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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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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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Damien Gleadall-Siddall

PhD Student in Sport, Health and Exercise Science, University of Hull

I am a PhD student and Graduate Teaching Assistant, teaching and researching within the area of exercise physiology. I am broadly conducting research looking at the health benefits of high intensity interval training (HIIT), an increasingly popular type of exercise. I believe exercise is an important part of daily life and can have profound benefits to your health over time.

I work and study at The University of Hull where I am studying for a PhD in Sport, Health and Exercise Science. I also obtained my Master of Science in Sport Science and Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Human Biology at The University of Hull.

My main research interest is attempting to make HIIT accessible to a larger portion of the population by reducing the intensity needed while training, so making this form of exercise easier to complete. While I appreciate this form of training will not be suitable for all, I do believe, a well-designed HIIT programme can be used as part of someone's regular training programme.

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Damien Riggs

Associate Professor in Social Work, Australian Research Council Future Fellow, Flinders University

After completing his PhD, Damien Riggs undertook a three-year ARC-funded postdoctoral fellowship before commencing his role as a lecturer in Social Work at Flinders University. He is currently an Australian Research Council Future Fellow, and an Associate Professor in social work.

Area of Research: Critical kinship studies, Critical race and whiteness studies, Gender and sexuality studies.

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Damien Scalia

Professeur en droit international pénal, Études empiriques du droit, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB)
Professeur de droit à la Faculté de droit et de criminologie de l’Université libre de Bruxelles. Après avoir réalisé des recherches sur les peines prononcées par les juridictions internationales pénales ainsi qu’en droit pénitentiaire, je mène depuis une dizaine d'année une recherche, alliant sociologie et droit, sur l’expérience pénale nationale et internationale des personnes jugées pour crimes de masse. J'ai été chercheur invité à la Columbia Law School et à l’Université d’Oxford et est Professeur invité dans plusieurs universités européennes.

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Dan Immergluck

Professor of Urban Studies, Georgia State University
Dan Immergluck is Professor of Urban Studies at Georgia State University. His research concerns housing, race, neighborhood change, gentrification, segregation, real estate markets, and community development. Dr. Immergluck is the author of five books, and over 120 scholarly articles, book chapters, and research reports. He has consulted to the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, the US Department of Justice, philanthropic foundations, and local legal aid and other nonprofits and government agencies.

Professor Immergluck has been cited and quoted in the New York Times, the Washington Post, National Public Radio, the Wall Street Journal, the Atlanta Journal Constitution, WABE Radio, and many other international, national, and local media outlets. He has testified several times before the U.S. Congress and the Federal Reserve Board. He has served as a Visiting Scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and as a Senior Fellow at the Center for Community Progress in Washington, D.C.

Recently, Dr. Immergluck served on Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens’ Transition Committee. His most recent book, Red-Hot City: Housing, Race, and Exclusion in Twenty-First Century Atlanta, was published in October 2022 by the University of California Press.

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Dan McEvoy

Associate Research Professor in Climatology, Desert Research Institute
Dr. McEvoy is a researcher with the Western Regional Climate Center. His research interests are interdisciplinary and span the fields of climate, hydrology, and meteorology. His research interests include advancing drought monitoring technology, seasonal drought prediction, the role of evaporative demand on drought, quality and uncertainty assessment of weather observations, and climate modeling.

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Dan Peppe

Associate Professor of Geosciences, Baylor University
Understanding the terrestrial ecosystem and its response to global climate change is critical for assessing the impacts of current and future climate change. However, we still know relatively little about the way terrestrial ecosystems actually respond to climate change. My research is focused on understanding how environmental change drives evolutionary processes in plants and animals. Specifically, my lab’s research is focused on reconstructing ancient climates and ecosystems through time in North America and eastern Africa, and on developing better and more accurate paleoclimate and paleoecological proxies. To do this we integrate methods in paleobotany, ecology, paleoclimatology, sedimentology, stratigraphy, and paleomagnetism. Results from this research address a broad spectrum of questions aimed at understanding the underlying dynamics of environmental, biotic, and climatic change through time.

