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Alexandra Crosby

Lecturer, Interdisciplinary Design Studies, University of Technology Sydney

Alexandra Crosby is a lecturer in Interdisciplinary Design and a research fellow at the Institute for Interactive Media and Learning.

Her research focuses on emerging forms of environmentalism and the the role of creative practices in culturally-specific forms of activism. She is a member of the Cities Network at Sydney University.

She speaks Indonesian and has worked extensively on cross-cultural art and media projects in the Asia-Pacific region.

Alexandra is a board member of Inside Indonesia and an artist for the Yurt Empire.

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Alexandra Digby

Adjunct Assistant professor of Economics, University of Rochester
I graduated with a PhD in economic history from the University of Cambridge. After that I worked for a short time at the Economist as an assistant editor during which time I published articles on financial and economic history. I am now employed as an adjunct Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Rochester and as Assistant Professor of Economics at Minerva University. My co-writers are employed by Minerva University.

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Alexandra Ehrhardt

Ph.D. Candidate in Psychology, Wayne State University
A second-year doctoral candidate working with Dr. Hannah Schacter and the ARC lab, Alexandra has an M.S. in Clinical Research Methods from Fordham University and a B.S. of Cell & Molecular Biology from Tulane University. Her research interests include stress and inflammatory markers in contexts as well as relationships as protective factors.

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Alexandra Kviat

Research fellow, University of Leicester
Alexandra Kviat is a Research Fellow at the School of Media, Communication and Sociology and the Institute for Digital Culture, University of Leicester. She works across the fields of consumer and service research, cultural and media studies, urban sociology and human geography. Her interdisciplinary research projects have explored the relationship between digital technology, urban space and everyday consumption in the context of the hospitality, retail and leisure industries. Alexandra's work has been supported by the Leverhulme Trust, the Economic and Social Research Council, the University of Warwick Institute of Advanced Study and Chancellor's International Scholarship, and the Fulbright Program.

Alexandra's areas of expertise include:

- cafes and other 'third places';
- post-digital culture;
- digital disconnection and detox;
- board game culture;
- servicescape design.

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Alexandra Mislin

Associate Professor of Management, American University
Professor Mislin’s research focuses on negotiation and conflict management. She studies how aspects of social exchange (e.g., trust, reciprocity, emotions) influence cooperation and conflict. Her work bridges the fields of management, experimental economics, and social psychology, leading to scholarly as well as practical insights on organizational life.

Alexandra (Alex) Mislin’s interdisciplinary research is premised on the view that negotiated agreements alone do not lead to desired outcomes. She studies how trust violations and repair, the tracking of obligations, and social curiosity motivate cooperation. Her research has been published in leading academic journals including Administrative Science Quarterly, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Journal of Applied Psychology, Psychological Science, and the Journal of Economic Psychology. Her courses focus on negotiation strategy and conflict management.

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Alexandra Sherlock

Lecturer, School of Fashion and Textiles, RMIT University
Alexandra is a lecturer in the School of Fashion and Textiles at RMIT University and a member of RMIT’s Academic Board. With a PhD in sociology from the University of Sheffield and a master’s degree in cultural anthropology from UCL she explores the role of material and visual culture in relation to identity and processes of identification. She is also interested in the value of Indigenous knowledge systems for teaching ethical and sustainable fashion and textiles practices.

Between 2010 and 2013 Alexandra worked as the postgraduate researcher on the ESRC-funded research project 'If the Shoe Fits: Footwear Identity and Transition' at the University of Sheffield. Her doctoral research explored the social lives of Clarks Originals shoes. In 2021 she founded the Footwear Research Network to support the ongoing development of academic enquiries into shoes and to enhance academic/industry collaboration.

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Alexandre Rodrigues

Alexandre is a PhD student in the School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment. Alexandre has a strong interest in environmental sustainability through design and his research is looking at optimised lifespans for passenger cars: more specifically, how automotive design can contribute to and influence the reduction of material demand through strategies such as structure modularity, re-use of (more) parts, upgradability, improved manufacturing and re-manufacturing.

Alexandre's interest stemmed from reflection on the automotive industry as a whole, producing more than 80 million cars a year worldwide, and how vehicles are used and disposed, often too soon, despite their potential to last longer. Also the impending scarcity of raw materials due to an expected rise in global population and a growing middle class who will demand more new products and put more pressure on an already polluted and saturated environment.

Alexandre's research will address the design stage and its influence on product use, durability, longevity and new forms of personal mobility; it will also consider assembly and disassembly processes and business models in order to understand how this interconnected relationship of three processes / disciplines can contribute to reducing material demand from a product longevity perspective and divert materials from end-of-life and give them an extended life. A design framework will be devised to assist automotive designers to incorporate optimised lifespans throughout the development of passenger vehicles.

In order to accomplish this Alexandre interviewed key people in the automotive industry who have influence in car design and development. The data gathered from experts will be analysed and will inform the design framework.

Alexandre has an automotive industry background and a degree in automotive product design. Alexandre also studied business administration and lectured in Product Design and Marketing for two years. Alexandre is also a storybook author with a published anthology.

