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Cyma Hibri

PhD, University of Sydney
Cyma Hibri is a second-year PhD student living and working on Gadigal land. Their research is on the influences of humanitarian ideologies and practices in documentaries made in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle.

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Cymie Payne

Associate Professor of Human Ecology and Law, Rutgers University
Cymie R. Payne is an Associate Professor in the Department of Human Ecology and the Law School at Rutgers University.

She has represented the interests of the international community in the marine environment as legal counsel before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in Hamburg, on behalf of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and has provided expert advice before the International Court of Justice and other international courts. She previously practiced natural resource and environmental law with the United Nations, the U.S. Department of the Interior and the law firm of Goodwin, Procter. For six years, she participated in landmark decisions on the legal responsibility of aggressor states for the restoration and remediation of damage to the environment from armed conflict as counsel to the United Nations Compensation Commission in Geneva, Switzerland. As Director of the Global Commons Project at University of California Berkeley’s Center for Law, Energy and the Environment, she focused on the linkage of state and international climate policy, particularly with respect to emissions trading systems; conflicts of state law with international trade; and regulating risks of new technologies such as carbon sequestration, where she was also a lecturer in residence on international courts and climate change law.

She has served on the Program Committee of the American Society for International Law and the International Law Association Committee on Sustainable Natural Resource Management for Development. She currently serves at the Chair of the Ocean Law Specialist Group of the World Commission on Environmental Law of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. She is a Fellow of the American College of Environmental Lawyers. She holds a Master’s degree from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a Juris Doctor from the University of California, Berkeley.

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Cynthia Alkon

Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
Education
LL.M. in Dispute Resolution, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law
J.D., U.C. Hastings College of Law
Hastings International and Comparative Law Review, Associate Articles Editor and Staff Member
B.A. in International Relations, San Francisco State University, magna cum laude

Expertise
Dispute resolution, including negotiation
Plea bargaining
Specialty courts: drug courts, veteran’s courts, mental health courts, etc.
Criminal procedure
Comparative criminal procedure
Rule of law development

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Cynthia Firey Eakin

Dr. Cynthia Eakin is an Associate Professor of Accounting. She currently serves as the Associate Dean for Academic Programs at the Eberhardt School of Business. She also is the school's Learning Assessment Coordinator.

Dr. Eakin earned a Ph.D. in accounting as well as a Master of Accounting degree with special emphasis in taxation from The Florida State University in 1993. She has over 20 years of teaching experience in all areas of accounting and taxation at both the graduate and undergraduate level. She was an assistant professor at the University of Hawaii's Manoa campus for four years before coming to the Eberhardt School. She has published research in the areas of earnings management, disclosure ethics, and insider trading.

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Cynthia Leung

Adjunct Professor, Victoria University
Dr Cynthia Leung is an educational psychologist. She is currently Adjunct Professor, Mitchell Institute, Victoria University, Honorary Professor, Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The University of Hong Kong and Honorary Professor, Department of Applied Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. She was formerly Professor and Psychology Panel Chair at the Department of Applied Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, and the program leader of the Master of Educational and Child Psychology program in The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. She was awarded the Medal of Honour by the Hong Kong Government in July 2019 in recognition of her contribution to special education. Dr Leung’s research includes parenting education, test development, program evaluation, cross-cultural psychology, migrant adjustment, child and adolescent well-being, and she has published extensively in these areas.

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Cynthia Meyers

Cynthia Meyers studies the advertising industry, past, present and future, and its role in the development of radio/TV and digital media. She also studies the television and radio industry, past, present, and future, and shifting business models.

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Cynthia (Xinzhu) Li

PhD candidate studying menopause and sleep, University of Sydney
PhD candidate at the University of Sydney's School of Health Science. Conducting research about menopause and sleep.

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Cynthia Faye Barlow

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Australian Centre for Housing Research, University of Adelaide
Dr Cynthia Barlow is a researcher at the Australian Centre for Housing Research.
Her research will determine just how cold Australian homes are, who is most at risk and why.

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Cyntrice Thomas

Instructional Associate Professor, Sport Management, University of Florida
Cyntrice Thomas is a lecturer in the Department of Sport Management. Prior to coming to UF, she was a professor of Sport Business at Jacksonville University in Jacksonville, FL.

