Menu

Search

Sabah Rind

Lecturer, Centre for Aboriginal Studies, Curtin University

  More

Less

Sabina Puspita

Monash Herb Feith Indonesian Engagement Centre Associate Director and IFAR Research Fellow, Monash University
I am currently based at Monash University, Indonesia. My research interests include democratization, political institutions, social movements, and gender politics in Northeast and Southeast Asia. Previously, I was an Arryman Scholar and received my doctoral training in comparative politics (primary subfield) and international relations (secondary subfield) from Northwestern University in the United States. I was also Policy Analyst for addressing sexual violence in schools and higher education institutions at the Indonesian Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology (2020-2021).

  More

Less

Sabine Baker

Research Fellow, Queensland University of Technology
I am a registered psychologist and Research Fellow at the Queensland University of Technology and at the University of Queensland.

My research centres around improving the development, health and wellbeing of children, and mitigating the impact of early adversity. I use a prevention lens to target risk and protective factors to enhance child and family well-being. My work also considers the economic context in which families raise children and examines structural barriers to positive development and health.

My early research revolved around the development and evaluation of Behavioural Family Interventions, with a focus on digital applications and increasing program reach for priority populations. More recently my research has specifically focussed on improving outcomes for families experiencing food insecurity.

  More

Less

Sabrina Gaertner

I am a researcher in Laboratory Astrochemistry. While the focus of my PhD project was on gas-phase ion-neutral reactions and spectroscopy, I no switched fields to solid state astrochemistry. Currently I am investigating planet forming collisions (using microgravity environments) and the strucutral properties of interstellar water ices (using neutron scattering facilities).

  More

Less

Sagarika Mishra

Associate professor, Deakin University
Dr Sagarika Mishra is an Associate Professor in the Department of the Finance at Deakin Business School. Sagarika completed her PhD in Applied Economics from Western Michigan University in the USA. She has over ten years of experience in research and teaching, with six publications in ABDC A* journals and many more in other reputable journals.

  More

Less

Sagatom Saha

Research Scholar in Energy Policy, Columbia University
Sagatom Saha is an Adjunct Research Scholar at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University SIPA. He is an expert on the geopolitics of the global energy transition and U.S. competitiveness in clean energy technologies. Sagatom previously worked on cleantech competitiveness at the International Trade Administration in the U.S. Department of Commerce and served as a special advisor in the Office of the U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate. In this role, he was chief of staff to Secretary Kerry’s clean energy and innovation team and led on cleantech competitiveness, nuclear energy, industrial decarbonization, Ukraine and Eastern Europe, and India. Sagatom was also a Fulbright researcher in Kyiv, Ukraine, where he advised the Ukrainian Parliament and cabinet ministries on strategies to advance energy reform. Sagatom previously helped direct the Council on Foreign Relations’ Program on Energy Security and Climate Change, managing its geopolitics portfolio.

  More

Less

Saiendhra Moodley

Public Health Medicine Specialist and Senior Lecturer, University of Pretoria
Dr Saiendhra Moodley is a public health medicine specialist and a Senior Lecturer in the Division of
Behaviour and Health Management Sciences, School of Health Systems and Public Health at the
University of Pretoria. He has a broad range of health systems experience and has worked at the
Office of Health Standards Compliance, in the Department of Public Health Medicine at Steve Biko
Academic Hospital/University of Pretoria, and in the Provincial Department of Health in the Western
Cape. He has previously served as Vice-President and President of the Public Health Association of
South Africa, and is the current President of the College of Public Health Medicine (SA). His research
focus areas are public mental health and human resources for health.

  More

Less

Saioa Legarrea Imizcoz

Investigadora en Entomología Agrícola, Universidad de La Rioja

  More

Less

Sajida Gordon

Researcher in the Clothing Sustainability Research Group, Nottingham Trent University

  More

Less

Salam Titinchi

Professor, University of the Western Cape
Salam Titinchi is a Professor of Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis Research Group Leader at the Department of Chemistry. While his work covers a range of concerns, he has over the past years increasingly focused on the development of nano-materials for environmental applications.

  More

Less

Saleena Ham

Adjunct Research Fellow, Rural Sociology, University of Southern Queensland
My PhD thesis has been submitted, evaluated and passed but is not yet formally awarded.
I have an undergraduate degree in Agricultural Science, a Masters in International Studies (Peace and Conflict Resolution) and a Diploma in Professional Coaching. I have worked with and in rural communities for several decades as a facilitator, knowledge broker and accredited mediator. Growing up in the far west of NSW, after graduation I worked for rural advocacy organisations, then the Department of Natural Resources and then worked with numerous government, corporate and community organisations as a Queensland consultant.

