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Catherine Campbell

Lecturer, Performing Arts, UniSA Creative, University of South Australia
Catherine is an actor, singer, director and educator.

Catherine is a Teaching Academic at UniSA in Performing Arts, where she Coordinates and teaches Cabaret: Context & Practice, World Music Theatre, Music Performance and Live Performance Production. UniSA offers one of only four non-auditioned experiential performing arts courses in Australia and Catherine is passionate about ensuring access to Performing Arts practice. She has also taught at University of Adelaide’s Elder Conservatorium Music Theatre Course and Classical Voice Course in Acting and Stagecraft, as well as at Federation University’s Ballarat Performing Arts Academy as Director, 3rd year Cabarets. Catherine is the Vocal Lead Teacher for the Adelaide Festival Centre: OnStage children & youth holiday program and Community program for young people in care. Catherine has also taught and directed for Tutti Arts in music theatre and cabaret.

Music Theatre includes A New Brain - Mimi Schwinn (Davine Productions) The Front - Matron, A Wild Party with Andrew Lippa, Take Flight with Richard Maltby and David Shire, Songs For A New World (Adelaide Cabaret Festival), Sweeney Todd (State Opera of SA),The Mikado (Adelaide Festival Centre), Les Miserables - Mme Thenadier (MS/Normie Rowe), Northern Lights/Southern Cross - Claire (Tutti/Interact USA), Conversations, P’Opera and Shouting Fence (Various People) and The Witch in the SA Premiere of Into The Woods. Cabaret includes: solo show My Blue Angel (written and directed by Frank Ford) at the Adelaide Cabaret Festival, Don’t Tell Mama (New York), and national tours in Australia; co-creator of comedy trio Gentlemen Prefer Curves (Adelaide Cabaret Festival, Adelaide Fringe, Melbourne Comedy Festival) and Berlin Cabaret – Greta (Adelaide Fringe, Weimar Room residency, Cabaret Festival). Acting credits include Mrs Linde in Doll’s House and A Streetcar Named Desire (Bakehouse Theatre), The Most Massive Woman Wins and Bruised Hearts Travelling Freak Show (Chop’t Logic) Sisters (CPA) and Equus (State Theatre Company).

Catherine is thrilled to celebrate over 25 years with the Chorus of State Opera of SA, and has recently performed the roles of Mrs Mullins in Carousel, Praskovia in Graham Murphy’s The Merry Widow and Cora The Boots in BOOJUM! as well as Ensemble in two productions of Sweeney Todd (dirs. Stuart Maunder, Gale Edwards), Voss and many others including the Australian Premieres of Dead Man Walking and Parsifal. For the Adelaide Festival she has appeared in Messa da Requiem (Zurich Ballet), Golden Cockerel (dir. Barrie Kosky), Requiem (dir. Romeo Castellucci), SAUL (dir. Barrie Kosky), Hamlet (dir. Neil Armfield) and Flamma Flamma (dir Nigel Jamieson). Shows with local companies include Iolanthe (Fairy Queen) & HMS Pinafore (Hebe) for G&S Society of SA, and COLE for Therry. Other performances include two international tours with Adelaide Chamber Singers, numerous corporate functions and various Country Arts SA Tours. She holds 4 Fringe awards, including the Advertiser Award for Excellence for Gentlemen Prefer Curves. Catherine sang backing vocals for Split Enz with the ASO and has never quite gotten over it.

Directing: The Hipster (development) Fringe 2020; Why Muriel Matters, Adelaide Cabaret Fringe; Dido & Aeneas, 3 Graces, Adelaide Fringe (Winner, Best Music); Assistant Director, Elixir Of Love, State Opera of SA; Stravinsky’s A Soldier’s Tale, SOL Summer Series; Echoes of the Underworld, Saving Abigial and RAW, UniSA Performing Arts.
Training: AC Arts (Acting); Hons Drama (Music Theatre), Flinders Uni; Cabaret at Yale (USA).
Catherine has two children and lives in Adelaide with her partner Paul.