She is a graduate of Florida State University and she holds a Juris Doctor from Tulane University as well. She is a licensed attorney in the District of Columbia and state of Virginia. After practicing law for a few years she pursued her PhD in Kinesiology from the University of Georgia.

Her research interests include:
• Legal aspects of sports
• The application of antitrust law in sports
• Collective bargaining and labor issues in sports
• Social issues in sports

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Cyprian Broodbank

Disney Professor of Archaeology, Director, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge
As an undergraduate at Oxford I studied history and received an education in archaeology from Andrew Sherratt. I took an MA in Aegean and Anatolian prehistory at Bristol, and first came to Cambridge in 1987 to start a PhD with John Cherry. I returned briefly to Oxford as a junior research fellow in 1991, and from 1993 spent twenty years at UCL’s Institute of Archaeology, starting as lecturer in Aegean archaeology and ending as professor of Mediterranean archaeology. In 2014 I returned to Cambridge to take up my current position. In 2015 I was elected a fellow of the British Academy. I have held visiting fellowships at All Souls, Oxford, and at institutions in the US. My books have won the Runciman Prize, James R. Wiseman Prize, Wolfson History Prize and Premio Nonino.

I see archaeology as a form of deep history, as the best way of understanding the global experience of humankind over time and why we are where we are today. My interests are therefore broad, comparative and not period-specific. My first grounding was in the Aegean, where I have been centrally involved in a project on the island of Kythera for the last twenty years. The Aegean, not least as an in-between place in spatial, analytical and interpretative terms, taught me the value of theory, material culture study, landscape archaeology, archaeological science, comparison and connectivity. From there my interests led outwards to island archaeology world-wide and to the overall early history of the Mediterranean, itself a space that brings together Europe, Africa and Asia. My most recent projects explore the long-term dynamics of Mediterranean Africa, and the archaeology of politics and urban life through the lens of fieldwork on Iron Age to Roman Kythera. I have a long-term interest in trans-Eurasian cultural processes and in the scope for an archaeology of oceanic connectivity.

Key publications:
Broodbank, C. and G. Lucarini 2019. ‘Mediterranean Africa, 9600-1000 BC: an interpretive synthesis of knowns and unknowns’ Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 32, 2.
Broodbank, C. 2018. ‘Does island archaeology matter?’, in A. Knodell and T. Leppard (eds.) Regional Approaches to Social Complexity; Studies in Honour of John F. Cherry, 188-206. Sheffield: Equinox.
Broodbank, C. 2013. The Making of the Middle Sea: A History of the Mediterranean from the Beginning to the Threshold of the Classical World. London: Thames and Hudson.
Broodbank, C. 2010. ‘“Ships a-sail from over the rim of the sea”: voyaging, sailing and the making of Mediterranean societies c. 3500-500 BC’, in A. Anderson, J.H. Barrett and K. Boyle (eds.) The Global Origins of Seafaring (McDonald Institute Monographs), 249-64. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Broodbank, C. and E. Kiriatzi 2007. ‘The first “Minoans” of Kythera re-visited: technology, demography and landscape in the pre-palatial Aegean’, American Journal of Archaeology 111: 241-74.
Broodbank, C. 2007. ‘The pottery’, in C. Renfrew, C. Doumas, L. Marangou and G. Gavalas (eds.), Keros, Dhaskalio Kavos: The Investigations of 1987-88 (McDonald Institute Monographs), 115-237. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Broodbank, C. 2006. ‘The origins and early development of Mediterranean maritime activity’, Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 19: 199-230.
Broodbank, C. 2004. ‘Minoanisation’, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 50: 46-91.
Broodbank, C. 2000. An Island Archaeology of the Early Cyclades. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Broodbank, C. 1989. ‘The longboat and society in the Cyclades in the Keros-Syros culture’, American Journal of Archaeology 93: 319-37.

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Cyril Labbé

Professor of Computer Science, Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA)

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Cyril Tarquinio

Professeur de psychologie clinique, Université de Lorraine
Responsable Equipe EPSAM/APEMAC EA 4360
Directeur Centre Pierre Janet - http://centrepierrejanet.univ-lorraine.fr/
Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of Trauma and Dissociation (Elsevier) -
Associate-Editor of the European Journal of Sexology and Sexual Health / Revue Européenne de Sexologie et de Santé Sexuelle (Elsevier)
Responsable du Master de Psychologie clinique de l'Université de Lorraine (site de Metz).

