Associate Professor of Dental Education and Research, University of Plymouth
Zoe is currently employed at the University of Plymouth as an Associate Professor in Dental Education and Research with a variety of educational roles, including overseeing the Year 1-5 curriculum of the BDS Programme (Bachelor of Dental Surgery) course, Acquired Dental Knowledge assessment lead, Enquiry Based Learning lead and Intercalating MSc Dental lead.
Her research interests involve undertaking clinical research in a primary care dental setting, investigating the mechanisms linking oral health and systemic disease, having established and now leading the the Plymouth Oral Microbiome Research Group (OMRG). She also leads blood pressure case finding clinics with Peninsula Dental Social Enterprise. The Plymouth OMRG investiugates links between the oral microbiome and blood pressure control (hypertension and pre-eclampsia), as well as the effects of anti-microbial mouth washes on the oral microbiome, where Zoe is working with the FDI task team on recommendations for their use. She is involved in a national initiatives to develop health screening services at the dentist. She has also previously published extensively in the field of sepsis, identifying microvascular endothelial cell mechanisms and pharmacological agents that improved blood flow and reduced inflammation during sepsis.
Zoe originally graduated with a BSc in Physiology and Pharmacology, after which she gained a PhD investigating the role of anaesthetics within the microcirculation, both from the University of Sheffield, ultimately becoming a Non-Clinical Lecturer and Principal Investigator there. Before this she also worked at the University of Alberta in the Department of Physiology as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow, funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. Since graduating in dentistry from Plymouth University Zoe has practised in clinics in the city and still works part-time as Dental Associate within the NHS, with an interest in anxious patients and periodontal disease.
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PhD Candidate, Film Studies, Lancaster University
I am an early career researcher currently working on my PhD in Film Studies, specifically in anime and adaptation studies. In addition to my academic work primarily on Japanese animation, I am also a film critic and member of the OAFFC (the Online Association of Female Film Critics) and GALECA (The Society of LGBTQ Critics), with bylines at publications like Little White Lies, The Skinny, and Vulture.
I also engage in outreach work at the Dukes Theatre, promoting independent cinema at the venue and encouraging post-film discussions following selected screenings.
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Master's Student, Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen
Zoë Deskin is a graduate student in Integrated Food Studies at the University of Copenhagen. Her research has focused on transformative, informal, and youth-led learning in food and environmental education.
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Lecturer in Criminology, Swansea University
Zoe is a lecturer in Criminology in the department of Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy at Swansea University.
She received her doctorate at Cardiff University, undertaking ethnographic research on gender, violence, and embodiment in mixed martial arts (MMA). These themes are still central to Zoe's research, which has interest in the boundaries of humour and violence in interaction.
Zoe is co-founder and co-director of the new research centre, Swansea Centre of Research in Sport and Society (SCORSS), with Dr Victoria Silverwood. SCORSS centralises on topics surrounding athlete mental and physical health, including the crisis of concussion in sport.
Zoe is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
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Associate Professor, School of Physics, University of Bristol
I am a computational astrophysicist. My research interests focus on the formation and evolution of planets and small bodies, such as asteroids and comets through the use of numerical simulations.
Zoë was previously at Cambridge University, and prior to that, Harvard, and the universities of Maryland and Washington.
Among the many accolades and grants she has been selected for, Zoë was awarded the American Association of University Women Ph.D. Award in 2005.
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Zoe Long is a senior researcher and PhD student with the Sustainable Transportation Action Research Team at Simon Fraser University. She has 7 years of experience leading applied research in low-carbon transport solutions, resulting in over 10 peer-reviewed publications. Most recently she has received a Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship recognizing her academic excellence, research potential, and leadership capability. Her research aims to understand how consumers use low-carbon transport technologies and how policy can ensure that these technologies are compatible with climate change goals – with the goal of producing evidence-based policy recommendations for decision makers.
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Professor/Honorary Consultant of Dental Public Health, University of Sheffield
Professor Zoe Marshman
I am a Professor of Dental Public Health at the School of Clinical Dentistry of the University of Sheffield. I teach undergraduate and postgraduate students and undertake PhD supervision. I provide advice to local and national government and health organisations about improving oral health and evidence-based dentistry.
