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Caitie Kuempel

Lecturer, School of Environment and Science, Griffith University
I am a conservation scientist with interests in sustainable seafood, land-sea interactions, and conservation planning. I am passionate about finding ways to meet the needs of the growing human population while minimising impacts on the environment – particularly in the world’s oceans. I am currently a Lecturer in marine ecosystem modelling at Griffith University. I completed my PhD at the University of Queensland in protected area design and evaluation, followed by post-doctoral positions at NCEAS UC Santa Barbara mapping impacts of the global food system and University of Queensland exploring ways to manage and monitor climate resilient reefs to benefit people and nature. I also holds degrees in marine biology (M.S.), environmental science (B.S.) and French (B.A.).

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Caitlin Macmillan

Casual Academic, Deakin University
Caitlin is a casual academic at Deakin University (School of Psychology), and is also a Research Officer and Data Analysis and Fieldwork Coordinator at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute. Caitlin has a Bachelor in Psychology (Hons) and in 2016 completed a Master's of Research in Health Systems and Populations where she explored donor-conceived people's perspectives and experiences, including donor seeking behaviours. In 2022 she submitted her PhD investigating parenting, parenting-child relationships and adjustment in donor-conceived families and continues to conduct research in the area, as well as engage in research in Autism, and early child health and education strategies for vulnerable families.

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Callum Smith

PhD Candidate in Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions, University of Leeds
I am a fourth year PhD student in the Biosphere and Atmosphere group. I received my master's and undergraduate degrees from the University of Leeds. During my undergraduate, I studied abroad at Monash University in Melbourne.

My research interests are investigating how deforestation in the tropics is affecting local and regional and global climate. I use remotely sensed and insitu data to assess the impact that land-use changes have on climate.

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Cameron Webb

Dr Cameron Webb is a Clinical Lecturer with the University of Sydney and Principal Hospital Scientist with the Department of Medical Entomology at Pathology West - ICPMR Westmead (NSW Health Pathology & Westmead Hospital). Cameron's primary focus is understanding the role of environmental management and urban development in reducing the risks of mosquito-borne disease caused by Murray Valley encephalitis virus, Ross River virus and Barmah Forest virus. However, he has also been called on to provide expert advice on a range of medically important arthropods, such as ticks, mites, biting midges, bed bugs and flies, to local, state and federal government agencies.

Key to his research is an understanding of the ecological role of mosquitoes and how wetland conservation, construction and rehabilitation projects may influence regional mosquito-borne disease risk together with changes in the local environment resulting from climate change, potential introductions of exotic mosquito species and personal protection strategies (e.g. insect repellents).

In his position with the University of Sydney, Cameron regularly provides lectures in a range of undergraduate and post graduate courses and has supervised a number of research students including collaborative projects with the University of Western Sydney, the Australian Catholic University and the University of South Australia.

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Cameron Robert Jones

Cameron Jones is a PhD Student in Cognitive Science at UC San Diego. His work focuses on how human beings use their embodied experience with the world to understand language and whether artificial models could understand language in a human-like way. He runs experiments that compare the way in which humans and language models respond to sentences that are theorised to require embodied experience to understand: for example, sentences about physical events, affordances, or social interactions. To the extent that human responses can't be predicted by text-only language models, these experiments suggests that human comprehenders are drawing on experience that goes beyond language alone.

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Camilla Baasch Andersen

Camilla has been a professional academic in Commercial Law for almost 20 years, starting as a Resarch Fellow at University of Copenhagen, where she obtained her initial law degree (Cand Jur). She has held posts at Queen Mary, University of London, University of Leicester and visiting posts on three continents. She has published extensively on comparative commercial law, international sales (CISG) and commercial arbitration. For more information, see her webste at: http://www.uwa.edu.au/people/camilla.andersen

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Camilla Nelson

Camilla Nelson lectures in Media and Communications at the University of Notre Dame Australia, and specialises in fiction and non fiction writing, adaptation and history in popular culture. Previously she was a lecturer in the Creative Practices Group at UTS. In addition to a range of scholarly and other essays, she is also a published novelist. Her work includes, Perverse Acts, for which she was named as one of the Sydney Morning Herald's Best Young Australian Novelists of the Year, and Crooked, which was shortlisted in the 2009 Ned Kelly Awards. She is also a former journalist, and has a Walkley Award Best All Media Online News (2001) for her work at the Sydney Morning Herald.