  More

Less

Salih Yasun

PhD Candidate, Indiana University
Salih Yasun is a Ph.D. student with a focus on Comparative Politics and Political Methodology. He holds a Master's Degree in Applied Statistics from Indiana University (2019). Salih’s research focuses on local governance, democratization and property rights within the Middle East and North Africa, and his work appeared in Women’s Studies International Forum Journal. He employs both quantitative and qualitative methods in his research, including fieldwork, survey data analysis, interviews, archival and ethnographic dimensions.

  More

Less

Sally Bashford-Squires

PhD Candidate in Public Health, Nottingham Trent University
I am a PhD student and part-time lecturer in Public Health at Nottingham Trent University. I taught nursery to secondary pupils for over 25 years and worked as an Assistant Head Teacher of an Infant School for 9 years. I also founded and Chair a charity which operates in rural Uganda which helps to improve the lives of women and girls through education and social enterprise projects. My interests concern gender and global health.

  More

Less

Sally Ferguson

Sally has spent the last fifteen years investigating the influence of circadian rhythms on human activities. Her particular focus is the interaction between work hours, sleep and wake patterns and what that means for people's safety, health and well-being.

Sally publishes, supervises students and gets out of the office as often as possible

  More

Less

Sally Keith

Senior Lecturer, Lancaster University
Using coral reefs as a model system, my team aims to:

(1) figure out if, when, how and why animal behaviour can scale up to influence the diversity ​and distribution of life on Earth,
(2) identify and explain global geographical patterns in animal behaviour,
(3) capture the impact of environmental change on (1)&(2), predict ecological vulnerability into the future, and offer solutions to increase ecosystem resilience.

To achieve these aims, we combine purpose-built fieldwork with a macroecological approach, conducting behavioural research in multiple locations across the world. This broad geographic coverage allows us to identify generalisable "rules" for how animals behave and understand how behaviour is affected by an animal's biotic and abiotic environment in the real-world.

  More

Less

Sally King

PhD Candidate, Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, King's College London
I am currently writing a book based on my doctoral research findings that gender and race myths appear to trump the available empidemiological data when it comes to clinical and lay descriptions of menstrual health-related symptoms. I have a Master's degree in research methods (Qual & Quant), ten years experience as an evaluator of human rights policies and interventions (with a focus on gender equality), and ten years specialising in menstrual health research. I also founded the world's first evidence-based info hub on menstrual health and associated rights issues in 2016 (www.menstrual-matters.com).

  More

Less

Sally Matthews

Associate Professor of Political and International Studies, Rhodes University
Sally Matthews is an associate professor in the Department of Political and International Studies at Rhodes University. Her research and teaching interests are in comparative politics, African studies and development studies.

  More

Less

Sally Robinson

Professor, Disability and Community Inclusion, Flinders University
Sally is Professor of Disability and Community Inclusion in the College of Nursing and Health Sciences at Flinders University, South Australia. Her interests and expertise centre on the use of creative methods to engage people with cognitive disability in research to express their perspectives on key issues.
Sally has contributed to a wide range of research and evaluation in the social policy arena over the past decade, focusing particularly on safety and harm, accommodation and social exclusion concerns of people with disability.
She is actively engaged in community and government policy debates, frequently advising on the development of policy and practice on abuse and abuse prevention, the National Disability Insurance Scheme, and community inclusion for children and young people. Prior to life as a researcher, Sally has a long history of advocacy and support work with people with intellectual disability. She has worked with people with intellectual disability for over 30 years.

  More

Less

Sally Shinan Zhu

I am a Lecturer in Private and Commercial Law. I hold a PhD from LSE, LLM from Cambridge, and LLB from LSE. I currently sit on the Law and Technology committee in the Scottish Law Society.

  More

Less

Sam Carr

Lecturer in Education, University of Bath

My research and teaching interests are focused upon the relationship between policy and psychology. I'm interested in how policy and discourse "shapes" us. I have published a lot in this area and am authoring my second book around educational policy and its link to motivation.

  More

Less

Sam Crane

PhD Candidate, School of Arts and Creative Technologies, University of York
Sam Crane is an award-winning video artist and actor.

In a theatre career spanning twenty years he has been critically acclaimed for his performances at the National Theatre, Shakespeare’s Globe, in the West End and on Broadway.

His films have been screened at contemporary art and film festivals worldwide. He won the Critics’ Choice award at Milan Machinima Festival, First Prize for Video Art at The Athens Digital Arts Festival and was longlisted for the Aesthetica Art Prize.

His production of Hamlet in Grand Theft Auto won The Stage Innovation Award 2023 and is the subject of a forthcoming feature length documentary.

He is currently playing Harry Potter in the West End production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, and can soon be seen as Jacques-Louis David in Ridley Scott’s forthcoming film Napoleon for Sony Pictures and Apple TV.

