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Nabiyla Risfa Izzati

Lecturer of Labour Law, Universitas Gadjah Mada
Nabiyla Risfa Izzati is a labour law lecturer in Faculty of Law Universitas Gadjah Mada. She is now a PhD student in Queen Mary University of London, researching on gender in gig economy. She completed her Bachelor of Law in Universitas Gadjah Mada in 2014 and her LLM degree in Leiden University, Netherland in 2015. Her research interest is in the labour law areas, specifically about labour rights, gig economy, and comparison study of international labour. She is also the Vice Director of Research Center for Law, Gender, and Society Universitas Gadjah Mada.

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Nader Habibi

Nader Habibi is the Henry J. Leir Professor of Practice in the Economics of the Middle East at Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle East Studies. His current research project is focused on labor market conditions for university graduates in the Middle East. He also maintains a website on issues of underemployment and overeducation in developing countries (www.overeducation.org)

Before joining Brandeis University in June 2007, he served as managing director of economic forecasting and risk analysis for Middle East and North Africa in Global Insight Ltd. Mr. Habibi has more than 25 years of experience in teaching, research and management positions; including vice-president for research in Iran Banking Institute (Tehran), assistant professor of economics in Bilkent University (Ankara), research fellow and lecturer on political economy of Middle East at Yale University. The author of one book on bureaucratic corruption and several articles in refereed journals; he earned his Ph.D. in economics at Michigan State University.

His most recent research projects include an analysis of the excess supply of college graduates in MENA countries, impact of economic sanctions on Iranian economy and the impact of Arab Spring uprisings on economic conditions of the affected countries. Habibi also serves as director of Islamic and Middle East Studies at Brandeis University. He has recently published a work of fiction about Middle East geopolitics titled: Three Stories One Middle East (2014).

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Nadia Bernaz

Associate Professor of Law, Wageningen University
Nadia Bernaz is Associate Professor in the Law group at Wageningen University (Netherlands). She holds a PhD in international law from Aix-Marseille University (France). Her research focuses on business accountability. Her book, Business and Human Rights - History Law and Policy, Bridging the Accountability Gap (Routledge, 2017) was rated as one of the best human rights books of all times. She has published in prestigious law and business journals such as Human Rights Quarterly, the International Journal of Constitutional Law, the Journal of Business Ethics, Business and Society and the Business and Human Rights Journal. She has a strong international experience and has taught students and delivered training to companies, governments, and civil society organizations around the world. She is the book review editor of the Business and Human Rights Journal and the editor of Springer’s “New Approaches to Business, Human Rights and the Environment” book series.

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Nadia Haq

ESRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Cardiff University
Dr Nadia Haq is a ESRC postdoctoral fellow based at the School of Journalism, Media and Culture at Cardiff University. Her doctoral research examined representations of Muslims in the media from the perspective of journalism practice. Her main research interests include journalism (legacy and digital), media and culture, and race, ethnicity and religion. Before joining academia, she was an international business journalist based in the Middle East for nearly a decade.

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Nadia Kougiannou

Associate Professor of Work and Employment, Nottingham Trent University
Dr Nadia K. Kougiannou is an Associate Professor of Work and Employment at Nottingham Business School. She also serves as the Deputy Director of Research Outputs at the institution. With a background in social anthropology, employment relations, HRM, and organizational behaviour, Nadia has extensive expertise in researching and teaching.

Her principal research interests include investigating the gig economy's impact on work and working conditions, the role of technology and app-work on employee voice, working conditions, and the employment relationship, employer practices and employee reactions in challenging contexts, such as economic recessions, and the impact trust and justice have on the operation and effectiveness of collective and representative voice.

Nadia has an impressive publication record, with her work appearing in renowned international journals such as the Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, Human Resource Management Journal, British Journal of Industrial Relations, British Journal of Management, New Technology, Work and Employment, and Journal of Business Research. Her publications are a testament to her dedication to advancing the field of work and employment relations and HRM through her rigorous and impactful research.

Apart from her academic work, Nadia is also an experienced consultant in the areas of employee voice, work in the gig economy, employment relations, trust, and organizational justice. With her outstanding academic credentials and expertise, she has much to offer her students and the wider community interested in the complex world of work and employment relations.