Camilla's work has been recognised through the award of grants from the Literature Board of the Australia Council and the Australian Film Commission. She has served as a judge of the NSW Premier's Literary Awards (2008 and 2012), the Kathleen Mitchell Award (2008 to 2014), the Sydney Morning Herald's Best Young Australian Novelists (2015), and on the governing board of the NSW Writers' Centre (2008-2011).

Her most recent book is a co-edited collection of essays On Happiness, UWA Press, 2015.

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Camille Stevens-Rumann

My research focuses on post-disturbance recovery. Focusing on challenges facing disturbed lands, my research is both basic in understanding species and ecosystem responses to disturbances, and applied for improving future ecosystem management. We use multiple techniques including observational field surveys, geospatial analyses, and experimental approaches.

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Candelaria Bergero

Ph.D. Student in Earth System Science, University of California, Irvine
I am an interdisciplinary researcher whose mission is to understand both the feasibility of a net-zero pathway, as well as the environmental justice implications of such a pathway.

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Caren Morrison

Caren Myers Morrison, associate professor of law, teaches Evidence and Criminal Procedure. She served as an assistant U.S. attorney in Eastern District of New York from 2001 to 2006, where she prosecuted international narcotics traffickers and organized crime. Her research focuses on the impact of electronic information on the criminal justice system and on mechanisms of jury selection.

Morrison graduated from Columbia Law School, where she was a James Kent Scholar (1996-97), a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar (1994-96), and a notes editor of the Columbia Law Review. After graduation, she clerked for U.S. District Court Judge Eugene H. Nickerson of the Eastern District of New York and for Judge John M. Walker Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit. From 2006 to 2009, she was acting assistant professor at New York University School of Law. Before law school, Morrison trained as a journalist at London’s City University and worked as freelance journalist in London for seven years.

Morrison’s most recent article, “Negotiating Peremptory Challenges,” forthcoming in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, proposes a system of negotiated consent to supplant the regime of regulating peremptory strikes through the framework established under Batson v. Kentucky. Her previous articles have explored the impact of the Internet on the functioning of the jury, the interplay of Facebook and the Fifth Amendment, the ways in which online access to court records affects prosecutorial accountability and the use of drones for domestic surveillance. Her articles have been published in the Vanderbilt Law Review, the Hastings Law Journal, the California Law Review Circuit and the Columbia Law Review Sidebar.

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Carey King

Dr. Carey W King is the Assistant Director of the Energy Institute at the University of Texas Austin.

He performs interdisciplinary research related to how energy systems interact within the economy and environment as well as how our policy and social systems can make decisions and tradeoffs among these often competing factors. The past performance of our energy systems is no guarantee of future returns, yet we must understand the development of past energy systems. Carey’s research goals center on rigorous interpretations of the past to determine the most probable future energy pathways.

He has both a B.S. with high honors and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin. He has published technical articles in the academic journals Environmental Science and Technology, Environmental Research Letters, Nature Geoscience, Energy Policy, Sustainability, and Ecology and Society. He has also written commentary for Earth magazine discussing energy, water, and economic interactions. Dr. King has several patents as former Director for Scientific Research of Uni-Pixel Displays, Inc.

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Carl Emmerson

Carl is Deputy Director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies and programme director of their work on direct taxes and welfare. He is an editor of the annual IFS Green Budget. His recent research includes analysis of the impact of the financial crisis and association recession, and the Government's response, on the UK's public finances. He has examined the effect of UK pension reforms on the public finances, retirement behaviour, labour market mobility, incentives to save and inequality, and has evaluated the large scale pilots of the Education Maintenance Allowance, the Pathways-to-Work reforms to incapacity benefits and the Saving Gateway matched savings vehicle. He has previously served as a specialist advisor to the House of Commons Work and Pensions Select Committee.

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Carl Miller

Research Fellow, King's College London
Carl Miller combines data and analysis with immersive, first-hand reporting to understand how times are changing. He is a co-founder of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media at Demos, the first UK think tank institute dedicated to studying the digital world. As its Research Director, he has focused on building new machine learning-driven approaches to robustly study online life. He has written over 20 major studies spanning online electoral interference, radicalisation, digital politics, conspiracy theories, cyber-crime and internet governance.

He is a Visiting Research Fellow at King's College London, a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Strategic Dialogue, a Fellow at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organised Crime, an Associate of the Imperial War Museum and a member of the Society Board of the British Computing Society.