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Catherine de Vries

Professor of Political Science, Bocconi University
Catherine de Vries is a Dean of International Affairs and Professor of Political Science at Bocconi University. She is also a Research Associate at the Dondena Centre for Research on Social Dynamics and Public Policy and an associate member of Nuffield College, University of Oxford. Her work can be broadly situated in the areas political behaviour, political economy and EU politics, and has appeared in leading political science journals, such as the American Political Science Review, Annual Review of Political Science, and the Journal of Politics. She has published several books Euroscepticism and the Future of European Integration (Oxford University Press, 2018), Political Entrepreneurs: The Rise of Challenger Parties in Europe with Sara B. Hobolt (Princeton University Press) and Foundations of European Politics with Sara B. Hobolt, Sven-Oliver Proksch and Jonathan Slapin (Oxford University Press, 2021). Catherine is currently working on research project (LOSS), funded through a Consolidator grant by the European Research Council, which examines the conditions under which economic hardship affects support for socially conservative political agendas.

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Catherine Douglas

Lecturer in Animal Science, Newcastle University

The pinnacle of my achievement to date has to be my Ig Nobel Prize, International Prize for Veterinary Medicine .

More serious roles and responsibilities are as a Lecturer at Newcastle University in Animal Science, Agriculture and Joint Honours in Science. I lecture in a range of Animal Science (Livestock and Companion) related disciplines including: Animal Welfare, Behaviour, Nutrition.

Degree Programme Director Joint Honours in Science, Newcastle University

Research Interests:

Animal Welfare and Behaviour:

Human-animal interaction and its affects on welfare, behaviour and production in the dairy herd.
Cognitive bias to measure affective state. Can whether an animal perceives its glass half full or half empty, be measured and if so can it inform on the welfare of the animal under different management regimes.
Companion animal behaviour and welfare
Student Transition:

Peer Assisted Learning, and extended inductions to reduce attrition and increase success in non-traditional learners in HE.

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Catherine Durose

Professor of Public Policy, University of Liverpool
Catherine is Professor of Public Policy, and Co-Director of the Heseltine Institute for Public Policy, Practice and Place at the University of Liverpool. She is recognised as a leading expert on urban governance and public policy, and has written widely on policy design and implementation, devolution, urban transformation, social and democratic innovation, and participation. Empirically, her work has focused at urban, city-regional, local, and neighbourhood levels. Catherine is particularly well-known for her work on co-production, how bringing together different forms of expertise can provide an innovative means of addressing complexity and uncertainty in governance and policy.

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Catherine Graham

Senior Researcher at Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research and Adjunct Associate Professor of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University (The State University of New York)
I study how the spatial and temporal arrangement of habitats influences biological diversity. This issue relates to a number of fundamental questions in ecology that have challenged scientists for decades. Questions include: Why do mountains have extraordinary biodiversity? What is the importance of niche partitioning in maintaining biological diversity? and How does the climate history of a region influence its current patterns of biological diversity? Addressing these types of questions requires integration from a range of fields, including ecology, evolutionary biology, biogeography, climatology, geology and conservation biology because mechanisms that influence biological diversity are played out across a range of spatial and temporal scales. Much of my current work is focused on the role of plant-hummingbird interactions in the generation and maintenance of high tropical diversity; however, I also work on multiple other systems and questions including drivers of global diversity and, most recently, of European montane plants.

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Catherine Harris

Catherine studied Geography (MA Hons) at the University of Oxford, graduating in 2005. She completed a MA in International Studies at the University of Birmingham in 2007, which was awarded with distinction. She gained her PhD from the University of Birmingham in 2012.

Her PhD investigated the experiences of Polish migrant entrepreneurs in the West Midlands region of the UK and is the first large-scale study of its kind. Her research has attracted interest internationally and has been disseminated in both the print and broadcast media.

Catherine's expertises lie in the fields of entrepreneurship and enterprise, ethnic entrepreneurship, social difference, EU enlargement, EU migration, Polish migration and the Polish community in the UK.