He is a PhD candidate at York University's School of Arts and Creative Technologies (under the supervision of Dr Ben Kirman and Dr Karen Quigley) and is a member of the PEERS programme of artistic researchers at Zurich University of the Arts.

He read Classics as an undergraduate at Oxford University and trained as an actor at LAMDA where he won the Nicholas Hytner scholarship.

  More

Less

Sam Firth

Lecturer School of Business and Creative Industries, filmmaker, University of the West of Scotland
Sam Firth is a practicing filmmaker and lecturer with an interest in both documentary and fiction filmmaking. Her work explores documentary form, the construction of personal narrative, notions of truth and objectivity and our relationship to place. Her fiction films have focussed specifically on the experience of young women. She has won awards internationally. She has also worked extensively as a community film practitioner.

Sam has been as a script consultant for a number of organisations including Film Four, Screen Yorkshire and the Welsh Arts Council. For many years Sam ran her own film production company Tiny Spark Productions where, she developed and delivered educational film programmes in primary and secondary schools across Scotland. Sam has also delivered programmes for the BFI Young Filmmakers Academy and taught at the Met Film School and has won awards for her work in this area.

Sam Firth's primary area of expertise is in filmmaking practice, but also the pedagogy of teaching filmmaking.

Sam's first three films use first person filmmaking to explore notions of self identity and the constuction of personal narrative. Her film Stay the Same which explored our relationship to time (2012) won International Competition in 2013 at Videoex Experimental film festival in Zurich and a special mention at Stuttgart Filmwinter. Her first film I.D. won the DepicT! Award at Encounters Film Festival and the Human Condition Competition at Chicago International Film Festival in 2010 and has been screened at the Tate Modern in Liverpool.

In 2012 Sam won a special commendation in the Wellcome Trust Screenwriting Award and an award of £10,000 for her work.

Her fiction film Creeling explored the depiction of teenage female sexuality and sexual desire in cinema. Creeling screened at the Edinburgh Film International film festival and is now used as a teaching tool in Germany and Austria .

Sam's most recent film The Wolf Suit premiered at the BFI London Film Festival. It explores reconstruction both in personal memory and in documentary and it's relationship to truth and reality, specifically in the context of families histories and 'gaslighting'.

Sam has evaluated, developed, facilitated and delivered community film projects with children and young people since 2001 and has won awards for her work in this area. Over this time Sam developed innovative ways of working with children and young people to explore their creativity through film. This interest in teaching creativity and encouraging creativity in teaching has continued in her role in HE and she has delivered workshops for academics on the subject.

  More

Less

Sam John

Senior Lecturer in Neural Engineering, The University of Melbourne
Sam John is a senior lecturer in neural engineering at the University of Melbourne. He holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and has extensive research experience in the development of neural interfaces and implantable devices. He has a passion for bridging the gap between cutting-edge medical technology and real-world applications. His research focuses on next-generation neural interfaces.

  More

Less

Sam Jones

Sam Jones is an Associate Professor in Development Economics at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Sam specializes in research in applied macroeconomics, foreign aid effectiveness, labour markets and education quality, with a special focus on sub-Saharan Africa. Previously, Sam worked for the Bank of England and spent seven years supporting the Government of Mozambique. Since 2012, Sam has collaborated with Twaweza in the large scale learning assessment exercises undertaken by Uwezo across East Africa.

  More

Less

Sam Power

Samuel is an ESRC funded doctoral researcher based in the Sussex Centre for the Study of Corruption (SCSC) interested in party funding regimes and corruption in Western Europe.

His thesis is titled: Party Funding Regimes and Corruption: Linkages, Relationships and Trends.

The research is a comparative study of three advanced democracies in Western Europe (Denmark, France and the UK) and investigates whether a certain type of party funding regime (e.g. public or private funding) leads to the prevalence of a certain type of corruption.

There has been little research - academic or otherwise - which attempts to investigate these linkages, the hypothesis is that certain types of party funding regime are not necessarily more corrupt than other types; but that perhaps different types of corruption occur in different types of party funding regime. It is important to understand more about how democracy is funded and how that might lead to specific types of corrupt practices.

  More

Less

Sam Wylie

Associate Professor Sam Wylie is Principal Fellow of the Melbourne Business School.

His research and consulting is focused on the investment management and hedge fund industries, especially performance measurement and incentives.

In 2005 Dr Wylie’s work was published in the University of Chicago’s Journal of Business.

He was an Assistant Professor at the Tuck School of Business from 1997-2004. The Tuck School, is one of the world’s leading business schools, being ranked #1 in world by the Wall Street Journal in 2006. Dr Wylie’s courses at Tuck were regularly rated among the best at a school renowned for teaching excellence.

Dr Wylie obtained his PhD from the London Business School. He also has a Master of Economics degree from the Australian National University and a Bachelor of Engineering degree from the University of Western Australia.