Carl speaks to audiences around the world about what the digital revolution means to them, including in Parliament, Oxford University, the British Academy, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Cabinet Office, Home Office, Wired, Shell, the Mayor of London, at Latitude Festival, and at large corporate and international events in Chicago, Thailand, Vienna, Leiden, Berlin, California, Kosovo, Prague and Canada.

He has presented a special report for the BBC on fake news merchants and has written for Wired, The Economist, The New Scientist, The Telegraph, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, The National, News Week, The Irish Examiner, CityAM, and for a number of websites and academic journals.

His appears regularly on national and international media, including BBC News at One, News at Six, BBC Daily Politics, BBC Click, Radio 4 Today Programme, Victoria Derbyshire, BBC World, GMT, Trending, BBC Radio Scotland, Good Morning Scotland, BBC Talkback, World Tonight, 5Live, LBC, ABC, CNN, Sky News, Sky Digital View, and has been Sky’s social media pundit during coverage of a number of by-elections and political debates.

His debut book, The Death of the Gods: The New Global Power Grab, was published in 2018 by Penguin Random House, and won the 2019 Transmission Prize.

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Carl Pilgram

Senior Academic Associate, Africa Center for Strategic Studies
Carl Pilgram is a Senior Academic Associate at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies in the National Defense University, where he has worked since 2017. In this capacity he supports the design and delivery of programs to improve the provision of security in African partners at the executive education and strategic level.

He is currently supporting the Counter-Terrorism and Countering Violent Extremism portfolios, and has previously worked the Countering Transnational Organized Crime, Maritime Safety and Security, and National Security Strategy Development lines.

He is a passionate and longtime researcher of African politics and security, as well as intrastate conflict and authoritarian dynamics. He has lived and worked in Kenya. He holds an MA in Security Studies from the Georgetown Security Studies Program and a BA from Washington University in St. Louis.

The views expressed are those of the authors alone and not those of the US Government or the Department of Defense.

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Carl Rhodes

Carl Rhodes is Professor of Organization Studies at UTS Business School. Working in the disciplines organization studies and business ethics, his current research investigates the ethical and political environments in which contemporary organizations operate and its effects on their behaviour. Central focus is on how organizations, especially corporations, can and should be held to account for their actions by citizens and by civil society. This work endeavours to contribute to the rigorous and critical questioning an reformulation of what the purpose of work organizations in the context of democracy.

Carl’s most recent books are The Companion to Ethics and Politics in Organizations (Routledge, 2015 with Alison Pullen), and Organizations and Popular Culture (Routledge, 2012 Simon Lilley). His work appears in journals such as Organization Studies, Human Relations, Organization, The Journal of Business Ethics, and The Leadership Quarterly. He serves as Senior Editor of the journal Organization Studies as well as Associate Editor of Organization and Gender, Work and Organization.

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Carl Walsh

PhD Candidate, Queensland University of Technology
Carl completed a Bachelor of Science (Earth Science) and Master of Philosophy at QUT and is now undertaking a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD).

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Carla Figueira

Carla Figueira, BA MA PhD FHEA FRSA, is an academic in the field of international cultural relations and cultural and linguistic policies. She is the Director of the MA in Cultural Policy, Relations and Diplomacy and of the MA in Tourism and Cultural Policy at the Institute for Creative and Cultural Entrepreneurship, Goldsmiths, University of London.

Carla is an international relations graduate of the Instituto Superior de Ciências Sociais e Políticas, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa (Portugal), she moved to London after a career in arts management. In the UK, she went on to gain an MA in Arts Management (City University, UK, Chevening Scholar) and a PhD in Cultural Policy and Management (City University, UK, Praxis XXI Scholar).

Carla is interested in international cultural relations as a transdisciplinary field, as well as being interested in the areas of cultural policy and arts management and in language policy. Her research interests encompass several academic disciplines, including international studies, history, cultural studies, sociology, linguistics and psychology. Keywords she has used to describe her work include: cultural diplomacy, cultural relations, sociolinguistics, language-spread policies, international cultural policy, international organisations, hegemony, soft power.

Carla is a member of ENCATC, the leading European network on Cultural Management and Cultural Policy education and a member of the British International Studies Association. She is a Chevening Alumna and Buddy.