Methodologically, Catherine’s interest is in qualitative and ethnographic research.

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Catherine Hausman

Assistant Professor of Public Policy, University of Michigan

Catherine H. Hausman is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public Policy and a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economics Research. Her work focuses on environmental and energy economics. Her research has appeared in the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, and the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity. Recent projects have looked at the economic and environmental impacts of shale gas; the market impacts of nuclear power plant closures; and the effects of electricity market deregulation on nuclear power safety. Prior to her graduate studies, Catherine studied in Peru under a Fulbright grant. She has taught Statistics, a policy seminar on Energy and the Environment, and a course on Government Regulation of Industry and the Environment. She holds a BA from the University of Minnesota and a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley.

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Catherine Laprise

Professeur UQAC, Co-titulaire de la Chaire de recherche en santé durable du Québec et Directrice du Centre intersectoriel en santé durable de l'UQAC, Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC)

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Catherine Murphy

Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning and Design, Monash University
Catherine Murphy is a research leader in the Monash Urban Lab in the Department of Architecture at Monash University, where she co-develops projects that combine practice-based design research with policy studies towards the regeneration of cities and regions. She was a researcher with the Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities where she focused on better integration across water planning, urban planning and design. She collaborates with architectural researchers on research projects on alternative processes for developing inclusive housing and ecological cities, the outcomes of which include industry reports and public exhibitions. She is co-editor (with Nigel Bertram) of the book In Time with Water: Design Studies of 3 Australian Cities.

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Catherine Purse

PhD Candidate, Quadram Institute
Catherine Purse is a PhD student at the Quadram Institute, where her project investigates age related changes to the gut microbiome, the immune system, and the contribution of these changes to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease.

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Catherine Régis

Professeure titulaire, Faculté de droit, Chaire de recherche du Canada en droit et politiques de la santé, Centre de recherche en droit public, Université de Montréal
Je suis une professeure spécialisée en droit et politiques de la santé, titulaire d'une Chaire de recherche du Canada en droit et politiques de la santé (chairesante.ca), co-responsable du Hub santé - politique, organisations et droit (h-pod.ca) et chercheuse au Centre de recherche en droit public (CRDP), à l'Observatoire international sur les impacts sociétaux de l'IA et du numérique (OBVIA), au Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CRCHUM) et au Mila. Mes intérêts de recherche couvrent notamment la gouvernance des systèmes de santé, l'innovation numérique et l'intelligence artificielle et l'action normative de l'Organisation mondiale de la santé.

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Catherine Richards1

Research Affiliate, Centre for the Study of Existential Risk, University of Cambridge
Catherine’s postdoctoral research at CSER, Cambridge, focused on developing our understanding of global risks, governance mechanisms and technical solutions in relation to complex critical infrastructure systems. Her work primarily spanned environmental risks, future foods biotechnology and artificial intelligence alongside complementary digital technologies across the water, energy and food sectors as well as the transport, waste and space sectors.

Catherine completed her PhD in Engineering at Cambridge on energy transition, climate change and agri-food supply chain risk. She also holds a BEng(Civ) and BEng(Env), both with First Class Honours, Dean’s Medal and University Medal, from University of Newcastle, Australia.

Catherine is now a management consultant at a top tier firm serving investors, corporates and startups in the real asset space (natural resources, infrastructure, real estate and related material supply chains) on strategy, transactions and sustainability. She leverages 10+ years’ industry experience at the intersection of real assets, technology and sustainability, having previously advised climate tech startups, dappled in real estate and proptech, and worked as an engineer at a top Fortune 500 company in the energy sector and government corporation in the water sector.

Catherine has been published in the Nature portfolio, is a John Monash Scholar and was recognised in Forbes 30 Under 30 for Industry Innovation.

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Catherine Sutton-Brady

Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Sydney

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Catherine Sweet

A certified Speech and Language Pathologist in Canada and the United States, Catherine is a specialist in North American English phonology. She leads the Accent Clinic at Dalhousie University, serving members of the public who have difficulty being understood because of their accent, and also training Speech and Language Pathology graduate clinical students. Since 2018, she has been an adjunct professor teaching Dalhousie's CMSD 5020, Clinical Phonetics, where Speech and Language Pathology and Audiology students learn to describe, transcribe, and apply the science of speech sounds to their clinical practice.