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Dan Royles

Associate Professor of History, Florida International University
I am the author of To Make the Wounded Whole: The African American Struggle against HIV/AIDS (UNC Press, 2020), which was a finalist for the Museum of African American History Stone Book Award. I have taught History at Florida International University since 2015.

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Dana Ruggiero

Dana Ruggiero is a Senior Lecturer in Learning Technology in the School of Education at Bath Spa University. She is involved in research initiatives from various European research institutes including the EU TEMPUS and ERASMUS programs.

Dana completed her Ph.D. in Learning Design and Technology from Purdue University and earned an M.A. in Education from Augsburg College. Her research interest focuses on praxis in design for persuasive technology, multimedia installations, and affective knowledge, including the application of games for social issues such as homelessness, juvenile offenders, children in care, and healthcare. In addition to speaking at international conferences and publishing in peer-reviewed journals she has edited a book on societal effects of persuasive games and is currently writing two other manuscripts around game design and learning.

Currently, Dana is involved in research focusing on player experience in social impact games, Bayesian statistical models to predict behaviour in serious games, and designing games for e-learning in teacher education.

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Danardo Jones

Assistant Professor of Law, University of Windsor
Danardo Jones joined the Faculty of Law as an Assistant Professor in January 2021. Professor Jones comes to the Faculty with years of criminal law experience, having worked as a staff lawyer at various Legal Aid organizations across Eastern Canada (Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia) and Ontario. He was also the Director of Legal Services for the African Canadian Legal Clinic. In that role, he intervened in precedent-setting cases before the Supreme Court of Canada (Tran v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2017 SCC 50; British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal v. Schrenk, 2017 SCC 62).

Professor Jones's research interests include criminal law, criminal procedure, criminal sentencing, and race and the law. His research draws on scholarly literature from law and cognate disciplines, including penology and criminology, law and geography, philosophy of law, critical race theory, and prison abolitionist and restorative justice literature.

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Daniel Acuña

Associate Professor of Computer Science, Affiliate Professor of Information Science, University of Colorado Boulder
Daniel Acuña is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He leads the Science of Science and Computational Discovery Lab. He works in science of science, a subfield of computational social science, and A.I. for science. He writes papers and builds web-based software tools to accelerate knowledge discovery.

Daniel’s research aims to understand historical relationships, mechanisms, and optimization opportunities of knowledge production. Daniel harnesses vast datasets about publications and citations and applies Machine Learning and A.I. to uncover rules that make publication, collaboration, and funding decisions more successful. Recently, he has been interested in biases in artificial intelligence and developing methods for detecting them. In addition, he has created tools to improve literature search, peer review, and detect scientific fraud. He has been funded by NSF, DDHS, Sloan Foundation, and DARPA through the SCORE project, and his work has been featured in Nature News, Nature Podcast, The Chronicle of Higher Education, NPR, and the Scientist.

In addition to his research, Daniel enjoys building communities around science of science and research integrity. He co-organizes the Science of Science Summer School (S4), the Computational Research Integrity (CRI-CONF) conference, and the Computational Research Integrity competitions. In addition, he is part of the ACM’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) council, contributing to the social justice initiative on publications, awards, and peer review.

Before joining Syracuse University, Acuña studied a Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities and was a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern University and the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. During his graduate studies, he received a NIH Neuro-physical-computational Sciences (NPCS) Graduate Training Fellowship, NIPS Travel Award, and a CONICYT-World Bank Fellowship. Daniel was born in Santiago, Chile, where he attended the University of Santiago.