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Naeemah Clark

Associate Professor of Communications, Elon University

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Nafis Alam

Nafis Alam is an Associate Professor at the Nottingham University Business School (NUBS) in the University of Nottingham - Malaysia Campus (UNMC). Prior to this, he was attached with Monash University at Sunway campus where he worked as lecturer in finance. Before that he worked with Multimedia University, Malaysia and CMC Sudan where he was the coordinator of the International MBA program.

He has published quite extensively in the area of finance and his scholarly research has featured in leading journals like Journal of Assets Management, Journal of Banking Regulation, Journal of International Banking law & Regulation, Review of Islamic Economics; Journal of Internet Banking and Commerce and Journal of Financial Services Marketing among others.

He also co authored three books in Islamic Finance among them is Encyclopedia of Islamic Finance which is first of its kind and has sold over 1000 copies worldwide.Dr. Alam is also Visiting Lecturer for Durham Islamic Finance Summer School, Durham University, UK. He is reviewer for leading finance & Islamic finance journals. He has also participated in leading Islamic finance conferences worldwide among them significant was participation in Harvard Islamic Finance forum at Harvard Law School and Gulf Research Meeting at Cambridge University, UK.

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Nancy Bird

Postdoctoral research associate, UCL
I am a post-doctoral researcher in the Hellenthal group at UCL Genetics Institute. My research focuses on human population genetics.
My PhD, also at UCL, uncovered population structure and admixture in worldwide human groups and tried to relate these to historical factors, with a particular focus on African history.

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Nancy Modesitt

Nancy Modesitt is an Associate Professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law, where she teaches Employment Law and Employment Discrimination. Before becoming a law professor, she worked at the U.S. Department of Justice as well as at several large law firms, where she specialized in employment law, including employment discrimination law. She is the lead author of Whistleblowing: The Law of Retaliatory Discharge. In addition to her academic work on whistleblowing, Professor Modesitt has testified before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on its strategic enforcement plan and proposed restructuring that agency to improve its ability to combat discrimination.

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Nancy Southin

Associate Professor of Supply Chain Management, Thompson Rivers University
Nancy Southin is an Associate Professor at the Bob Gaglardi School of Business and Economics, Thompson Rivers University, where she teaches a variety of supply chain management courses. Her significant experience as a supply chain manager inspires her to pass on the importance of good supply chain management practices to students. Nancy’s research interests include responsible supply chains, and teaching innovations. She received her PhD from the University of Calgary.

Education
- PhD (Management with Specialization in Operations Management)
- Masters of Business Administration (University of Calgary)
- Bachelor of Commerce (Entrepreneurial Management) (Royal Roads University)
- Diploma of Technology (Operations Management) (BC Institute of Technology)

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Naomi Lightman

Associate Professor of Sociology, Toronto Metropolitan University
Naomi Lightman is Associate Professor of Sociology at Toronto Metropolitan University. Her areas of research expertise include migration, care work, gender, inequality, and research methodology. Her academic work has been published in journals including European Sociological Review, Journal of European Social Policy, International Migration Review and the Social Politics. In addition, she is the co-author of the second edition of the textbook Social Policy in Canada. Dr. Lightman has collaborated on research focused on immigration, race, and inequality with various social agencies and government bodies including Social Planning Toronto, the Wellesley Institute, the Calgary Local Immigration Partnership and the Calgary Immigrant Women’s Association.

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Naomi Pullin

I am a historian of the early modern British Atlantic, with specific interests in the place of women within dissenting communities. I am currently adapting my PhD thesis (obtained from the University of Warwick in 2014) into a monograph titled: 'Female Friends and the early Quaker Community: Gender and Identity in the Atlantic Age, 1650-1750'. It advances existing knowledge on the experiences and social interactions of Quaker women in England and the colonies between 1650 and 1750 by reconceptualising the relationship between female identity and domesticity.

I am developing an innovate new research project on female enmity and conflict, entitled 'Making Enemies: Conflict, Disputes and the Cultivation of Female Identity in the early modern British Atlantic'. This project will provide the first in-depth study of female enmities in the 17th and 18th centuries and will question whether female antagonisms had a distinctly gendered dimension and how this transformed as it crossed the Atlantic.

I am currently working as a Teaching Fellow in Early Modern British History at the University of Warwick. In 2014-2015 I worked as a programme co-ordinator at the University of Oxford for the interdisciplinary research Centre Women in the Humanities (WiH), led by Dr Selina Todd and Dr Senia Paseta and co-ordinated the History Faculty’s Centre for Gender, Identity and Subjectivity (CGIS). I also acted as the Senior Editor for the Interdisciplinary Research Journal 'Exchanges: the Warwick Research Journal' at the Institute of Advanced Study at the University of Warwick and am also on the Steering Committee of the Women’s History Network and will be acting as Committee Liaison Editor for their journal Women’s History.