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Alexey Serdyuk

Head of the Research Lab for Psychological Support of Law Enforcement, Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs
Dr. Alexey Serdyuk (Oleksii Serdiuk) is a Head of the Research Laboratory for Psychological Support of Law Enforcement, Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs, Ukraine; Lieutenant Colonel of Police. He was born in 1974. PhD Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs (Sociology), 2003; BA/MA V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University (Psychology) and Kharkiv Institute of Management (Economics), 1997. Associate Professor in Sociology, 2006. Visiting Scholar and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Michigan, Addiction Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, 2015. His previous appointments include Deputy Head of Research Lab on Combating Crime; Head of Research Lab on Distance Education; Head of Sociology and Social Work Department; Deputy Head of Research Lab for Staff, Sociological and Psychological Support of Law Enforcement. He is author of over 150 publications. Has extensive experience in international research on sociology, psychology, criminology, policing and epidemiology of substance abuse.
Research:
2019 – present, Ukrainian Longitudinal Study (ULS) – measuring behavioral development of Ukrainian children across the transition from middle to high school and then to college with special focus on substance abuse risk factors with interdisciplinary methodological approach (Principal investigator)
1995 – present, Youth and Drugs – Substance Use Monitoring Among Youth in Kharkiv City (Principal investigator) in cooperation with Sociological Association of Ukraine within the Regional Community Safety and Public Order Ensuring Program and Development Strategy for Kharkiv Region
2013 – present, Trust and Safety – Measuring of police performance in Kharkiv region (Principal investigator) in cooperation with Sociological Association of Ukraine and European Union Advisory Mission (EUAM), within the Regional Community Safety and Public Order Ensuring Program and Development Strategy for Kharkiv Region
2013 – present, Corruption in the Everyday Life – Survey on corruption in Kharkiv region (Principal investigator)
2014 Survey on socio-political situation in Kharkiv region and identifying ways of overcoming the crisis (Principal investigator)
2013 – 2014 Like mother, like daughter: Intergenerational criminality of Ukrainian women, in collaboration with Ohio State University – Marion, USA (Co-Principal investigator)
2011 – 2012 Study of the effect of internal and external migration on the criminal situation in Kazakhstan, in collaboration with International Organization for Migration (scientific consultant on criminology)
2010 – 2011 Migrant workers and crime: where Kings Lynn meets Moscow. The study in England, Russia and Ukraine, in collaboration with Anglia Ruskin University (Co-Principal investigator)
2007 – 2009 Corruption in State traffic inspection (STI) of the Ministry of Interior of Ukraine (Project director / Principal investigator)
2007 – 2008 Drugs-crime connection: the study of convicted offenders in Ukraine In collaboration with Anglia Ruskin University (Co-Principal investigator)
2005 Monitoring of illegal spread of drugs among young people in Kharkov region (Co-Principal investigator)
2001 Injection drug use in Kharkov region: WHO survey of injection drug use, stage 2. (scientific expert of Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs)
2000 – 2001 Organizational and methodical aspects of drug abuse prevention among youth. Measures in Ukraine, Germany, Spain and Russia (Co-Principal investigator / scientific expert of Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs)
1998 – 1999 The dynamics, socio-cultural context and subjective conditions of illegal spread of drugs among young people Since the Second World War (Co-Principal investigator / as scientific expert of Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs)

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Alexis Habiyaremye

Associate Professor in the School of Economics, University of Johannesburg
Alexis Habiyaremye is an associate professor in the School of Economics at the University of Johannesburg. His research interests include innovation & industrial policy, labour market dynamics, technological change and export diversification. He has published extensively on industrial capacity building, economic policy uncertainty, economic stimulus & job creation, innovation policy, and beneficiation of natural resources.

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Alexis Poulhès

Enseignant à l’École des Ponts, ingénieur de recherche au Laboratoire Ville Mobilité Transport, École des Ponts ParisTech (ENPC)
Les travaux de recherche d’Alexis Poulhès portent sur la modélisation de l’affectation des usagers dans des réseaux de transport et ses applications économiques et environnementales. Il s’intéresse également à la modélisation et l’évaluation environnementale de la mobilité à l’échelle du quartier, les conséquences des pratiques de mobilité dans les villes de taille moyenne sur l’environnement et l’évaluation de politiques publiques environnementales.

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Alexis Wolf

Research Associate on the Davy Notebooks Project, Lancaster University
I am a Research Associate on the Davy Notebooks Project.

I obtained my PhD from Birkbeck, University of London in 2018. I joined the Department of English Literature and Creative Writing at Lancaster in 2021 from the University of Leeds, where I was a Research Associate on the Sheridan Project (Leverhulme-funded). I have lectured at Birkbeck, Canterbury Christ Church University and City, University of London.

I was awarded a Birkbeck / Wellcome Trust ISSF doctoral extension grant in 2018/19 for research on women’s participation in medicine in the early nineteenth century. I have been awarded visiting fellowships at Yale University’s Lewis Walpole Library, the Wordsworth Trust and Chawton House Library.

My research focuses on Romantic manuscript practices, women’s literary history, and travel writing. I am currently working on my first book, entitled Manuscript Geographies: Women Writers and Transnational Networks: 1798-1840. My research has been published in European Romantic Review. I have forthcoming articles in Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies and Studies in Romanticism (both 2021).