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Daniel Bliss1

Master's Student in Entomology, Penn State
B.S. in Biology from Urisnus College

Areas of expertise: Ecology, Entomology, IPM, Spiders, Carabid Beetles

I am interested in the ecology of arthropods--how they interact with plants, with each other, and with us. My research looks for ways to use arthropod ecology to benefit agricultural efficiency, specifically through the process of biological control. Biological control is a strategy of pest management which uses natural enemies (predators and parasitoids primarily) as killing agents, reducing our reliance upon chemical insecticides. My projects are focused on improving this process, identifying new control agents and increasing the effectiveness of those we already use. I recently began studying spiders with the hopes of using them to control problematic pests in alfalfa, a common forage crop. The results so far are very promising.

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Daniel Bürkle

Senior Lecturer in Psycholinguistics, University of Central Lancashire
Daniel’s teaching and research go hand in hand, covering language variation across various aspects as well as the psychological underpinnings of language. He teaches, conducts research, and supervises and advises research students (undergraduate and postgraduate) in these areas.

Daniel mostly contributes to teaching in the various English Language undergraduate courses at the University of Central Lancashire. These contributions are united by his Humboldtian ideals of education and by research-based teaching practice: Creative ideas of doing so can come from well-established researchers just as well as from students, and so Daniel believes it is important to teach recent and empirically-founded results and to involve students in research – from having research projects as part of module assessments to projects in the annual Undergraduate Research Internship scheme.

In his early years in academia, Daniel was intrigued by the possibilities of explanation offered by systematic descriptions of language – for example, syntactic explanations for processes of language acquisition, and patterns of noun gender based on word structure. During his postgraduate years in Germany and New Zealand, Daniel was introduced to the more complex descriptions of language variation as a systematic or statistically describable phenomenon, further revealing the complex knowledge that every competent speaker of a language has. This has led to Daniel’s having research, teaching, and supervision interests in the fields of psycholinguistics and sociolinguistics: How exactly do we understand and use language, and how do expectations and experience affect these processes? In what ways and to what extent does language vary between different users of the same language and between different utterances by the same user? How do language users react to and process this variation? Daniel has also worked on methodological questions in linguistics, such as statistical tests for different types of data, modifying established research methods so they can be used with participant groups like children or people with disabilities, and open-source research technology.

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Daniel Daylight

Community Manager Mt Druitt JustReinvest NSW, Indigenous Knowledge
Daniel is a proud Gamilaraay (NSW) man who has family ties to the Gubi Gubi nation (QLD). Daniel has a passion for helping Aboriginal children and youth caught in the criminal justice system and has spent his working life in the justice sector. He worked on the development of the Youth Koori Court (YKC) including consultation with community and development of the program with other stakeholders.

He believes if the appropriate support mechanisms are placed around our young Aboriginal people in the Justice system and we can empower them, then they can and will be among our leaders in the future. He is currently the Manager for Just Reinvest NSW in Mt Druitt. Daniel is also a Director of the Redfern Aboriginal Medical Service board and lifelong member of the organisation.

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Daniel Drache

Professor emeritus, Department of Politics, York University, Canada
My published work and research is on international political economy and its institutions, global inequality and development, counter-publics, NAFTA, economic integration and social movements. My most recent book, Has Populism Won?The War on Liberal Democracy , is co-authored with Marc D. Froese,ECW, 2022.

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Daniel Feller

Emeritus Professor of History, University of Tennessee
Daniel Feller is Distinguished Professor in the Humanities Emeritus and Editor/Director Emeritus of The Papers of Andrew Jackson. Feller came to UT as Professor of History and Jackson project director in 2003 and continued until his retirement in 2020. Previously he had taught for 17 years at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque and before that for three years at Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin.