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Carla Sousa

Assistant professor, Lusófona University
Carla Sousa is a PhD in Communication Sciences from Lusófona University, where she also took her Bachelors Degree in Psychology, her Master's Degree in Clinical and Health Psychology, and a Postgraduate degree in Applied Neuropsychology. Her PhD thesis approached game accessibility as a path to empower and promote well-being in individuals with intellectual disability, which illustrates her main research targets - the different intersections between media, with a particular focus on games, inclusion, behavior, and human diversity. Also in Lusófona University, Carla is part of the Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture, and New Technologies (CICANT) and is an assistant professor in the Bachelor's Degrees in Psychology and Videogames. She published several papers as an author and co-author in peer-reviewed journals, and has done communications at national and international conferences in the fields of media studies, media psychology, games, accessibility, disability, social inclusion, learning, and education. Carla has been part of several national and internationally funded projects, both in research and management roles, including: GameIN (2022.07939.PTDC); TEGA (2020-1-UK01-KA203-079248); ID-Games (2019-1-EL01-KA204-062517); Youth for Youth (2020-2-HU01-KA205-079126); ASDigital (2020-1-PT01-KA226-SCH-094961); or GamiLearning (UTAP-ICDT/IVC-ESCT/0020/2014). Carla has also been involved in the organization of scientific events and scientific networks, being the chair of Working Group 2 in COST Action (CA 19104) - advancing Social inclusion through Technology and EmPowerment (a-Step), which aims to map the best practices and define a research agenda for the future of assistive technologies for individuals with intellectual disability and autism. Since 2022, Carla has been an individual ambassador for the non-profit Women in Games and, since 2023, a member of the advisory board of the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA).

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Carlo Ratti

Director of MIT Senseable City Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

An architect and engineer by training, Professor Carlo Ratti practises in Italy and teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He directs the MIT Senseable City Lab and the design office Carlo Ratti Associati. He chairs the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Future Cities. He graduated from the Politecnico di Torino and the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris, and later earned his MPhil and PhD at the University of Cambridge, UK. Ratti has co-authored over 200 publications and holds several patents. His work has been exhibited worldwide at venues such as the Venice Biennale, the Design Museum Barcelona, the Science Museum in London, GAFTA in San Francisco and The Museum of Modern Art in New York. His Digital Water Pavilion at the 2008 World Expo was hailed by Time Magazine as one of the Best Inventions of the Year. He has been included in Esquire Magazine’s Best and Brightest list, in Blueprint Magazine’s 25 People who will Change the World of Design and in Forbes Magazine’s People you need to know in 2011. Ratti was a presenter at TED 2011 and is serving as a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council for Urban Management. He is a regular contributor to the architecture magazine Domus and the Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore. He has also written as an op-ed contributor for BBC, La Stampa, Scientific American and The New York Times.

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Carlos Ferreira

Assistant Professor, Research Centre for Business in Society, Coventry University
I am an experienced researcher, whose interests include adoption and use of data by organisations and individuals, business ethics and policy analysis. My passion is to understand complex phenomena and to distil them into nuanced strategic insights for organisations. My current focus is on the role of data as a mechanism for addressing interlocking social, environmental and health challenges.

I have a background in Social Psychology and Economics, and in the past I worked in the Marketing Research industry. I have led cross-European consortia in extensive policy analysis projects, with a focus on learning best practice and knowledge transfer across countries. My research has informed decision-making for organisations such as large NGOs, a large UK supermarket chain, the UK’s jewellery industry and Coventry City Council. I have also consulted with the Estonian and Latvian governments on how to promote cooperation in their respective regional policies. I have been invited to present my findings to the European Committee of Regions, and have produced briefing papers for the European Commission in preparation for the European Union’s post-2020 Regional Policy.

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Carlos Gardeazabal Bravo

Carlos Gardeazábal Bravo’s scholarship intersects contemporary Latin American literature and film, the cultural politics of emotion, human rights narratives, ecocriticism, and critical theory. Examples of such intersections are the co-edited volume (with Kevin Guerrieri) Human Rights in Colombian Literature and Cultural Production: Embodied Enactments (Routledge 2022) and two academic dossiers published last year on humanitarianism and representations of violence.

Gardeazabal Bravo is currently an Assistant Professor of Spanish at the University of Dayton’s Department of Global Languages and Cultures, where he collaborates in the Latinx and Latin American Studies program. He teaches a wide variety of courses on Latin American culture, human rights narratives, and race and ethnic studies.

