Professeur à l'Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Chercheur au laboratoire CIMEOS, Université de Bourgogne – UBFC
Professeur à l’Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté (Dijon), Chercheur Propedia (Groupe IGS, Paris). Auteur de « Enquête sur le business de la communication non verbale. Une analyse critique des pseudosciences du "langage corporel" » (EMS, 2017) et de « Génération 3.0. Enfants et ados à l’ère des cultures numérisées » (EMS, 2016).
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Researcher, LAET, École nationale des travaux publics de l'État
My research activities focus on issues related to the mobility of people, and more specifically on the analysis of the links between lifestyles and daily mobility and the social issues of mobility. Conducted in collaboration, my work has been carried out mainly on African grounds, while another part focuses on French contexts.
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Professeure de science politique, Institut des sciences sociales du politique (ISP), Université Paris Nanterre – Université Paris Lumières
Professeure de science politique à l'université Paris Nanterre, Fellow Institut Convergences Migrations
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Molecular Ecology, University of Otago
I am a molecular ecologist interested in exploring the ways environmental change facilitate and engender evolutionary change in animals. A geneticist by training, I interpret both ancient and modern DNA in light of geological and palaeontological evidence to draw conclusions about palaeoenvironments and the organisms in them. My early work investigated the relationships between squirrels and the seasonality of their primary food source. Most of my work to date investigates the impacts of the Pleistocene Ice Age on New Zealand's endemic bird species; it was on this that my PhD was focused. Presently, I am studying the evolutionary and phenotypic histories of New Zealand and New Caledonian geckos as a postdoctoral fellow. All of my investigations are ultimately concerned with the lessons we can learn from the past that shed light on the future of organisms in a rapidly changing, human-dominated future.
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I joined Essex Business School, University of Essex, in November 2014. At Essex my academic home is the Management, Marketing and Organisation Subject Group on the Colchester campus. I have also worked at the School of Management / Yr Ysgol Reolaeth, Swansea University / Prifysgol Abertawe, in Wales / Cymru, the Bristol Centre for Leadership and Organizational Ethics, Bristol Business School, the University of the West of England, and the School of Business at Lappeenranta University of Technology in Finland. My educational background is long and varied. Over the years, I have studied, for varying lengths of time, at Lappeenranta University of Technology, University of Victoria (Canada), University of Saskatchewan (Canada), University of Georgia (USA) and University of Turku (Finland). In 2009-2010 I was a Visiting Scholar at Laurentian University (Canada).
Outside of academia I have worked for a Finnish location technology SME in London, UK, and for a regional development agency in Southeastern Finland on various EU-funded projects.
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Lecturer in Natural Language Processing, University of Edinburgh
Pasquale is a lecturer in Natural Language Processing at the School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh; co-founder and CTO of the generative AI start-up Miniml.AI; and ELLIS Scholar (Edinburgh Unit). His research interests include natural language processing and machine learning, focusing on relational learning and learning from graph-structured data, solving knowledge-intensive tasks, hybrid neuro-symbolic models, compositional generalisation, and designing data-efficient and robust deep learning models. Pasquale published over 100 peer-reviewed papers in top-tier AI conferences, receiving multiple awards (including one Outstanding Paper Award at ICLR 2021, one of the most influential conferences in AI), and delivered several tutorials on Explainable AI and relational learning in leading AI conferences. More information on his research is available on his website, www.neuralnoise.com.
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Associate Professor in Geography, University of Galway
Pat Collins is a native of Galway and has worked as an Economic Geographer at NUI Galway since 2012. Prior to that he was a researcher at the Whitaker Institute where his work looked at the location decisions of multinational tech companies. More recently, Pat has turned his attention to Creative Economies and Cultural Production. Through a number of EU funded projects, Pat has sought to better understand the relationship between culture, creativity and production as well as identifying the unique role played by Geography. Pat has contributed to both of Galway’s designation of UNESCO City of Film and European Capital of Culture. He has published over 20 internationally peer reviewed journal articles and two books. He is currently Director of the newly formed UrbanLab Galway at the University of Galway. His forthcoming book ‘Galway: Making a Capital of Culture’ will be published by Orpen Press.
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Professor Emerita in Physics, University of Otago
Taught physics at University of Otago from 1988-2020. Sea ice researcher in Arctic and Antarctic at Universities of Cambridge and Otago from 1977-present. Retired in 2020 but have emeritus status and continue to publish journal articles on sea ice.