Professor Feller’s scholarly interests encompass mid-nineteenth-century America as a whole, with special attention to Jacksonian politics and the coming of the Civil War. Besides the publications listed below, he has contributed to reference works and compilations including the Oxford Companion to United States History, Reader’s Guide to American History, Dictionary of American History, American National Biography, The Encyclopedia of American Political History, and the AHA Guide to Historical Literature. Feller’s critical essays and review articles have appeared in Reviews in American History, Documentary Editing, Tennessee Historical Quarterly, and on H-SHEAR. For 14 years Feller served as Conference Coordinator for the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic (SHEAR), and in 2018 he was the recipient of SHEAR’s Distinguished Service Award. His other recognitions include the Knoxville Area Transit Most Valuable Passenger Award and the Thomas Jefferson Prize of the Society for History in the Federal Government, awarded in 2017 for Volume X of The Papers of Andrew Jackson. Feller has spoken widely to public audiences and educators on Jacksonian Democracy, on Andrew Jackson’s presidential banking and Indian policies, and on slavery and the coming of the Civil War. He has given several presentations as a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians, and in 2000 he was a Commonwealth Fund Lecturer in American History at University College London. His major current project is to complete a study of Benjamin Tappan, a Jacksonian politician, scientist, social reformer, and freethinker.

Education
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1981

Selected Publications

Editor, The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volumes VII-XI, 1829–1833 (University of Tennessee Press, 2007–2019)

Editor, Harriet Martineau’s 1838 Retrospect of Western Travel (M. E. Sharpe, 2000), abridged with Editor's introduction, notes and, index.

The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995)

The Public Lands in Jacksonian Politics (University of Wisconsin Press, 1984)

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Daniel Gettings

PhD Candidate, Department of History, University of Warwick
I am currently a PhD candidate in the Department of History at the University of Warwick supervised by Professor Beat Kümin. My PhD is titled "Sustaining body and soul: the early modern English and their water, 1550 - 1750". It focuses on the cultural understandings of water and the relationship that early modern people had with it. Through this it hopes to explore aspects of how early modern people understood themselves, the world around them, and their place in it. My broader research interest include water, drinking history, and religious history, particularly the history of popular beliefs.

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Daniel Hending

My current research focuses on how and why African Elephants use seismic communication. My other ongoing research interests include the ecology and conservation of tropical forest habitat and its resident vertebrate fauna, particularly cheirogaleid lemurs in Madagascar. Additionally, I am interested in the use of bioacoustics for non-invasive biodiversity assessment at the ecosystem level and to disentangle the cryptic species complex.

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Daniel Hough

Dan Hough graduated from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in 1997. On leaving the North-East he headed for the Institute for German Studies at the University of Birmingham to complete his PhD. Following the completion of his doctoral studies in 2000 he spent another two years in Birmingham working on a Leverhulme Trust funded research project with Charlie Jeffery and then as an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow. He then moved to the University of Nottingham for a year before joining the department in the Autumn of 2003.

In his role as Director of the Sussex Centre for the Study of Corruption (SCSC) Dan regularly works with and advises practitioners in the anti-corruption community.

Dan also serves as the Chairman of the International Association for the Study of German Politics having previously served as both Secretary (2007-10) and Treasurer (2004-07)

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Daniel Kiel

FedEx Professor of Law; Author of The Transition: Interpreting Justice from Thurgood Marshall to Clarence Thomas, University of Memphis
Daniel Kiel is the FedEx Professor of Law at the University of Memphis, where he teaches Property, Constitutional Law, and Education & Civil Rights. His scholarly work centers of education law, as well as constitutional questions of citizenship and justice.

He is the director of The Memphis 13, a documentary film sharing the stories of the first graders who first desegregated schools in Memphis, and the author of The Transition: Interpreting Justice from Thurgood Marshall to Clarence Thomas (Stanford Univ. Press), which traces the lives and work of the two justices at the center of the most consequential Supreme Court transition of the past 75 years. In addition, Professor Kiel received a Fulbright Fellowship in 2015 and researched post-apartheid education policy at the University of the Free State in South Africa.