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Cyrille Bret

Géopoliticien, Sciences Po
Enarque et normalien, auditeur de l'institut des hautes études de défense nationale (IHEDN). Agrégé de philosophie et docteur, il a enseigné notamment à l'ENS, à l'université de New York, à l'université de Moscou, à Polytechnique et à Sciences-Po. Il dirige le site Eurasia Prospective et collabore régulièrement aux Echos, au Huffington Post, à Telos, à New Eastern Europe en français, en anglais et en russe. Chercheur associé à l'Institut Notre Europe Jacques Delors.

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Cyrille François

Ingénieur en génie de l’environnement et docteur en urbanisme, Université Gustave Eiffel
Cyrille François est ingénieur en génie de l’environnement et docteur en urbanisme. Ses travaux de recherche portent sur l’évaluation environnementale des mobilités quotidiennes des individus et des marchandises en mobilisant des modèles de mobilité et de trafic couplés à l’analyse de cycle de vie des systèmes de transports.

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D'amy Steward

Master's Student in Biology, University of Guam
Steward is a master’s student at the UOG Marine Laboratory. Her research focuses on coral reef restoration through sexual propagation of corals and novel settlement substrate for coral larvae. Her project aims to understand how ecological processes and resilience influence coral restoration with sexually propagated corals.

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D. Alex Quistberg

Associate Research Professor, Urban Health Collaborative, Drexel University
Alex Quistberg is Associate Research Professor in the Urban Health Collaborative and the Department of Environmental & Occupational Health. He also has a courtesy appointment as Adjunct Professor in the School of Medicine in Universidad de los Andes, Bogota, Colombia.

His current research focuses on the epidemiology of road traffic safety, the built environment, and global and urban health. His work implements methods to measure the built environment objectively, including from geographic information systems (GIS), virtual audits, and artificial intelligence via computer vision and deep learning. He currently leads the Built Environment, Pedestrian Injury, and Deep Learning (BEPIDL) study funded by the Fogarty International Center at NIH and the Urban Health and Climate Change in Informal Settlements in Latin America Study (ESCALA) study funded by the Lacuna Fund. Both these grant are in partnership with the Universidad de los Andes, and the latter also with Universidad del Norte in Barranquilla, Colombia. He is also a co-investigator of the SALURBAL project, funded by Wellcome Trust. His work has primarily focused on improving safety for walking and biking, including the evaluation of policies on road safety outcomes. He is affiliated with The Society for the Advancement of Violence and Injury Research (SAVIR) and the Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER).

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Daan van der Veen

Senior Lecturer in Sleep and Chronobiology in the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey

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Dadang I K Mujiono

Faculty member of International Relations Department, Universitas Mulawarman
Dadang is a faculty member of the international relations department of Mulawarman University - Indonesia. Currently, he undertakes his Doctoral degree at the National University of Singapore.

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Dae Hee Kwak

Associate Professor of Sport Management, University of Michigan
Dr. Kwak is an Associate Professor of Sport Management in the School of Kinesiology at the University of Michigan and the Director of the Center for Sport Marketing Research. His research focuses on sport consumer behavior, exploring how cognitive and emotional factors shape decisions and behaviors in sport-related consumption contexts. Recently, he has published research on consumer responses to athlete activism and mental health issues in sports.

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Dahwi Ahn

Graduate Research Assistant in Psychology, Iowa State University
Ph.D. candidate in cognitive psychology, Iowa State University (degree expected in 2024)

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Daile Zhang

Assistant Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, University of North Dakota

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Daisy Gibbs

Evaluation Officer, Burnet Institute

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Daisy Matthews

PhD candidate in Sociology, exploring the lives of religious and spiritual sex workers, Nottingham Trent University
I am a third year PGR student at Nottingham Trent university. I hold an interest in identity management of sex workers, lived religion and intimacy. I utilise creative research methods throughout my PhD to analyse lived experiences of sex workers. I also am interested in policy related research which advocates for the decriminalisation of the sex industry.

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Daisy McManaman

PhD Candidate, Centre for Women's Studies, University of York
Daisy McManaman is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher based in Glasgow, Scotland. She holds a BA (hons) in Fine Art Photography from the Glasgow School of Art, and an MFA in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Daisy is a PhD candidate at University of York’s Centre for Women’s Studies, where her thesis project is currently titled: "A Girl Resembles a Bunny" A Feminist Reanalysis of Representations of Women in Playboy.

