anne Owen

Research project:
The suitability of global trade models for climate change mitigation strategy

2015 PhD in Environmental Science
2003 MSc in Geographical Information Science
2000 BSc in Geography and Mathematics

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