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Naomi Stead

Dr Naomi Stead is Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Queensland, and Deputy Director of the research centre ATCH (Architecture | Theory | Criticism | History). Her research interests lie in the cultural studies of architecture - in its production, reproduction, and reception, and the place of architecture in the broader cultural imaginary. Current research projects examine experimental writing practices in architecture, and the representation of architecture and architects in popular media. She was a co-investigator on the ARC Discovery project 'The Cultural Logic of Queensland Architecture: Place, Taste and Economy' (2011-2014) with Prof John Macarthur and Dr Deborah van der Plaat, and was the leader of the ARC Linkage project ‘Equity and Diversity in the Australian Architecture Profession: Women, Work and Leadership’ (2011-2015) which led to the founding of the award-wnning website Parlour: Women, Equity, Architecture, edited by Justine Clark.

Having been trained as an architect at the University of South Australia, Stead received her PhD from the University of Queensland, and has taught at the University of Technology Sydney, and the University of Queensland. Her doctoral thesis, ‘On the Object of the Museum and its Architecture’ (2004), examined the cultural politics of architecture in recent, purpose-built social history museums.

Stead edited the 2012 book Semi-Detached: Writing, Representation and Criticism in Architecture (Uro, Melbourne, 2012). She was from 2012-2015 co-editor of Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research (Norrkoping, Sweden), and from 2011-2014 editor of Architectural Theory Review (Sydney).

Stead has been a visiting postdoctoral fellow at the Advanced Cultural Studies Institute of Sweden, and a UQ Postdoctoral Research Fellow. Her scholarly work has been published in anthologies such as Critical Architecture (Jane Rendell et al. eds, Routledge, London, 2007), Architecture and Authorship (Katja Grillner et al. eds, Black Dog, London, 2007) and Architecture, Disciplinarity and Art (Andrew Leach and John Macarthur eds, A & S Books, Ghent, 2009), and Mongrel Rapture (Mark Raggatt and Matiu Ward eds, Uro, Melbourne, 2015). She has published in journals including the Journal of Architecture, Volume, OASE, Performance Research, JAS: Journal of Australian Studies, Fabrications, and Critical Studies in Television. She is a past Editorial Board member of the Society of Architectural Historians of Australia and New Zealand, and has edited three volumes of conference proceedings. She has supervised eleven PhD and research Masters students to completion, and been a keynote at Australian and international conferences.

Stead also maintains a number of ‘para-academic’ writing, exhibition, and art projects. These include the 2009 exhibition ‘Mapping Sydney: Experimental Cartography and the Imagined City’ at the UTS DABLab; the 2015 exhibition 'Hung Out to Dry: Space, Memory, and Domestic Laundry Practices,' with Kelly Greenop and Allison Holland at the UQ Art Museum; the 2015 exhibition 'Portraits of Practice: At Work in Architecture' with Justine Clark, Maryam Gusheh and Fiona Young at the Tin Sheds Gallery, Sydney. In 2009 Stead made a series of short films for the UTS Equity and Diversity Unit in collaboration with Sam Scotting; she has an ongoing writing collaboration with Dr Katrina Schlunke of UTS; and continues an ongoing visual research project Documentation: The Visual Sociology of Architects.

Stead is widely published as an art and architectural critic, having written more than fifty commissioned feature and review articles in industry magazines. These include Places Journal (for which she is a columnist), Architecture Australia (of which she was a contributing editor 2003-2012), Architectural Review Asia Pacific, Monument, Artichoke, Pol-Oxygen, and [Inside]: Australian Design Review. In 2008 she was awarded the Adrian Ashton Prize for architectural writing by the NSW chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects.

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Naomi Ruth Pendle

Lecturer in International Development, University of Bath
Naomi is a Lecture in International Development in the Social and Policy Science Department at the University of Bath. She was formerly an Assistant Professor at the Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Since 2010, she has carried out ethnographic and qualitative research in South Sudan on governance during war and peace. This has included research on patterns of violence, public authority, revenge, peace meetings, armed mobisations, humanitarian protection, Nuer prophets and famine. Her book 'Spiritual Contestations – The Violence of Peace in South Sudan' will be published in 2023.