My main interest is child-centred dental research to improve the oral health and treatment experiences of children and their families. I have led, published and presented internationally and nationally many child-centred research projects and have become recognised as an advocate for involving children in high quality oral health research. I have experience of leading large multi-centred randomised controlled trials, integrating qualitative research into trials and conducting process evaluations with the aim of informing policy and practice.
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PhD candidate, The University of Melbourne
Zoe Nay is a PhD candidate with Melbourne Law School and the Melbourne Climate Futures research centre at the University of Melbourne, where she is the recipient of a scholarship for graduate research in the field of human rights. Broadly, Zoe’s research examines the role of law in addressing environmental challenges, with a focus on climate change. Her doctoral research examines the legal issues related to state responsibility for loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change in Pacific small island developing states. Zoe is also part of World’s Youth for Climate Justice (WYCJ)’s Academic Taskforce.
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Professor of Political Science, Auburn University
Zoe Nemerever is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Auburn University. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California San Diego in 2021 and her Bachelor’s Degree in Policy Studies from Lafayette College.
Dr. Nemerever's research focuses on representation during the policymaking process, with emphases on state-level policymaking and rural constituencies. Her research is published at Political Analysis, Political Behavior, Political Psychology, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, Party Politics, and College Teaching.
She teaches courses in American National Government, State and Local Politics, Policy Analysis, Inequalities in Participation and Representation, Environmental Politics, Executive Politics, Public Policy (PhD Seminar), and The Politics of Economic Inequality.
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PhD Candidate, School of History, Australian National University
Zoe Smith is a PhD candidate and gender historian in the School of History at the Australian National University. Her doctoral research is a feminist, social, and cultural history of domestic violence in New South Wales, Queensland, and Victoria between 1880–1914, with a focus on both colonial women’s divorce petitions and the fiction and non-fiction writings of Barbara Baynton, Ada Cambridge, Louisa Lawson, and Rosa Praed. She has published and presented prize-winning research on histories of sexual violence, domestic violence, Australian literature and film, colonial literature, masculinity, and gender and race in the context of nineteenth-century Britain and Australia.
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From "friendship clubs" and two-line classifieds to flipping through faces on Tinder, the technologies and rituals of dating have changed much in the past 40 years. But how deep do these changes go? Does gender operate as differently within the new courtship realm as the range of new dating technologoies would suggest?
My research is intended to answer these questions, focussing on how mediated dating platforms (eg lonely hearts adverts, computer dating message boards, introduction agencies) have evolved since 1970 and tracking how singles using these platforms have put to work ideas of gender in their adverts or profiles. The study focusses on the metropolitan environment of London, where new technologies, fashions and experimentalism in relationships were more observably taken up than elsewhere in Britain, and considers the effects on daters of the capital's heightened discourses of consumerism, permissivness, choice and alienation. Crucially, London formed a major (though certainly not exclusive) hub of the Women's Liberation Movement, and the ways in which the newly strident and bounteous discourse generated by the movement was used, played with or ignored by daters is also of key interest to me, raising broader questions of how the political relates to the personal in the domain of gender.
More broadly, I am interested in Anglo-American and global courtship cultures throughout the 20th century (up to the present), and particularly in how new technologies are adopted, used or rejected by daters around the world. I am also extremely interested in historiographical debates, particularly those concering where lie the strengths and weaknesses of contemporary history and its sources, especially live digital ones like Facebook.
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Director of the Sexual Assault Research Initiative at the Kinsey Institute and Professor of Applied Psychology in Education and Research Methodology, Indiana University
Dr. Peterson is a licensed clinical psychologist, and she has researched the topics of sexual consent, sexual assault, sexual coercion, and unwanted sex for over 20 years. She has studied men’s and women’s experiences as both victims and perpetrators of sexual aggression.
Dr. Peterson is an author on over 75 peer-reviewed journal articles and is the editor of the Wiley Handbook of Sex Therapy. She is past-president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, and she is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality.
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Head of Policy Design at the Tech Policy Design Centre, Australian National University
As Head of Policy Design at the Australian National University's Tech Policy Design Centre, Zoe leads a research team that works with government, industry and civil society to improve tech governance in Australia and around the world.