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Honorary Fellow, Macquarie University Applied Finance Centre, Macquarie University
After over 30 years working for, and consulting to, major banking and insurance companies in the US, Europe and Australia, Pat transferred to teaching courses in Risk Management at Masters level and to industry. His main areas of research are in Operational Risk (People, Systems, Process and Legal risks) and banking regulation and he has published widely on this topic, including a new book on People Risk Management http://www.koganpage.com/product/people-risk-management-9780749471354 .
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Quantitative Sea Ice Biogeochemist/Ecologist, University of Tasmania
Pat Wongpan is a quantitative sea ice biogeochemist/ecologist at the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Otago in New Zealand, was a David Crighton fellow at the University of Cambridge, and a JSPS post-doctoral fellow at the Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Japan. He is interested in sea ice-ice shelf-ocean interactions and their consequences on the ecosystem.
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Professeur des Universités en sciences de gestion, IAE Nancy School of Management
Patrice LAROCHE est professeur des Universités à l’IAE de Nancy et professeur affilié de Gestion des Ressources Humaines à ESCP Europe (Paris). Spécialiste du syndicalisme et des relations sociales en entreprise, il a été professeur invité à Cornell University (Industrial and Labor Relations School), à l’UC Berkeley et à la London School of Economics and Political Science. Membre de l’Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) depuis 2008, ses travaux de recherche portent plus particulièrement sur les effets de l’activité syndicale sur la performance des entreprises. Il est l’auteur de plusieurs contributions dans des ouvrages collectifs et de nombreux articles publiés dans des revues scientifiques. Il est également l’auteur de deux ouvrages intitulés respectivement « Les relations sociales en entreprise » et « Gérer les relations avec les partenaires sociaux. Fonctionnement et enjeux du dialogue social » publiés en 2009 et 2010 aux éditions Dunod et co-auteur d’un ouvrage en langue anglaise publié en 2017 aux éditions Routledge « The Economics of Trade Unions : A Study of a Research Field and its Findings ».
Agrégation des Facultés de Droit, économie et gestion
Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches, Université Paris 1 Sorbonne
Doctorat en sciences de gestion, Université Nancy 2
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Post doctoral research fellow, Institute for Health & Sport, Victoria University
Dr Patrice Jones is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Genetics, Epigenetics and Exercise group at the Institute for Health and Sport (IHeS)
Patrice's research interests are in examining biological differences in exercise responses and related epigenetic and metabolic processes. Her current work focuses on examining the effects of gender affirming hormone therapies on physiological and molecular measures of muscle health and performance in trans individuals. This work aims to advance our understanding of the functional impacts of GAHT and inform evidence-based exercise programs and guidelines aimed at improving physical activity in trans Australians
Patrice completed her PhD in the area of nutrigenomics in 2020, at the University of Newcastle, and also undertook a predoctoral training fellowship at NIEHS/NIH (USA) in 2019 exploring the molecular effects of sex hormones in breast tissue. She has published 20 manuscripts (9 as lead author and 5 as second author), and two editorial letters (1 as lead author, 1 as second author).
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet
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Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, Aston University
Prior to joining Aston as a Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, I was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Exeter (UK). I received my PhD in Politics from the Autonomous University of Barcelona (Spain) in November 2015.
My research agenda is driven by a fundamental interest in the internal organization, and the electoral and governmental behaviour of political parties. To date, the primary purpose of my research has been to understand how political parties face changes in the political system and, hence, the party system where they compete. Parallel to this, my research has also focused on two additional issues linked to political parties, the main characteristics and behaviour of middle-level party elites and party activists and parties' adaptation to digitalization.
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Clinical Research Specialist, West Virginia University
I am a researcher at WVU Medicine and West Virginia University. I have published in the area of opioid use, drug policy and stigma. I am a Canadian living in West Virginia researching the opioid crisis, social determinants of health and health care disparities.
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Lecturer in Sociology, University of York
Patricia joined the University of York as a Lecturer in Sociology in September 2022. She completed her undergraduate degree in South Africa, majoring in English and Sociology, before moving to the UK for an MA in Gender Studies, funded by a Commonwealth scholarship.
For her PhD at the University of Western Ontario, Patricia interviewed black mothers living in the UK and Canada and explored their engagements with attachment parenting, a popular parenting philosophy that emphasises secure attachment between mother and child and is promoted as a ‘natural’ and ‘instinctive’ approach to raising children. The monograph based on this doctoral research, Black Mothers and Attachment Parenting, was published in the Bristol University Press Sociology of Children and Families series and was shortlisted for the 2021 BSA Philip Abrams Memorial Prize.