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Naomie Gendron

Medical Student, McGill University
I am a 4th year medical student at McGill. My research interests are suicide prevention and knowledge translation.

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Napoleon Katsos

Senior Lecturer Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, University of Cambridge

Napoleon Katsos is interested in how experimental research in language acquisition and processing can inform theoretical linguistic inquiry and vice versa. His particular focus is in the area of semantics and pragmatics, especially implicature, presupposition and quantification. Together with colleagues, he has been awarded grants by the AHRC, the British Academy, the ESRC, and other funding bodies to work on aspects of experimental pragmatics with typically- and atypically-developing children and adults.

Napoleon is also interested in bilingualism, and is a founder member of the Cambridge Bilingualism Network.

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Nareg Seferian

Ph.D. Candidate, School of Public and International Affairs, Virginia Tech
Nareg Seferian defended his dissertation at the School of Public and International Affairs, Virginia Tech in February, 2023. His doctoral research focussed on the province of Siunik in southern Armenia, using it as a case in investigating changes in geographical imaginations and the geopolitical culture of the country following the Second Karabakh War of 2020. From 2013 to 2016, he served on the faculty at the American University of Armenia. Nareg Seferian has conducted research, run courses, and delivered talks in Armenia, Turkey, Austria, and the United States. He holds a master's in international affairs from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna and a bachelor's in classical liberal arts from St. John's College in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His published writings are available at naregseferian.com.

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Nassim Jalali

Final year PhD student researching Sylvia Plath's nature poetry, University of Huddersfield
I have a BA Honours in English and MA in Twentieth Century Literature from the University of Leeds. I am currently in my final year of PhD research at the University of Huddersfield. I am researching ecological readings of Sylvia Plath's poetry. I am also a qualified English teacher; I spent 12 years working as Head of Literature at a prestigious sixth form college in Yorkshire. I currently work part time in a high school in London, whilst I complete my doctorate.

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Nasya Bahfen

Senior Lecturer, Department of Media and Communication, La Trobe University
Nasya Bahfen is a senior lecturer in the Department of Media and Communication at La Trobe University. She has taught at Monash University, UNSW, and RMIT and was previously a a radio and online journalist and producer for ABC Radio Australia and SBS. Her freelance writing and commentary includes feature articles and opinion pieces for the Age, Daily Life, the Far Eastern Economic review, and the Brunei Times; and hour-long radio documentaries for ABC Radio National and ABC Grandstand Digital. Nasya has postgraduate qualifications (PhD) in the sociology of the media, and extensive media and communications teaching and research experience. She has a first class honours degree in media from LaTrobe University and an undergraduate degree in journalism from RMIT.

Research Summary
Nasya's doctoral dissertation and research activity reflects the theme of internationalisation and diversity in the media and online, including the media of southeast Asian (Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore) and Australia.

Teaching
Nasya teaches subjects in the coursework Master of Journalism and supervises higher degree by research students.

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Natalee Garrett

Lecturer in History, The Open University
I was awarded a PhD in Modern History from the University of St Andrews in July 2021, graduating in June 2022. My area of specialism is 18th-century European history, focussing on popular culture and questions of identity (gender, social, national). I was awarded an MA (Hons) in History from Queen's University Belfast in 2016 and a BA (Hons) in English and History from Queen's University Belfast in 2015.

At present, my research is focussed on the British monarchy in the 18th century, and I am currently writing a biography of Queen Charlotte for Routledge's Queens of England monograph series.

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Natalia Kogut

Languages, Cultures, Art History and Music - Research Fellow, University of Birmingham
Natalia Kogut graduated from Taras Shevchenko National University in 2005, PhD in Law was awarded at Institute of State and Law named after V. Korezkiy of NAS (Ukraine). From 2009 till 2012 she was employed on different positions as a lawyer – from leading council to head of legal department of the Research Institute. She was combining legal practise with teaching.
After fleeing the war in Ukraine Dr Natalia Kogut held position of the research fellow in the University of Birmingham at the Department of Modern Languages, Cultures, Art, History and Music.
Sphere of scientific interests of Dr Natalia Kogut include: right to life and health, healthcare systems, ecological law, migrants’ rights, historical memory of migrants. The project with which she is dealing now is a Post Socialist Britain, where research is being conducted in the sphere of migrants and refugees’ welcoming, historical memory of migrants, aspiration and hopes of migrants. Also, Natalia Kogut is a specialist in human rights, right to health, comparative analyse of health care systems in different countries, she published quite a few articles in the sphere in scientific journals.