Catherine is an advocate for Canadian Basic Income, and serves as the Secretary of BIGNS - Basic Income Guarantee Nova Scotia, an affiliate of Coalition Canada.

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Catherine Tylan

Postdoctoral Researcher in Biology, Penn State
Catherine Tylan works primarily in physiology and ecology, answering questions regarding the effects of stress, invasive species, and temperature on the physiology, metabolism, and immune function of wild animals. Recent work has also included assessing interactions between wildlife, their environment, and ectoparasite infestations.

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Catherine Vanner

Assistant Professor of Educational Foundations, University of Windsor
Catherine Vanner is an Assistant Professor of Educational Foundations and the Vice President of Research and Innovation Research Chair for the Faculty of Education at the University of Windsor. She uses qualitative and participatory research to study the relationship between gender, education, and violence in diverse country contexts.

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Catherine Wilding

Senior Research Assistant, Marine Ecology, Marine Biological Association
I am a marine ecologist at the Marine Biological Association (UK). My research focusses on restoration, cultivation and harvesting management of marine resources, such as kelp forests.

With a keen interest in applied research outcomes, I work closely with industry partners. My work also explores how benthic ecosystems respond to environmental change, such as climate change and marine heat waves, and seeks solutions to improve marine stewardship.

I hold a Master’s in Research degree in Marine Biology, commercial boating and scientific diving qualifications.

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Catherine Wilson

Reader in Environmental Hydraulics, Cardiff University
My research area is environmental hydraulics in river systems with an emphasis on nature-based solutions for flooding, the hydro-environmental impact of in-stream installations (e.g. turbines, weirs, culverts, gates) and microplastic pollution. I have worked in the field of environment hydraulics and flooding for over 25 years and my research bridges the disciplines of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science. I was awarded Chartered Engineering status (CEng) in 2008.

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Catherine Wynne

Associate Dean for Research and Enterprise, Faculty of Arts, Cultures and Education, University of Hull
I am author of Lady Butler: War Artist and Traveller, 1846-1933 (2019), Bram Stoker, Dracula and the Victorian Gothic Stage (2013) and The Colonial Conan Doyle: British Imperialism, Irish Nationalism and the Gothic (2002). I have published scholarly editions of Bram Stoker's theatre reviews and theatrical writings (2012) and I have edited and co-edited collections on mesmerism in Victorian culture (2006), afterlives of Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes (2012), Bram Stoker (2016). I have also published journal articles and book chapters on Victorian and post-Victorian literature and visual culture. I am currently editing The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes for OUP and a joint edition of The Hound of the Baskervilles and The Valley of Fear for EUP.

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Catherine A. Sanderson

Poler Family Professor and Chair of Psychology, Amherst College
Catherine Sanderson received a bachelor's degree in psychology, with a specialization in Health and Development, from Stanford University, and received both masters and doctoral degrees in psychology from Princeton University. Her research has received grant funding from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Health. Professor Sanderson has published over 25 journal articles and book chapters in addition to four college textbooks, middle school and high school health textbooks, and trade books on parenting as well as how mindset influences happiness, health, and even how long we live (The Positive Shift). Her latest trade book, published in North America as Why We Act: Turning Bystanders Into Moral Rebels (Harvard University Press) and internationally as The Bystander Effect: The Psychology of Courage and Inaction (HarperCollins), examines why good people so often stay silent or do nothing in the face of wrongdoing. In 2012, she was named one of the country's top 300 professors by the Princeton Review.

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Catherine E Wood

Associate Professor and Clinical Psychologist, Swinburne University of Technology
Catherine is a Associate Professor and clinical psychologist at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia. Currently, she is the course director for the Master of Psychology (Clinical Psychology) and the Master of Counselling. She earned her PhD at La Trobe University, and is a member of the Australian Psychological Society College of Clinical Psychologists. Her research and clinical interest is in child and adolescent mental health, parenting, performance psychology and twin psychology. She has been in private practice for over 20 years.