She's currently writing a book about the development of parenting leave policies, including maternity leave and Shared Parental Leave, in the UK.
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I am a Reader in European Politics in the Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR). I completed my PhD in European Studies at the University of Bradford and taught at the universities of Strathclyde, Edinburgh and Glasgow before coming to the University of Westminster in 2004. I work in the fields of comparative European politics and European Union politics, specialising in German politics, political identity and internal security.
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Professor of Continental Philosophy, Anglia Ruskin University
Patricia is a researcher who has published in the areas of continental philosophy (especially Deleuze, Guattari, Serres, Irigaray, Lyotard, Kristeva, Blanchot, Ranciere), feminism, queer theory, posthuman theory, horror film, body modification, animal rights/abolitionism, cinesexuality and ethics.
Patricia has published extensively in the areas of Continental philosophy, feminism, queer theory, posthuman ethics, animal studies and horror films. The REF test rated all her work at 4*. Her work has been cited and reviewed internationally resulting in many invites to HEIs to speak both to Faculty and public lectures. Her monographs Cinesexuality, Posthuman Ethics and The Animal Catalyst collection have been key reading on curricula internationally, including Monash University, Brock University, UCSB and universities in Europe, North and South America and Australia. She has had successful large single researcher grant applications and continues to apply for large grants.
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Chercheuse scientifique et professeure associée, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC)
Patricia Raymond est ingénieure forestière et chercheuse scientifique à l’emploi de la Direction de la recherche forestière du Ministère des Ressources naturelles et des Forêts du Québec depuis 2002. Passionnée d’écologie forestière et de sylviculture appliquée, elle s’intéresse particulièrement à la forêt mixte tempérée pour laquelle elle expérimente des méthodes de régénération compatibles avec l'aménagement écosystémique et d'autres pouvant aider les forêts à s'adapter aux changements globaux.
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Personal Docente e Investigador, Universidad de Salamanca
Doctora en Formación en la Sociedad del Conocimiento por la Universidad de Salamanca. Licenciada en Publicidad y Relaciones públicas por la Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Postgrado en Dirección y Gestión de empresas por la Escuela de Administración de Empresas de la Universidad Politècnica de Catalunya. Postgrado en Big Data y Data Science por la Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca. Máster en Estudios de la Ciencia, la Tecnología y la Innovación, con especialidad en Cultura Científica por la Universidad de Oviedo. Máster Universitario en Formación del Profesorado de Educación Secundaria Obligatoria y Bachillerato, Formación Profesional y Enseñanzas de Idiomas. Posee experiencia laboral de más de 20 años en el campo de la comunicación en empresas privadas.
Sus líneas de investigación se centran en: adopción de tecnologías, comunicación científica, big data e inteligencia artificial en comunicación, perspectiva de género, opinión pública, migraciones, discursos de odio y métodos computacionales de investigación en ciencias sociales.
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Former director of SAAO and honorary professor at UCT, South African Astronomical Observatory
Whitelock is an astronomer at, and former director of, the South African Astronomical Observatory and an honorary professor at the University of Cape Town. She obtained her BSc and PhD at the University of London. Her primary research interests are the late stages of stellar evolution, mass-loss and variability. She also works on galactic structure, near-by galaxies and the cosmic distance scale. She is involved in astronomy education, astronomy for development, and international coordination and collaboration. She has served as president of the International Astronomical Union’s Division VII (Galactic Systems), is a member of the Academy of Sciences of South Africa, an honorary fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society (UK) and an honorary member and fellow—and former president—of the South African Institute of Physics (SAIP). She is the recipient of the 2018 de Beers Gold Medal of the SAIP and a Doctor of Laws (honoris causa) from Rhodes University in 2020.
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Researcher in Marine Biology, Universidad de La Laguna
Patricia Arranz is a marine biologist and marine mammal expert
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Indigenous Knowledge Holder, Indigenous Knowledge
Patricia is from Dhukurrdji clan, the traditional landowners of Maningrida community in West Arnhem Land, Northern Territory. She speaks Ndjébbana, Kuninjku, Na-kara and Kun-barlang. Her skin name is Nja-wakadj and she is from the Yirridja moiety. Patricia grew up on the tiny outstation of Modkorldjban, in the rocky country. When she was 10 years old she moved to the Waláya area of Maningrida where she went to school and learnt music. Patricia is a djunggay and cultural leader for ceremony in and around Maningrida.