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Dakotah Tyler

Ph.D. Candidate in Astrophysics, University of California, Los Angeles
Dakotah Tyler went from Division I college football at the University of Kentucky to studying the other worlds in our galaxy. After an injury, Dakotah transitioned to academia, starting at a community college and eventually becoming a graduate student at UCLA where he is currently a Ph.D. candidate. Dakotah's research focuses on exoplanets - planets that orbit stars other than our Sun. Dakotah studies how these planets come to be and how they evolve time. He is also a passionate science communicator and public educator that values fostering excitement about our universe to audiences of all ages and backgrounds.

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Dal Yong Jin

Professor, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University
Dal Yong Jin is a Distinguished SFU Professor. After working as a journalist for many years, he completed his Ph.D. in the Institute of Communications Research at the University of Illinois in 2005. Jin’s major research and teaching interests are on digital platforms and digital games, globalization and media, transnational cultural studies, and the political economy of media and culture.

He is the author of numerous books, including Korea’s Online Gaming Empire (MIT Press, 2010), New Korean Wave: transnational cultural power in the age of social media (University of Illinois Press, 2016), Smartland Korea: mobile communication, culture and society (University of Michigan Press, 2017), Globalization and Media in the Digital Platform Age (Routledge, 2019), and Transmedia Storytelling in East Asia (ed. Routledge, 2020). Jin has also published many articles in scholarly journals, such as New Media and Society, The Information Society, Media, Culture and Society, International Journal of Communication, Telecommunications Policy, Television and New Media, Games and Culture, and Information Communication and Society.

He is the founding book series editor of Routledge Research in Digital Media and Culture in Asia while directing the Center for Policy Research on Science and Technology (CPROST) at SFU.

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Dale Mitchell

Lecturer in Law, University of the Sunshine Coast
Dr Dale Mitchell is a Lecturer in Law at the University of the Sunshine Coast with a keen interest in the intersection between law and culture. His work within the field of cultural legal studies uses cultural artefacts (films, video games, novels, statues, costumes, interviews, etc) as a way of re-reading concepts of law and justice. This scholarship has gained national and international acclaim.

In 2022, Dale was awarded the Julien Mezey Dissertation Prize from the US-based Association for the Study of Law, Culture and Humanities, who hailed his work as ‘innovative and rigorous’ and demonstrating a ‘theoretical clarity that pushes legal analysis forward in creative and engaging ways’.

Dale is Secretary of the Law, Literature and the Humanities Association of Australasia.

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Dale Rae

Director of Sleep Science and associate professor at the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town
Dale Rae is the director of Sleep Science and an associate professor at the University of Cape Town. Her research focuses on sleep and circadian rhythms (the body’s 24h clock). She is particularly interested in how sleep is associated with health, disease and obesity, and the relationship between sleep, the body clock, and athletic and work-place performance. She is affiliated to the South African Society for Sleep and Health, World Sleep Society and European Society for Sleep Research

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Dale Squires

Adjunct Professor of Economics, School of Global Policy and Strategy, University of California, San Diego
Dale Squires is Adjunct Professor of Economics, University of California San Diego, and former Senior Scientist with US NOAA Fisheries. He is an applied economist and econometrician working on national and international conservation, environment and resource issues. He is the co-author or co-editor of 11 books and about 150 peer-reviewed scholarly papers. He has considerable experience in developing countries, international treaty negotiations, member of US State Department delegations to international organizations, and as independent consultant to international organizations. He is the architect of both national and international resource management plans. He has a B.Sc. and M.Sc. in applied economics from the University of California Berkeley and Ph.D. from Cornell University.

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Dalia Alazzeh

Lecturer in Accounting and Finance, University of the West of Scotland
Dr. Dalia Alazzeh is a lecturer in accounting and finance at the University of West of Scotland (UWS) and Early Career Researcher (ECR). Dalia has completed her PhD degree at the University of Essex through Essex doctoral scholarship and her thesis contributed to the growing literature on public sector accounting in settler-colonial context. Dalia received her MSc in International Accounting and Finance from the University of Sussex through the HESPAL British council scholarship scheme.