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Catherine E. Wood

Associate Professor and Clinical Psychologist, Swinburne University of Technology
Catherine is a Associate Professor and clinical psychologist at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia. Currently, she is the course director for the Master of Psychology (Clinical Psychology) and the Master of Counselling. She earned her PhD at La Trobe University, and is a member of the Australian Psychological Society College of Clinical Psychologists. Her research and clinical interest is in child and adolescent mental health, parenting, performance psychology and twin psychology. She has been in private practice for over 20 years.

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Catherine Jane Archer

Senior Lecturer, Communication, Edith Cowan University
I am a researcher and senior lecturer specialising in social media and strategic communication at Edith Cowan University. My current research interests include social media, particularly related to families and health, with a complementary focus on social media influencer relations and ethics, and the blurring of lines between media, marketing, public relations and communication. Before working in academia, I had more than 15 years in industry, in services marketing, media and communication. I have recently joined the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child as an associate investigator.

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Catherine O. Johnson

Research Scientist in Public Health, University of Washington
Catherine O. Johnson is a Lead Research Scientist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. She received her MPH and PhD in Epidemiology from the University of Washington with a focus on cardiovascular disease. Dr. Johnson specializes in studying the burden of cardiovascular disease both globally and with a focus on disparities in burden in the United States.

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Catherine Page Jeffery

Lecturer in media and communications, University of Sydney
Catherine Page Jeffery is a lecturer in media and communications at the University of Sydney. Her research examines families and digital media, with a particular focus on parenting in the digital age. She used to work in media regulation and cyber safety education.

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Cathleen LeGrand

Postgraduate researcher, University of Leeds
I am currently a 4th-year doctoral student in media and communication. My PhD research is inspired by my long career as a professional librarian outside the global north and I conducted my doctoral fieldwork in three locations in the Caribbean, southern Africa and South Asia. I am the author of multiple academic, pedagogical and professional publications in several domains.

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Cathryn Brown

Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, University of Central Lancashire
Cathryn has been working as a community pharmacist in the UK for over 25 years, and as an academic pharmacist for over ten. She has an interest in sexual health, in LGBTQ+ health, and in equality, diversity and inclusion.
Cathryn has worked in pharmacy regulation, and has appeared on radio and TV discussing pharmacy related topics.

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Cathrynne Henshall

Lecturer, School of Agricultural, Environmental and Veterinary Sciences, Charles Sturt University
I obtained a BA (Hons) from Sydney University in 1996. I have since completed a Master of Animal Science qualification with a focus on equine behaviour and welfare. I recently completed a PhD at Charles Sturt University in applied neuroscience, equine behaviour and learning.

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Cathy Buntting

Director, Wilf Malcolm Institute of Educational Research, University of Waikato
My research interests straddle science, technology and STEM education across the school years, with a strong focus on innovative approaches to education in these disciplines. I am proud to be Director of the award-winning Science Learning Hub - Pokapū Akoranga Pūtaiao and Principal Investigator for On2Science: Multiple affordances for learning through participation in online citizen science. I was formerly Director of Education for the Centres for Asia-Pacific Excellence, including leading the development of teachapac.nz.

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Cathy Clerbaux

Directrice de recherche au CNRS (LATMOS/IPSL), professeure invitée Université libre de Bruxelles, Sorbonne Université
Après une thèse en Sciences Physiques dans le domaine de la spectroscopie (Université Libre de Bruxelles) et plusieurs séjours aux USA, j’ai orienté mes recherches vers l'étude de l'évolution de la composition atmosphérique sous l’influence des activités humaines, à partir de données satellite obtenues par spectroscopie infrarouge. Je collabore avec les agences spatiales et j'ai aussi eu l'occasion de contribuer aux rapports du GIEC et WMO-ozone.