He received his Ph.D. in Spanish studies specializing in Latin American Literature, and a Graduate Certificate in Human Rights from the University of Connecticut (2018). Prior to this, he earned an MA in Hispanic Linguistics from the Instituto Caro y Cuervo and a BA in philosophy from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia.

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Carlos Góes

Doctoral Candidate in Economics, University of California, San Diego
Carlos Góes is the founder of Instituto Mercado Popular, a São Paulo-based think tank. He has previously worked as Senior Economic Advisor at the Office of the President of Brazil and as a researcher at the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organization, the World Bank, and U.S. think tanks.

His work has been featured in global outlets such as the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, El País and Le Monde. His research spans over different topics (including trade, economic development, and income inequality). Góes has been named one of the “30 persons every investor should follow” by Infomoney, a Brazilian finance magazine, and is an economics columnist for O Globo, a major Brazilian newspaper.

In 2016, he founded Instituto Mercado Popular, which focuses on designing evidence-based public policy marrying the goals of social inclusion and fiscal responsibility. The Institute’s research has been used in Brazilian congressional committees as official grounds for debate and decisions, as well as quoted in the national and international press.

Góes is a PhD candidate in Economics (UC San Diego), holds a MA in International Economics (Johns Hopkins SAIS), and a BA in International Relations (University of Brasilia). A coding enthusiast, he works in Python, Stata, Eviews, LaTeX, R, Julia, and Matlab.

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Carlos Ibañez del Rivero

PhD candidate, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University

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Carlton Mark Waterhouse

Professor Carlton Waterhouse has served at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law since 2010. He is nationally recognized for his work on environmental justice and is known internationally for his research and writing on reparations for historic injustices and state human rights violations. His views have been published in the Wall Street Journal online and his articles have appeared in prestigious law journals including the Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, the Fordham Environmental Law Review, and the Rutgers Law Review. He attended college at the Pennsylvania State University where he studied engineering and the ethics of technology before deciding to pursue a legal education. He is a graduate of Howard University School of Law, where he was admitted as one of its distinctive Merit Fellows. While in law school, he was selected for an internship with the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law where he participated in the preliminary formation and development of the Civil Rights Act of 1992. Professor Waterhouse currently serves as a member of the Indiana Advisory Committee to the United States Civil Rights Commission

After law school, he began his career as an attorney with the United States Environmental Protection Agency where he served in the Office of Regional Counsel in Atlanta, Georgia and the Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C. At the EPA, he served as the chief counsel for the agency in several significant cases and as a national and regional expert on environmental justice, earning three of the Agency’s prestigious national awards. His responsibilities at the EPA included enforcement actions under numerous environmental statutes, the development of regional and national policy on Environmental Justice and the application of the Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to the EPA permitting actions. Following a successful nine-year career with the EPA, Professor Waterhouse enrolled in a Ph.D. program in the Emory University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences as one of the select George W. Woodruff Fellows. The previous year, he graduated with honors from the Candler School of Theology at Emory University with a Master of Theological Studies degree. In 2006, he graduated from Emory with a Ph.D. in Social Ethics.

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Carly Sawatzki

Dr Carly Sawatzki is a teacher-educator with expertise in curriculum and pedagogy across the Victorian and Australian curricula (VCE, Victorian Curriculum, Australian Curriculum). Carly's subject areas include upper primary Mathematics, middle school Economics & Business, senior school Business Management and senior school Psychology. Being an interdisciplinarian is critical to her key area of interest, contextual learning.

Carly's PhD explored the role of social and mathematical understandings in children's financial problem-solving and decision-making. Her ongoing research focuses on the 'Money and financial mathematics'​ strand of the Australian Curriculum - Mathematics in upper primary school, and has involved developing, trialling, studying, and refining unique financial dilemmas and associated pedagogies to enhance financial literacy teaching and learning. Some of her tasks have been included in the Encouraging Persistence, Maintaining Challenge (EPMC) project.

Before switching careers to teaching and academia, Carly worked in marketing and business development roles in the finance industry.

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Carly Tozer

Senior Research Scientist, CSIRO
I am a senior research scientist at CSIRO with an interest in characterising the ocean-atmospheric processes influencing Australia’s weather and climate extremes, and understanding their predictability for rainfall and streamflow forecasting.