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Natalia Piotrowska

PhD Candidate in International Relations, University of Kent

Natalia Piotrowska is a PhD Candidate in International Relations at the University of Kent. Her research areas include international security, foreign policy analysis and Turkish foreign and security policy (with a special focus on Turkish-Israeli relations). Natalia adopts an interdisciplinary approach to her research, and draws from psychology and sociology in order to further the understanding of domestic and foreign policy of states. In her PhD project, the role of friendship in International Relations is explored through the theoretical prism of ontological security.

Prior to beginning her PhD, Natalia was awarded a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Political Sciences (focus: foreign services) from the University of Wroclaw (Poland). During this time, she was also an exchange student at the Yeditepe University in Turkey (2008/2009) and the Belgrade University in Serbia (2010/2011). Natalia was awarded the Scholarship for Academic Achievements by the Institute of Political Sciences at the University of Wroclaw, the Scholarship for Academic Merit by the Polish Minister of Science and Higher Education and the University of Kent 50th Anniversary PhD Scholarship.

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Natalie Bursztyn

Lecturer in Geosciences, University of Montana
I have a passion for finding creative ways to teach and communicate the importance of geology – its application in everyday life, for inspiring students to explore their environment, and for encouraging their natural awe and respect for the Earth. I have a broad range of geologic interests ranging from broad-scale landscape evolution and sustainability to public science communication and wine and terroir. I am passionate about employing creative ways to communicate the importance and value of scientific understanding in everyday life and how critical it is that we as a species embrace sustainable practices now.



My recent research has focused on geoscience education, especially assessing the efficacy of pedagogic tools ranging from analog models of Earth systems to the integration of smart technology and augmented reality in learning experiences. My experience in post-secondary education has been driven by my passion for engaging and educating my diverse student body equally.

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Natalie Goodison

Teaching Fellow in Department of English Studies, Durham University
I am a scholar of medieval romance and the history of ideas with a particular interest in embodiment. I've written on the medical humanities regarding women's health, on the transformation of the body, and on medieval swans. Ive had some small success working collaboratively with scientists, resulting in my being interviewed on Times Radio by John Pienaar, and featured in The Guardian, The Times, Science Magazine, and beyond. My current research looks at medieval ideas of causality for abnormal birth. I hold degrees from UNC (BA), Edinbugh (MSc), and Durham (PhD).

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Natalie Lazaroo

Lecturer, School of Education and Professional Studies, Griffith University
Dr Natalie Lazaroo is a Lecturer in Education (Drama) at Griffith University, where her research interests lie in cultural citizenship, socially engaged performance, arts-based research, and decentring/decolonising methodologies. Natalie has received grants for her work into the arts and cultural citizenship with disadvantaged young people in Singapore, where she has been involved in a long-term and ongoing collaboration. Along with Dr Tanja Beer and Dr Linda Hassall, Natalie is a co-director of the Performance + Ecology Research Lab (P+ERL), which explores the intersections between creative practice and ecological ways of being, knowing, and doing.

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Natalie Silove

Associate professor, University of Sydney
Associate Professor Natalie Silove is a Neurodevelopmental Paediatrician, Head of the Child Development Unit at The Children's Hospital Westmead and Senior Lecturer Sydney University

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Natalie M Frandsen

Assistant Teaching Professor, School of Public Health and Social Policy, University of Victoria
My career brings together practice experience in public health, mental health and post-secondary teaching. I have a BSc in Health Studies, Bachelor and Master degrees in Nursing and a PhD in Educational Technology and Learning Design. My area of research focuses on accessible and inclusive education for students with mental-health-related disabilities who are studying online. I have recently (November 2022) defended my PhD and I hold a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Joseph-Armand Bombardier fellowship (2020-2023).

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Natalie Victoria Wilmot

Associate Professor in International Business, University of Bradford
Natalie's research focuses on language diversity in international business, and she has published a number of works on this topic, with a research monograph on language management published by Multilingual Matters in August 2022. She plays an active role in the administration of Groupe d’Etudes Management et Langage, a scholarly body focused on management and language.

Her teaching interests are in the areas of international strategy and cross-cultural management. In addition to her substantive roles at Sheffield Hallam University and subsequently the University of Bradford, since 2017 she has also been a visiting lecturer at the University of Bordeaux, where she teaches a postgraduate course on intercultural communication. Prior to academia, Natalie held various positions in the private sector, specialising in export sales and has worked extensively with organisations in southern Europe and Latin America.