Dalia’s research interests focus on public sector accounting, environmental accounting, and management accounting research broadly. Dalia is an associate fellow of higher education and has almost 9 years of academic experience in the UK and overseas. Dalia has recently attended big data course with the university of Cambridge/2020. Other Professional qualifications include a diploma in IPSAS/CIPFA and CertPFM/ ACCA.

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Dameyon Bonson

Suicide Prevention, Macquarie University
Dameyon is of the Jawoyn peoples from the Mangarrayi of the Mataranka region (NT) and the Bari Clan of the western island group Kala Lagaw Ya, called the Wagedagam on Mabuiag Island (TSI). Our totem is the saltwater crocodile.

Dameyon is a gay male, and his pronouns are he/him. He is recognised as an Indigenous suicide prevention subject matter expert, specifically in Indigenous LGBTQIA suicide prevention. Dameyon has extensive experience working in and with remote Indigenous communities in suicide prevention and is the founder of Black Rainbow, Australia’s first and only national Indigenous LGBTIQA suicide prevention charity organisation.

He holds a post-graduate qualification in Suicidology and is currently undertaking his final year of the Master of Suicidology by research. Dameyon’s work has been the catalyst for three Indigenous LGBTQIA suicide prevention research studies underway in Australia. He currently leads a co-design project with Indigenous LGBTQIA young people in the NT to create safer homes and communities.

In 2016 he designed and developed the first workforce development Indigenous LGBTQIA Inclusive Practices in Mental Health and Suicide Prevention workshop, and has delivered it to over 500 people in remote, regional, and urban Australia.

Dameyon is an independent suicide prevention practitioner in his hometown of Darwin in the NT, Australia.

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Damian Mellifont

Lived Experience Fellow, Centre for Disability Research and Policy, University of Sydney
Dr Damian Mellifont is a Lived Experience Postdoctoral Fellow and member of the Centre for Disability Research and Policy (CDRP) leadership team at The University of Sydney. Damian is also lead Editor of the Disability Studies Collection at Lived Places Publishing.

As a neurodivergent researcher specialising in disability studies and policy, Dr Mellifont enjoys undertaking evidence-based projects that help to:
- inform and evaluate disability policy, programs and services
- promote diversity and inclusion
- progress more people with disability into employment and leadership roles
- accommodate neurodivergent staff (and prospective staff) on an individualised basis
- reveal the work performance strengths of neurodivergence
- expose and oppose neuro-discrimination
- debunk ableist stereotypes
- stop the bullying of neurodivergent employees
- support the legal rights of people with disability
- encourage ethical media reporting of disability - and
- advance neurodivergent pride.

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Damian Radcliffe

Caroline S. Chambers Professor in Journalism, University of Oregon

Damian Radcliffe is the Carolyn S. Chambers Professor in Journalism at the University of Oregon, an Honorary Research Fellow at Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Culture Studies, and a Fellow of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA).

He is an experienced digital analyst, consultant, journalist, and researcher who has worked in senior and mid-level editorial, research, and policy positions for the past two decades in the UK, Middle East, and now the USA.

A life-long digital intrapaneur, Damian has led new creative and research initiatives at the BBC, Ofcom (the UK Communications Regulator), CSV—a volunteering and social action charity—and Qatar’s Ministry of Information and Communications Technology (ictQATAR).

Damian is a regular contributor to major media outlets such as the BBC, CBS Interactive (ZDNet), and The Huffington Post, as well as a number of other outlets.

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Damián Tuset Varela

Investigador en Derecho Internacional Público e IA. Tutor Máster Relaciones Internacionales y Diplomacia UOC, UOC - Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
Interesado en las Relaciones Internacionales e Inteligencia Artificial, la Ciberdiplomacia y Geopolítica. Doctorando en Derecho Internacional Público e Inteligencia Artificial en la Universidad de Jaén. Máster en Ciencia y Derecho. Máster en Derecho Público y de la Administración Pública. Máster en Dirección Pública y Liderazgo Institucional. Especialista en Seguridad y Ciberseguridad. Especialista en Propiedad Intelectual, Patentes y Protección de Datos. Graduado en Derecho. Jefe de Sección en el Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores, Unión Europea y Cooperación. Tutor en el Máster de Relaciones Internacionales y Diplomacia de la UOC-UNITAR.

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Damiano Spina

Senior Lecturer, School of Computing Technologies, RMIT University

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