Patricia is an established gospel singer and composer. With her brother, she records songs that reflect the troubles she has seen and the strength needed to overcome. She is also keyboard player, vocalist and songwriter in the all-women’s rock band Ripple Effect Band. She has toured nationally and her song Ngúddja was recently featured in the Stan series BUMP. Through her work with the band, she collaborates on research about popular music, First Nation languages and the power of music to contribute to social change.
Currently Patricia works at Mala'la Health Service in Maningrida on the Rheumatic Heart Project as a community liaison officer.
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Researcher in Transition Engineering, University of Canterbury
Patricio is a research engineer at the Electric Power Engineering Centre. His area of research focuses on transportation as an energy system. He has cross-disciplinary experience integrating transition engineering, energy systems planning, GIS-based analysis, and microsimulation approaches. Patricio is passionate about everything that revolves around energy and transportation planning, data science, and GIS analysis. He is a member of the Global Association for Transition Engineering (GATE), and is open to collaborate on projects aiming to engineer the decarbonization of complex activity systems.
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Lecturer in Strategy and Innovation, Boston University
Patrick Abouchalache is a lecturer in Strategy and Innovation and Family Business at Boston University's Questrom School of Business, and founded The PEGA Group, a Boston- and New York-based operating, investment and advisory firm.
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Clinical Assistant Professor and Director of Digital Academic Initiatives (University of Michigan Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (University of Chicago Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (UCLA School of Law), University of Michigan
Patrick Barry is a clinical assistant professor of law and the director of digital academic initiatives at the University of Michigan Law School and a visiting lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School and the UCLA School of Law. His teaching and research focus on creating a new vocabulary to talk about advocacy, especially in the age of artificial intelligence.
Among his teaching awards are the Wayne Booth Prize for Excellence in Teaching, the Provost’s Innovation in Teaching Prize, and the Outstanding Research Mentor Award. In addition, he was recently selected as a faculty fellow by the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion’s Center for Educational Outreach and a Public Engagement Fellow by the Center for Academic Innovation.
An All-American soccer player in college, Barry focused on the theatrical aspects of Supreme Court confirmation hearings as a PhD student in English at the University of Michigan. During that time, he also worked with other Michigan faculty to create Clinnect, a global network of legal clinics devoted to combating human trafficking.
Barry is the author of ten books—including Good with Words: Writing and Editing, Good with Words: Speaking and Presenting, Feedback Loops: How to Give and Receive High-Quality Feedback, and The Syntax of Sports. He has also created several online courses for the educational platforms Coursera and Michigan Online and regularly collaborates with the Human Trafficking Clinic, the Child Welfare Appellate Clinic, and the Social Enterprise Clinic, as well as with various law firms, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations. He is a member of the California Bar.
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Associate Professor of English, Arizona State University
Patrick Bixby (he/him/his) is an associate professor of English in the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University.
After earning a BA in psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles and a MA in English from California State University, Long Beach, Bixby completed his PhD in English at Emory University in 2003. He served as visiting assistant professor of literature at Claremont McKenna College for one year and then joined the faculty of ASU’s New College, where he has held a number of posts. In 2017, after directing several graduate programs and then serving as director of graduate studies for the college, he took a role building partnerships between the university and Arizona tribal communities, as well as other universities around the globe. Most recently, in 2021, he became the program lead for the BA in Disability Studies. In addition to these duties, he currently serves as vice president of the Samuel Beckett Society and resident director of the USAC summer school program at NUI Galway.
Bixby's scholarly interests span a variety of fields, including Irish studies, modernist studies, postcolonial theory and criticism, Continental philosophy, and issues of travel, mobility, and the body. He teaches courses in these fields and in the history of the novel, the history of film, the history of literary criticism, twentieth-century thought, postmodernism, and methods of interdisciplinary research.
His essays have appeared in journals such as Modernism/Modernity, Modernist Cultures, Irish Studies Review, and the Journal of Beckett Studies, as well as in collections such as A History of Irish Modernism (Cambridge UP, 2019), A History of the Modernist Novel (Cambridge UP, 2015), Beckett in Context (Cambridge UP, 2013), and Beckett and Ireland (Cambridge UP, 2010).
Bixby's latest book, License to Travel: A Cultural History of the Passport (U of California P, 2022), investigates the unyielding paradox of the document: even as it promises independence and mobility, escape and safe haven, the passport also serves as an essential tool of government surveillance and state power, purportedly assuring homeland security and the controlled movement of individuals across national boundaries. The study investigates this paradox by drawing on a range of sources, including literary history and modern art, archival documents and contemporary journalism, international law and theories of cosmopolitanism.