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Carly Ziter

Associate professor, Biology, Concordia University
Carly Ziter is an assistant professor in the Biology Department of Concordia University, the Concordia University Research Chair in Urban Ecology and Sustainability, and a core faculty member of Concordia’s cluster for Smart, Sustainable, and Resilient Cities and Communities. As an urban landscape and ecosystem ecologist, her research focuses on how landscape structure, historical land-use, and biodiversity interact to shape the ways that nature benefits us in the cities where we live, work, and play. She leads a dynamic group of undergraduates, graduate students, and postdoctoral researchers, and collaborates frequently with colleagues across a wide range of disciplines, including designers, architects, engineers, and social scientists.

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Carmel Pascale

Visiting Research Fellow, School of Humanities, University of Adelaide
Carmel Pascale is a cultural historian of twentieth century Australia and Visiting Research Fellow in the School of Humanities at the University of Adelaide. She researches settler nationalism, ideas of Britishness, the Australian Federation, and commemoration. Her PhD thesis traced the development of nationalism in South Australia from 1901 to the 1960s, with a focus on the state’s relationship with Britain and the empire.

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Carmen Alvaro Jarrin

Associate Professor of Anthropology, College of the Holy Cross
Dr. Carmen Alvaro Jarrín received their Ph.D. from Duke University and they are Associate Professor of
Anthropology at College of the Holy Cross. Their research explores the imbrication of medicine,
the body and inequality in Brazil, with foci on plastic surgery, genomics and gender
nonconforming activism. They are the author of The Biopolitics of Beauty: Cosmetic Citizenship
and Affective Capital in Brazil (University of California Press), which explored the eugenic
underpinnings of raciological thought among plastic surgeons, and the aesthetic hierarchies of
beauty that reinforce racial inequality in Brazil. They are also co-editor of two collections of
essays: Remaking the Human: Cosmetic Technologies of Body Repair, Reshaping and
Replacement (Berghahn Books), and Precarious Democracy: Ethnographies of Hope, Despair
and Resistance in Brazil (Rutgers University Press).

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Carmen Nave

I am an anthropologist who has published on kinship and inheritance among the Asante of Ghana. I now work on an interdisciplinary team studying policing and police oversight.

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Carmen Reese Foster

Dr. Carmen Reese Foster is the Interim Online MSSW Program Director, an Assistant Professor of Practice, and the Director of Alumni Affairs at the University of Tennessee College of Social Work. She is also the Executive Director of the Coalition of Black Social Workers. Dr. Reese Foster is a 2022 DSW graduate of the University of Alabama, where she was the 3MT (Three Minute Thesis) Winner for the University and the Southern Region. While at Alabama, Carmen was the recipient of the Laura Langley Social Justice Award and the DSW Scholarship Award. Simultaneously, as a faculty of practice at the University of Tennessee, Carmen was the 2022 recipient of the Inspirational Teaching Award. Her research focus is race-based trauma and its impact on mental health.

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Carol Grech

Professor, University of South Australia
Professor Carol Grech commenced her academic career with the University of South Australia in 1990 as a Lecturer in Nursing. Her academic appointment followed a distinguished clinical career at Royal Adelaide Hospital (RAH) where she trained as a Registered Nurse earning a gold medal for academic performance before moving into critical care nursing at Calvary North Adelaide Hospital, Royal Adelaide Hospital, and the Lyell McEwin Hospital. In 2004 she was awarded a PhD, which led to an extensive research portfolio in patient safety and professional practice standards.

In 2012, Professor Grech was appointed Head of School: Nursing and Midwifery at UniSA. In this role she introduced a range of pedagogical innovations including embedding inquiry-based learning into all accredited curricula to stimulate students’ active engagement in learning. She re-conceived the approach to students’ clinical skills development through the design and implementation of a unique simulated hospital and health service (HHHS) to support students’ practice-based learning and readiness for clinical practicums. These innovations continue to be embedded in nursing and midwifery curricula in UniSA Clinical and Health Sciences (CHS) and provide a platform for further strengthening interprofessional learning. Professor Grech also implemented a strategy to ensure that nursing and midwifery research reflected academic staff expertise and industry need. In 2015 and 2018 Nursing research at UniSA was consecutively ranked well above world class in the Excellence in Research Australia ratings.

In 2019, Carol was appointed as the Pro Vice Chancellor: Student Engagement and Equity where she provided outstanding leadership in the development, implementation and continuous improvement of the University’s student engagement and wellbeing portfolio including championing pathways for students from non-traditional backgrounds.