Zoe brings together a broad range of perspectives on tech policy problem solving, with international experience in foreign affairs, politics, big tech, and research. Previously, Zoe managed Amazon’s digital public policy strategy in Australia and New Zealand and represented the company in international organisations, such as the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism. During her time in Government, Zoe advised Cabinet Ministers and Ambassadors; led the development of Australia's 2017 International Cyber Engagement Strategy, 2018 Digital Economy Strategy and Online Safety Act 2021; and represented Australia’s interests in diplomatic contexts around the world. A think tanker at heart, Zoe started her career at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute and has continued to develop her portfolio of publications, international lectures, and media experience - covering topics such as election integrity, internet governance, and tech geopolitics - ever since.
Zoe has an MSc in Social Science of the Internet from the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford, and a Bachelor of International and Global Studies from the University of Sydney.
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Chief of Staff, Werth Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation, University of Connecticut
With experience in both the private and public sectors, I currently work at The Werth Institute as the Chief of Staff, where a large portion of my role is centered around piloting experiential learning opportunities for unique student populations as well as supporting globally-based entrepreneurship activities.
Passionate about social and creative entrepreneurship as a catalyst for change, I am also a published journalist, covering topics related to climate change, public health, and social networks. I enjoy sharing my ideas with others, especially those outside of my circle through my blog "...And She Writes" as well am a TEDx speaker.
In my free time, I like to relax with my dog, who I am training to become therapy certified. I am also an award-winning cellist and nature photographer.
A proud Husky, I graduated from the University of Connecticut with an individualized B.A.
in Population Health, Disease, & Policy.
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Master of Science Student, Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University
I am a second-year Master of Science candidate in the Health Sciences program at Simon Fraser University. My thesis focuses on proactively creating a consensus-driven normative governance framework for the ethical design and implementation of voice-based artificial intelligence (AI)-powered virtual conversational agents utilized for monitoring, diagnostic, and therapeutic purposes. My anticipated research outcome is to pave the way for VCAs that are both ethically sound and optimally beneficial for users in clinical and therapeutic contexts, setting the gold standard for voice-AI's ethical application. I have acquired over 8+ years of research experience in various multicultural healthcare contexts and have conducted both clinical and non-clinical research work. Alongside this, I have developed interpersonal skills through collaborations with interdisciplinary teams ranging from public policymakers to clinicians and patient research partners in Canada. I hope to further my knowledge in bioethics, voice AI, and AI healthcare technologies.
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Senior Lecturer in Nutrition and Behaviour Change, University of Bristol
Zoi Toumpakari is a Senior Lecturer in Nutrition and Behaviour Change. Her research focuses on upstream determinants of eating behaviour, for example the physical environment, advertising and the role of policies. Specifically, she looks at how features of the eating environment, like where and with whom people eat, influence their food intake and how these could be altered to improve the population's diet. In addition, her research explores the role of dietary and physical activity patterns in the prevention of cardiometabolic health.
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Ph.D. Candidate in Immunology, Tufts University
I graduated from Stonehill College in 2018 with a Bachelors in Biology. Currently, I am a 5th year PhD Candidate in immunology at Tufts University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Under my advisor Dr. Alexander Poltorak, I study silent cell death, apoptosis, in immune cells (macrophages and neutrophils). My current work examines a novel role for a surface protein in preventing post-death inflammation and ensuring cell death remains silent. The elimination of these immune cells by apoptosis is crucial for the resolution of inflammation after infection. Interestingly, the apoptosis of these cells can be altered in aggressive cancers, particularly in the tumor environment. I hope that my work will have significant implications in these contexts.
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Assistant Professor of Anthropology, American University
Zoltán Glück is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at American University in Washington, DC. His research focuses on issues of security, cities, development, postcolonialism, environmental crisis and racial capitalism in East Africa. He is currently working on a book manuscript titled, Recolonizing Security, which is an ethnographic study of the war on terror in Kenya. Zoltán was previously an Assistant Professor of Sociology, Anthropology and International Affairs at Northeastern University. He is also an Editor of Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology.
He received his PhD and MPhil in Anthropology from the CUNY Graduate Center, MA in Sociology from Central European University, and BA in Philosophy from Bard College.
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I am a PhD student at Dalhousie University working with a team to unravel the global shark meat trade. My past work experiences include working in India as a marine education officer for a local NGO, studying the terrestrial behaviour of sea kraits, studying the resilience of coral reefs and associated taxa in the face of climate change, and characterising the shark and ray fisheries of India. I am interested in understanding the complex relationships between fish and humans and how these can inform resource governance and policy.