Mon projet-phare c'est la mission IASI, qui vole actuellement sur la famille de satellite Metop. Ces dernières années avec mon équipe j'ai démontré le potentiel des sondeurs infrarouges pour surveiller les pics de pollution, les grands feux de biomasse, les panaches de cendres volcaniques que les avions doivent éviter, les émissions d’ammoniac associées à l’agriculture intensive, et la formation du trou dans la couche d’ozone.

Affiliations: Directrice de recherche CNRS et Professeure invitée ULB

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Cathy Creswell

Professor of Developmental Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford
My research mainly focuses on the development, maintenance and treatment of anxiety disorders in children and young people. My team in The Oxford Psychological Interventions for Children and adolescents (TOPIC) research group apply a broad range of methods (including experimental, longitudinal, clinical trial and qualitative methods and systematic reviews) with children, young people and families in both community and clinical settings, with the ultimate aim of improving access to and outcomes from psychological treatments for these common conditions.

https://www.psy.ox.ac.uk/people/catharine-creswell

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Cathy Hope

Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts and Design; Coordinator, Play, Creativity and Wellbeing Project, Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, University of Canberra
Associate Professor Cathy Hope is Engagement and Impact Director in the Faculty of Arts and Design, and Coordinator of the Play, Creativity and Wellbeing Project in the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra. This applied research project critically examines the role and capability of play in cultural practice across the lifespan and is currently investigating the potential of play in enlivening cities, growing communities and enhancing wellbeing.

Cathy has facilitated hundreds of local collaborative and innovative real world cross-sector projects and produced multiple government and industry reports that aim to improve people and place outcomes and wellbeing in the ACT. In 2019 Cathy led the national award-winning Haig Park Experiments with a cross-sector consortium, which piloted 26 creative ‘experiments’ to transform the once unsafe and unused Canberra green space into a loved community hub. Cathy also founded Play Activation Network ACT – an interdisciplinary and collaborative collective of over 80 local professionals dedicated to making Canberra a more playful and playable city. In 2021 Cathy won the UC Citizen of the Year Award for her significant contributions to Canberra.

Cathy has written extensively on alternative cultures in their initial experimental phases – including film festivals, farmers’ markets and Australian youth radio station Triple J. Cathy programmed films for the early Canberra International Film Festivals, and co-directed the Canberra Short Film Festival. She has worked in a freelance capacity for the Australian media, including film and travel reviewer for The Canberra Review, chief editor of a Melbourne city guide and other publications including Rolling Stone magazine.

Play - as a cultural mechanism, as a strategy for enhancing well being, and as an enabler of engagement, creative practice, and disruption – is at the core of Cathy's freelance writing, research, engagement and teaching pursuits and practice.

Cathy thinks herself lucky.

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Cathy Mihalopoulos

Professor, Monash University
Cathy Mihalopoulos is the inaugural head of the Division of Health Economics in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University. Her major field of research interest is the economics of mental health and psychosocial care, with a special focus on economic evaluation and associated methodologies.

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Cathy Montgomery

Reader in Psychopharmacology, Liverpool John Moores University
Dr Cathy Montgomery is a Reader in Psychopharmacology and Head of the Institute for Health Research at Liverpool John Moores University. Dr Montgomery’s PhD research investigated the effects of the recreational drugs ecstasy, cannabis and cocaine on working memory and the fractionated model of executive functioning. Since this time, her research has developed to investigate the effects of drugs on various aspects of cognitive function and their neurophysiological, neuroendocrine and neuroelectric effects. From 2006-2019, Cathy was Honorary Secretary of the Psychobiology Section of the British Psychological Society and currently leads the Marginalised Groups sub-theme of the NIHR funded Applied Research Collaboration North West Coast.

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Cathy Risdon

Professor and Chair, Family Medicine, McMaster, McMaster University
On Faculty with McMaster since 1995, working as a family doctor and an educator with a speciality in healthcare and team communication, doctor-patient relationships, systems change and leadership development. Currently Chair of the Department and Lead Physician for our Family Health Team.

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