From 1986-1992 he was an Intelligence Officer with the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation. Dr Wylie is married and has three young children.

  More

Less

Samantha Monk

PhD Student, Department of Kinesiology, University of Windsor
Samantha Monk received her MHK in Applied Human Performance from the University of Windsor in 2020. Currently, she is a PhD Student in the Department of Kinesiology at the University of Windsor, working within the Community Health, Environment, and Wellness (CHEW) Lab. Her research interests lie in supporting the health and wellness of fellow Canadians by investigating environmental influences on health outcomes through multidisciplinary, community-based research, with an emphasis on problematic social media use among youth. Her current research is focused on lifestyle outcomes of social media influencers, and career guidance for high school students who desire a career in social media influencing.

  More

Less

Samantha Ward

Lecturer Zoo Animal Biology, Nottingham Trent University

Dr Ward's research interests are linked to human-animal interactions and animal husbandry and management techniques to investigate impacts and improve captive welfare and reintroduction of species.

Previous work has investigated the impacts of stockmanship on the behaviour and welfare of zoo species and the impacts on behaviour, welfare and production of different management techniques during lambing on a commercial sheep farm.

Trustee of The Sumatran Tiger Trust an international charity working to protect the Sumatran Tiger and its habitat.

Secretary of the South Lakes Red Squirrel Group working to preserve the UK red squirrel population and encourage local support and populations of the red squirrel in the south lakes area.

  More

Less

Samar Fatima

Research Fellow Enterprise AI and Data Analytics Hub, RMIT University
I am working as a Research Fellow at RMIT University, Australia. I recently completed PhD at Queensland University of Technology, Australia. Through my research, I aspire to explain the role of emerging technologies in society's gains. My PhD research investigated AI planning and deployment at the government and public agency levels. In my current research program, I am exploring components of AI governance such as fairness, transparency, explainability, ethics and accountability through AI system design, development and allocation.

  More

Less

Sameer Hosany

Professor of Marketing, Royal Holloway University of London
Sameer is Professor of Marketing and Head of Department, School of Business and Management, Royal Holloway University of London. He is recognised as a research pioneer by applying advanced quantitative methodologies at the intersection of psychology, marketing, and tourism. Professor Hosany has published influential and highly cited papers and his works have won multiple awards.

  More

Less

Samia Badji

Research Fellow, Centre for Health Economics, Monash University
Samia is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Health Economics, Monash University. Her research focuses on identifying the most effective policy practices to improve health outcomes of disadvantaged populations.

  More

Less

Samuel Alexander

Dr Samuel Alexander is a lecturer with the Office for Environmental Programs, University of Melbourne, teaching a course called ‘Consumerism and the Growth Economy: Interdisciplinary Perspectives’ in the Masters of Environment. He is also a research fellow with the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute and co-director of the Simplicity Institute. In 2015 he published two books of collected essays, 'Prosperous Descent: Crisis as Opportunity in an Age of Limits' and 'Sufficiency Economy: Enough, for Everyone, Forever' both available from the Simplicity Institute publications page. His other books include 'Simple Living in History: Pioneers of the Deep Future', 'Entropia: Life Beyond Industrial Civilisation', and 'Voluntary Simplicity: The Poetic Alternative to Consumer Culture.'

  More

Less

Samuel Cornell

PhD Candidate, UNSW Beach Safety Research Group, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney
Sam is working with the BSRG on a PhD which seeks to determine the efficacy and effectiveness of using location-based social media safety messaging to reduce injuries and fatalities at aquatic locations, popular with Instagram users.

Research Interests:

Risk communication

Social media effects on risk taking and drowning

  More

Less

Samuel Farley

Senior Lecturer in Work Psychology, University of Sheffield

  More

Less

Samuel Kariuki

Chief Research Scientist and Director, Centre for Microbiology Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute
Sam Kariuki is Chief Research Scientist and Director, Centre for Microbiology Research at KEMRI in Nairobi and a Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute International Fellow. He is visiting Professor of Tropical Microbiology, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, UK. He is Co-ordinator of Medical Microbiology postgraduate course, Institute of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases, KEMRI. He has research interest in the epidemiology and antimicrobial resistance of enteric bacterial pathogens, including invasive non-typhoidal salmonellosis (NTS) and typhoid fever, Shigella spp, Vibrio cholerae and Escherichia coli. He is Chair, Global Antimicrobial Resistance Partnership (GARP)-Kenya chapter and in 2014-16, led the initiative for development of the Situational Analysis on AMR in Kenya culminating in the National Action Plan Draft document. He has Authored/co-authored over 130 papers in peer-reviewed journals and 3 text books on Antimicrobial resistance and Food Safety.

  More

Less

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 
  • Market Data
Close

Welcome to EconoTimes

Sign up for daily updates for the most important
stories unfolding in the global economy.