Professor Grech is highly regarded within the national and international nursing community. She served on a number of professional groups, committees and boards including the Australia and New Zealand Council of Deans Nursing and Midwifery; the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (Teaching, Training and Research); Health Workforce Australia (Productivity and Retention Standing Committee); Health Workforce Australia (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Health Curriculum Framework Working Group); and the Clinical Training Advisory Council (SA Health). She has also served as a reviewer for the New Zealand Health Research Council, has been a panel member for Professional Standards Committees and provided expert opinions in medico-legal cases.

Carol is an active member of the Australian College of Critical Care Nurses (ACCCN). She is a long-standing member of the National ACCCN Education Advisory Panel, was Editor of the Australian Critical Care journal (the highest ranked critical care nursing journal in the world by impact factor); and was the National Chairperson of the College’s Credentialing and Standards Committee. In 2020 Carol was awarded Life Membership of the College for service to practice, education and research in her specialist field of critical care nursing.

In recognition of her distinguished service to the University of South Australia, Professor Grech was conferred the honorary title Emeritus Professor on her retirement in 2021. This title recognises those eminent scholars who have demonstrated:

- an international reputation, and professional peer recognition, for research and scholarship;

- a significant track record of team leadership and capacity building in research or teaching;

- participation in University management and/or governance;

- service contributions to a discipline, a profession, the University and the wider community.

While having retired from UniSA in 2021, Carol remains professionally active. She is a member of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Accreditation Council (ANMAC) Nurse Practitioner Accreditation Committee; a Board member of the Rosemary Bryant Foundation; an Editorial Board member of the Australian Critical Care journal and is a Council member of the RAH Registered Nurses’ Association.

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Carol Hsu

Professor of Business Information Systems, University of Sydney
I am a Professor at the University of Sydney Business School. My research interests broadly center around the interactions between institutional properties, technological features and organizational strategies that influence the design and implementation of cybersecurity management.

Before joining the University of Sydney, I have worked in several leading institutions in the Asia-Pacific including City University of Hong Kong, National Taiwan University and Tongji University. I currently serve as Senior Editor at the Journal of Strategic Information Systems, Information Systems Journal, and Information & Management, and on the editorial board of the Journal of the Association for Information Systems, and the IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management.

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Carol Johnson

Carol Johnson has published numerous chapters and articles on Australian politics. She is also the author of the books, The Labor Legacy: Curtin, Chifley, Whitlam, Hawke (Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 1989) and Governing Change: From Keating to Howard (Network Books, Perth, 2nd edition 2007). Most recently she co-edited, Carol Johnson and John Wanna (with Hsu-Ann Lee), Abbott's Gambit: The 2013 Australian Federal Election (ANU Press, Canberra, 2015) http://press.anu.edu.au/titles/abbotts-gambit/

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Carol Richardson

Professor of Early Modern Art History, History of Art, The University of Edinburgh
Carol M Richardson specialises in institutional patronage, particularly that of the Early Modern period. Her research to date has been primarily concerned with the papal city, Rome, and the ways in which the patronage of individuals combine to create corporate identity. A particular feature in all things Roman is the embeddedness of the long history of the city in the works of art and architecture created there.

Being a native Scot, Carol took both her degrees close to home, at the University of St Andrews. She went on to teach at Aberdeen, Edinburgh and The Open University in Milton Keynes, moving to Edinburgh in 2012. She is passionate about the History of Art as the ultimate interdisciplinary subject area, which makes it both inclusive and challenging. She believes it is an antidote to media attention on global crisis and humanity’s inhumanity as art often emerges from, comments on, sometimes resolves and almost always atones for some of our worst actions.

Carol’s most recent books include Gilio's Dialogue on the Errors and Abuses of Painters (2018) in collaboration with Michael Bury and Lucy Byatt and Old Saint Peter’s, Rome (2013) which came out of a conference she co-organised in Rome. She has published two books on Renaissance cardinals: her monograph Reclaiming Rome (2009), which was described in reviews as ‘a milestone’ and ‘essential reading’, and The Possessions of a Cardinal (2011) co-edited with Mary Hollingsworth).

She has also written for and edited widely-used text books, including the anthology of primary sources, Renaissance Art Reconsidered (Blackwell, 2006).

From October 2018 to June 2019 she is Paul Mellon Senior Fellow, completing her book, The Last English Catholic Church Remaining in the World: Art and Sacred Geography in the 1580s.​​

She has just finished a book chapter on the dress and regalia of early modern cardinals for the Brill Research Companion to the Early Modern Cardinal and an article on Andrea Sansovino for Sculpture Journal.

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