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Associate Professor in Global Geophysics Research Group at FTTM, Institut Teknologi Bandung
Zulfakriza Z. adalah Dosen pada Kelompok Keahlian Geofisika Global, Fakultas Teknik Pertambangan dan Perminyakan (FTTM), Institut Teknologi Bandung (ITB), dan aktif mengajar serta membimbing mahasiswa S1, S2 dan S3 pada Program Studi Teknik Geofisika FTTM ITB.
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Matakuliah yang diampu:
Berfikir Komputasi (S1), Komputasi Geofisika (S1), Seismologi (S1), Geodinamika (S1), Komunikasi Geofisika (S1), Geotomografi (S1), Geodinamika dan Seismotektonik (S2), Geohazard dan Fisika Gunung Api (S2), dan Geotomografi Lanjut (S2).
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Fokus penelitian:
Ambient Noise Tomography untuk delineasi profil bawah permukaan di zona cekungan, gunung api, lapangan migas dan geotermal.
Seismologi gempa untuk investigasi sumber dan bahaya gempa.
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Link Scopus and Google Scholar:
SCOPUS: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57215578191
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.co.id/citations?user=3SYNtesAAAAJ&hl=en)
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Assistant lecturer - University of the Witwatersrand, University of the Witwatersrand
Zunaida Moosa Wadiwala has an LLM (Wits), CML (UNISA & Pret), BLC, and an LLB (Pret).
She is an admitted attorney, conveyancer and notary of the High Court of South Africa. With an extensive legal background, she previously practised as a property lawyer and now serves as a teaching assistant and lecturer at the University of the Witwatersrand, School of Law.
She is also an examiner for the Legal Practice Council (Law Society of South Africa) for attorney, conveyancer and notary admission examinations. Zunaida contributes to global legal and sustainability efforts as a rapporteur for the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University, covering South Africa, Saudi Arabia and the Middle East.
Zunaida is a sessional lecturer at the University of the Witwatersrand, an associate fellow at the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law (CISDL), a course leader at the University of Cambridge’s Democratising Education for Global Sustainable Justice programme, and a member of the editorial team for the Global Network for Human Rights and the Environment (GNHRE). She is also the editor for the UNESCO Voices of Future Generations Children’s Initiative.
Her latest publications are:
Defending the Defenders: State Responsibilities to Respect Climate Justice, Rule of Law and Rights of Counsel in Climate Litigation Worldwide (https://www.lcil.cam.ac.uk/sites/www.law.cam.ac.uk/files/images/www.lcil.law.cam.ac.uk/Image/events/cordonier_segger_et_al_-_defending_the_defenders_draft_-_27_october_2024.pdf)
and a contribution to Courage, Contributions and Compliance: The Routledge Handbook of Climate Law and Governance (https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Climate-Law-and-Governance-Courage-Contributions-and-Compliance/Segger-Voigt/p/book/9781032233000)
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Associate Professor of Accounting, HEC Montréal
My name is Zvi Singer. I am an associate professor of accounting at HEC Montreal. Before joining HEC Montreal I worked at McGill University. I hold a PhD Degree from University of California at Berkeley. My research interst include financial reporting, audit, gender, and regulations. I published my research in journals such as The Accounting Review, Journal of Accounting Research, Review of Accounting Studies, Contemporary Accounting Research, Accounting, Organizations, and Society, and others.
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주요 이력
현)한양대학교 겸임교수
현)블록체인 전략연구소 소장
현)대한민국 모바일 어워드 심사위원
현)경기도 학술용역심의위원
현)광명시 지역정보화 위원
현)B캐피탈리스트 주임교수
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Senior Research Fellow in Social and Political Science, The University of Melbourne
Rachel is a social researcher and anthropologist, with a focus on environment, science studies, Pacific studies, gender, religion and race. She has undertaken research into pathways for achieving nature-based climate mitigation and adaptation, landscape and community-based resilience, the social dimensions of environmental challenges, people's connections with nature and each other, diverse knowledges and ethical systems, and the social role and position of science. She has worked in research, industry, government and NGO sectors, and at the interface of science and policy.
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