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Professor of Geography, Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast
After 30 years of research, mostly focused in the Asia-Pacific region, Professor Nunn has accumulated a degree of expertise in a number of different fields. His primary field is geography, once largely physical in focus, but now straddling various aspects of sustainability. Professor Nunn has worked for a number of years in climate change, mostly on sea level and on the challenges of effective adaptation in poorer countries. He has also worked on archaeological topics, usually through the lens of palaeoenvironment reconstruction, but also applying his geological training to ceramic mineralogy and radiocarbon chronology. Since 2000, when a coup in Fiji interrupted a planned research programme, Professor Nunn became interested in myths as potential sources of information about geological hazards, particularly earthquakes and tsunamis, volcanic eruptions and abrupt coastal change.
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Reader in Neuroprosthesis, Newcastle University
I am a reader in biomedical engineering and came to Newcastle in 2010 to develop world class collaborations between the school of EEE and the Institute of Neuroscience. I have a BSc (1st class) and MRes in applied physics from Liverpool University, and a PhD in bioimaging from the Japan Advanced Institute for Science and Technology. After some time in the software industry, I did two post-doctoral projects at Imperial College before getting an RCUK fellowship in 2005. From 2005-2010 I was a lecturer and then senior lecturer in Imperial College, before coming to Newcastle. In my time I have had numerous research awards and published numerous papers in the key journals in the biomedical field.
At the heart of these efforts is my pioneering use of CMOS-micro-LED optoelectronics in combination with optogenetic gene therapy solutions. These will lead to highly advanced forms of prosthetic intervention not previously possible. This has led to a number of highly cited papers in key biomedical engineering journals. Furthermore I have explored impact through patient trials and commercial translation.
To achieve my aims I have been part of a number of large research consortia. Between 2010-2014 I coordinated the FP7 OptoNeuro project. More recently I am the engineering team leader on the £10M CANDO project to develop a next-generation prosthesis for epilepsy. Currently I have a large highly dedicated team of RAs, and PhD students.
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Full Professor, Faculties of Social Sciences and Medicine; Senior Investigator, Global Strategy Lab, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Before returning to academe Patrick Fafard served as a senior executive in the Governments of Canada and Saskatchewan. He is the author, co-author and editor of numerous publications on public health governance, public health policy, and the intersection of political science and public health. Patrick’s current teaching and research includes the public administration of public health, building the political science of public health, and global health governance to address the challenge of antimicrobial resistance. Patrick also serves in leadership roles for the Global Strategy Lab at York University and the University of Ottawa and for the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa.
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Professor - Industrial ecology and climate change mitigation, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC)
Industrial ecology; climate change mitigation; sustainable development; circular economy; greenhouse gas management; soil-atmosphere gas exchanges; biogenic volatile organic compounds
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PhD candidate - Behavioural Ecology and Conservation Research, University of Sydney
I am a PhD student from the University of Sydney, School of Life and Environmental Sciences (SOLES) studying how we can strategically exploit plant odours to manipulate wild mammalian herbivore foraging behaviour as a conservation and wildlife management tool.
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Chair in Creative Writing, University of Adelaide
Patrick Flanery is Chair in Creative Writing at the University of Adelaide. Prior to joining Adelaide, he was Professor at the University of Reading, and subsequently Professor and Director of Creative Writing at Queen Mary University of London. He is the author of the novels 'Night for Day' (2019), 'I Am No One' (2016), 'Fallen Land' (2013) and 'Absolution' (2012), which was shortlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the Royal Society of Literature’s Ondaatje Prize, among others. In 2019 he published a volume of creative nonfiction, 'The Ginger Child: On Family, Loss and Adoption'. His creative and critical work has appeared in 'Granta', 'Zoetrope: All Story', 'The Hopkins Review', 'The Times Literary Supplement', 'The Washington Post', 'The Guardian', 'The Los Angeles Times', and 'The Spectator', among others. He has held fellowships at MacDowell, the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center, the Santa Maddalena Foundation, and the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study.
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I am the principal investigator of three SSHRC-funded projects studying policing and police oversight. I am currently writing a book based on the first of these projects, a study of eight criminal trials in Canada and the United States where police officers were tried for on-duty shooting incidents and where video evidence played a key role in the trial. My current studies are of special investigations units decisions of officer "reasonablenss" for cases that do not proceed to trial. I am the first Canadian scholar to be the successful principal applicant of the SSHRC/DFG/ESRC/ARN Open Research Area grant (2022 competition).
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