Professor Kiel's broader scholarly work has been published in a variety of journals and periodicals and has been shared at museums, universities, film festivals, and conferences across the country. At the University of Memphis, he has been awarded both the university-wide Distinguished Teaching Award and the Martin Luther King, Jr., Human Rights Award, and has served in multiple capacities, including as an associate director, at the Benjamin Hooks Institute for Social Change.

Education
J.D., Harvard Law School, 2004; B.A., University of Texas at Austin, 2001

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Daniel Maeso Miguel

Doctorando en biomedicina y oncología molecular, Universidad de Oviedo
Graduado en Ciencias Biomédicas por la Universidad de Lleida. Promoción 2013 - 2017

Máster en Biomedicina y Oncología Molecular por la Universidad de Oviedo. Promoción 2017-2018

Doctorando en el Programa de Doctorado Oficial en Biomedicina y Oncología Molecular de la Universidad de Oviedo, investigando en cáncer y envejecimiento en el Laboratorio del Doctor Carlos López Otín

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Daniel Mota-Rojas

Researcher

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Daniel Neyland

My research interests cover issues of governance, accountability and ethics in forms of science, technology and organization. I draw on ideas from ethnomethodology, science and technology studies (in particular forms of radical and reflexive scepticism, constructivism, Actor-Network Theory and the recent STS turn to markets and other forms of organizing) and my research is ethnographic in orientation. In particular I am interested in the question of how entities (objects, values, relationships, processes and also people) become of the world.

My substantive interests are quite varied. Across a number of research projects I have ethnographically engaged with: security and surveillance, traffic management, waste, airports, biometrics, parking, signposts, malaria vaccines, Universities, algorithms and speeding drivers. Through these projects I have looked into ontology, notions of equivalence, parasitism, the mundane, market failures, problems and solutions, deleting, value and the utility of social science.

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Daniel Romero-Alvarez

Ph.D. Candidate in Ecology of Infectious Diseases, University of Kansas
My name is Daniel Romero-Alvarez. I am originally from Ecuador and I am in my final year of the PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Kansas. I have a degree as a doctor in medicine but I changed subjects to explore how ecological determinantes might be driving outbreaks and epidemics. I publish academic papers on this subject on different disease systems including anthrax, malaria, and currently leprosy. My work can be reviewed in my personal website: www.romerostories.com

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Daniel Rowe

Dan is a third year Ph.D. candidate at the University of Oxford. In his doctoral thesis, ‘Fighting Rust: The Long Economic Crisis and the Rebuilding of the Northeast and Midwest’, Dan explores the political and economic forces that helped transform the Northeast and the Midwest from industrial to post-industrial during the 1970s and 1980s.

Chronicling the efforts that members of the business community, labor unions, community activists and elected officials (local and national) made to help struggling industries and geographic regions negotiate the shifting economic terrain between 1974 and 1988 Dan examines the interlinked histories of urban decline, deindustrialisation, and economic development. By thoroughly examining the political environment of the 1970s and 1980s from a local and regional level Dan hopes to challenge the assumption that the economic success of the 1990s was produced by the limited government and free market policies of the Reagan administration or the ingenuity of individual entrepreneurs.

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Daniel Rubenson

Professor of Political Science, Toronto Metropolitan University
I am a professor of political science specializing in political economy and political behaviour. I design, implement and analyze large scale field experiments to answer questions about the impact of institutions, social, economic and political conditions on behaviour and attitudes.

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Daniel Sailofsky

Lecturer, Department of Criminology, Middlesex University
I am criminologist/sociologist with an interest in gender and violence against, masculinity, sport sociology, sport labour, and the sociology of law. My interdisciplinary academic background includes formal training in law, sport management, criminology and sociology.