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Natasha Bradshaw

Grattan Institute
Natasha Bradshaw is an Associate in Grattan Institute’s Transport and Cities Program. She previously worked at the Australian Treasury, with a focus on structural issues in the labour market and barriers to women’s economic security.

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Natasha Erlank

Professor of History, University of Johannesburg
BA (Hons) MA University of Cape Town. PhD Cambridge University.

I trained as an historian, doing my undergraduate, honours and master sdegrees at the University of Cape Town (UCT). My doctorate was completed at Cambridge University.

To date, my research interests have focused on the history of the relationship between gender and mainline African Christianity, within the broader context of colonialism. This work has just been published as Convening Black Intimacy: Christianity, Gender, and Tradition in Early-Twentieth Century South Africa (Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2022).

My new work is on the history of reproductive health in Africa between the 1940s and the 1990s. This work takes a comparative look at how birth control policies were rolled out across a range of different and newly-independent nation states, and about the ways in which Africans resisted and adopted the agendas of foreign donor agencies in this regard.

After brief teaching stints at UCT and Rhodes University, I have been lecturing and researching at the University of Johannesburg since 1999. From 2007 to 2010 I directed the Centre for Culture and Languages in Africa. In 2011 I moved to head up Historical Studies at UJ, a position I held for five years. I am currently a professor in the department, where I have a particular interest and expertise in supervising and mentoring postgraduates. I am also a senior research associate at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada.

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Natasha Layton

Senior Research Fellow: Rehabilitation, Ageing and Independent Living Research Centre, Monash University
An occupational therapist and an academic practicing, researching and teaching in the areas of assistive technology (AT), disability, and outcomes. Dr Layton works locally and nationally in Australia with a range of consumer groups, government and the non-profit sector. She consults globally to the World Health Organisation (WHO) Global Co-Operation on AT Initiative and is a contributor to the WHO/ UNICEF Global Report on Assistive Technology, released in 2022. Dr Layton represents Australian Standards as the Australian expert to ISO assistive products classification and terminology standard. She is a past Board Member of Occupational Therapy Australia, current International Lead on the Board of Australia’s peak body for AT, ARATA (www.arata.org.au), and a founding Board member of the Global Alliance of AT Organisations (www.gaato.org). Dr Layton is particularly interested in the relationship between research, policy and practice, and inclusive research methods.

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Natasha Ward

Lead Researcher, RMIT University
Natasha Ward is an Aboriginal teacher and researcher. They have a passion for Indigenous knowledges being incorporated into western education systems.

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Nathalie Cooke

Professor of English and Associate Dean (McGill Library), McGill University
Currently Associate Dean of McGill University Library with oversight of ROAAr, a group of rare and special collections units. I have previously served as Associate Dean of Arts, and Associate Provost of the University. My research and teaching focuses on the evolution of literary and culinary tastes in Canada. My most recent project involves scrutiny of a forgotten food-related practice involving riddles, which has extended my focus to Britain and America of the nineteenth century. I am a full professor in the Department of English.

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Nathalie Wierdak

Teaching Fellow, University of Otago
As an accomplished Teaching Fellow at the University of Otago's esteemed Otago Business School, I have been instrumental in transforming the way businesses engage with their stakeholders. My role encompasses advising the industry sector on cutting-edge stakeholder engagement practices, as well as creating robust monitoring and evaluation frameworks that drive results.

I am passionate about designing innovative learning experiences that explore the critical intersections of Business, Government, and Society.

As the Co-Director of the Master of Sustainable Business program, I have been at the forefront of molding future leaders who are primed to excel in the rapidly evolving business landscape. My expertise in supervising and coordinating research projects for Master's students has enabled them to achieve their academic goals and contribute to the field of sustainable business.

I also take pride in my role as the Academic Lead for the Winds of Change Programme, where I strive to equip students with the knowledge and skills necessary to navigate the dynamic world of business and effect positive change.

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Nathan Aaron Kerrigan

Nathan Kerrigan is a Research Assistant at Coventry University. He uses ethnographic approaches to explore a number of issues around identity, community and exclusion. This research tends to examine the ways rural identities are maintained and protected from wider social pressures such as urbanisation, neoliberal expansion and population growth. In this, he has focussed on the ways in which prejudices, such as racism, against minority ethnic groups are worked up as unintended consequences.

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