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Daniel Simms

Lecturer in Remote Sensing , Cranfield University
Daniel Simms graduated from the University of Plymouth in 2000 and worked as a GIS technician for Jacobs Babtie before studying for an MSc in Geographical Information Management at Cranfield. After working as the Spatial Data Manager for Kent County Council, he returned to Cranfield in 2004 to work on a UK Government project on illicit crop monitoring. The project delivered science-based support for decision makers through the integration of multi-resolution satellite and airborne imagery, digital photogrammetry, ground data collection and analysis. During the 6 year project he gained field experience in the operation and deployment of satellite receiving stations, collection of aerial photography and crop data.

Since 2009 Dr Simms has been involved in projects supporting the UNODC in monitoring of illicit crops; the dissemination of soil and terrain data through open web standards as part of the European contribution to a Global Soil Observing System (eSoter); and the integration of spatial hazard datasets based on future projections of extreme weather events as part of the CREW (Community Resilience to Extreme Weather) interdisciplinary project.
Current activities
Dr Daniel Simms is a specialist in applied remote sensing and GIS, researching the integration of imagery and spatial data for land and agricultural information

His interests are in the area of applied remote sensing for improved land and agricultural information. He is currently researching crop detection and cultivation estimation from field to regional scale through the integration of satellite and aerial imagery with ancillary spatial datasets. Of particular interest is the development of methodologies for deriving accurate and timely information from remotely sensed data with a minimal requirement for ground-based sampling.

Dr Simms lectures on the Geographical Information Management MSc Programme and has delivered training in remote sensing and GIS techniques to Afghan nationals under UN-sponsored capacity building projects, and ground data collection for the UK component of the 2013 EU LUCAS survey.

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Daniel F. Stone

Associate Professor of Economics, Bowdoin College
Dan is Associate Professor of Economics at Bowdoin College. He teaches behavioral economics, game theory, and microeconomics and his research is on media, sports, polarization, and socially responsible capitalism. He lives in Brunswick, ME with his spouse and two sons and is originally from Charlottesville, Virginia.

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Daniel L. Douek

Faculty Lecturer, International Relations, McGill University
My research specialization focuses on political violence in southern Africa. My teaching focuses on Africa and the Middle East.

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Daniel Martinez HoSang

Professor of Ethnicity, Race & Migration, Yale Divinity School
Daniel Martinez HoSang is a Professor of Ethnicity Race and Migration and American Studies and holds a secondary appointment in the Department of Political Science and serves on the Education Studies Advisory Committee.

His most recent book is A Wider Type of Freedom: How Struggles for Racial Justice Liberate Everyone (University of California Press, 2021).

HoSang is the co-author (with Joseph Lowndes) of Producers, Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity (University of Minnesota Press, 2019) and the author of the author of Racial Propositions: Ballot Initiatives and the Making of Postwar California (University of California Press, 2010) which was awarded the 2011 James A Rawley Prize from the Organization of American Historians.

He is the co-editor of three volumes: Seeing Race Again: Countering Colorblindness Across the Disciplines (with Kimberle Crenshaw, Luke Harris and George Lipsitz) University of California Press, 2019; Relational Formations of Race: Theory, Method and Practice (co-edited with Ramon Gutiérrez and Natalia Molina), University of California Press, 2019; and Racial Formation in the 21st Century (with Oneka LaBennett and Laura Pulido) University of California Press, 2012).

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Daniel Paül Agustí

Profesor de Geografía, Universitat de Lleida
Daniel Paül es doctor en Geografía y profesor agregado del grado de Turismo de la Universitat de Lleida. Coordinador del Máster en gestión de áreas de montaña. Sus principales líneas de investigación se centran en aspectos relacionados con la gestión de la imagen de la ciudad, especialmente en dos ámbitos: (1) la imagen proyectada por turistas en las redes sociales y (2) la imagen percibida por los ciudadanos en su vida cuotidiana. Ha publicado varios artículos y capítulos de libro sobre esta temática. Igualmente, es investigador principal del grupo de investigación consolidado “Territori i Societat” de la Generalitat de Catalunya (2021 SGR 01369).

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