I have secondary interests in the medical humanities and the history of science, particularly women’s midwifery writing of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. I have written a book chapter on Lady Mount Cashell’s medical life, forthcoming in The Palgrave Handbook of Women and Science: History, Cultures and Practice since 1660 (2021), of which I am also Co-editor.

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Alfred Cardone

I am an American living in Europe taking advantage of the "outsider" perspective in order to understand my country's political system and how members of society interact within the United States.

I received my BA in History from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine in 2002 and my MA in Political Science from Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts in 2004. Afterwards, I worked in international education in London, specifically helping American students adjust to life in the UK, and in the finance industry in Luxembourg.

My research focuses on three essential questions: what is "populism," how does one define the Tea Party and Occupy organisations, and how are they all related? Concerning "populism," I argue that a dichotomy exists regarding how this label is conceived today that appeared after the emergence of the Populist Movement of the late nineteenth century.

For the Tea Party and Occupy organisations, I maintain that they are more complex than many originally imagined and do not conform to the general anti-government and anti-capitalist activism respectively applied to them. To conclude, I postulate that the elements within the Tea Party and Occupy organizations have inherited the role of the Populist Movement and are developing a new way to view populism in America.

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Alfred Nayinggul

Senior Erre Traditional Owner, Indigenous Knowledge
Alfred Nayingull is a senior Erre Traditional Owner from Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia. He is committed to caring for his people's cultural heritage, and has been actively involved in Indigenous land management and conservation efforts in the region.

Alfred has been instrumental in the creation of the Njanjma Aboriginal Rangers, who are responsible for managing Erre traditional lands in the Arnhem Land Aboriginal Land Trust and Kakadu National Park. He is currently a member of the Kakadu National Park Board of Management.

He has also been involved in the development of cultural tourism initiatives, which showcase the unique traditions and customs of the local Aboriginal communities. Alfred's dedication to caring for country and his people's culture and the natural environment is widely respected and appreciated.

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Ali Asgary

Professor, Disaster & Emergency Management, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies & Director, CIFAL York, York University, Canada
I am a professor of disaster and emergency management at York University, Toronto, Canada. I have been teaching and researching various types of disasters and emergencies since 1993. My research focuses on human, economic and environmental, and technology applications aspects of disasters and emergency management. I develop many different types of simulations and applications for disaster and emergency management.

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Ali Dehghantanha

Lecturer in Cyber Security and Forensics, University of Salford

Dr.Ali Dehghantanha (www.alid.info) has served for several years in variety of industrial and academic positions with leading players in Cyber-Security and E-Commerce. He has long history of working in different areas of computer security as security researcher, malware analyzer, penetration tester, security consultant, professional trainer, and university lecturer. He regularly travels the globe on speaking, teaching, and consulting engagements and assist clients in securing their information assets.

Ali is imminently qualified in the field of cyber-security; he has awarded a prestigious EU Marie Curie post-doctoral fellowship in cyber forensics, Ph.D in Security in Computing and a number of professional qualifications namely CISM (Certified Information Security Manager - ISACA), CCFP (Certified Cyber Forensics Professional - ISC2), CISSP (Certified Information System Security Professional - ISC2), LPT (Licensed Penetration Tester), CEH (Certified Ethical Hacker), CHFI (Certified Hacker and Forensics Investigator) and he is a Certified IT Security Instructor (CEI).

As a forensics researcher, Ali is actively researching on latest trends in “Real-Time Malware Detection and Analysis in Mobile and Pervasive Systems”, “0-Day Malware and Exploit Detection Techniques” and “Big-Data Forensics”. He is now attached with University of Salford (UoS)- Greater Manchester and is the program leader for MSc. of Information Security.

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Ali Dubin

Lecturer in Non Profit Leadership, Clemson University
Ali Dubin is a graduate of the Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism Management at Clemson University in Community Recreation, Sport, and Camp Management. She is a lecturer in Non-Profit Leadership and a Hospitality Certificate Program for Clemson University. Her research focuses on issues in camp administration and camp healthcare, with a specific focus on children with Severe Food Allergy and the constraints to participation that they face.

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Ali Malik

Lecturer in Criminal Justice, University of Leeds
My research interests include police governance, the role of experts in public and policing policy and diversity in policing. I join University of Leeds in May 2023. I have worked as Assistant Professor in Criminology and Policing at Northumbria University (2019-2023) and Associate Inspector for His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary in Scotland (2017-2021). I have written extensively about police governance arrangements in Scotland following the amalgamation of local forces and the creation of the Scottish Police Authority in 2013. I have also assisted HMICS with thematic inspections on police governance, training and development and local policing. More recently, I have conducted research examining the impact of English as an additional language (EAL) on police recruitment, progression and specialist roles, funded by the Policing Uplift Programme.

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Alice de Jonge

Dr Alice de Jonge is a senior lecturer in the department of Business Law and Taxation.

Alice has travelled extensively throughout Asia and speaks Mandarin and Chinese. She lived and studied in Shanghai (Fudan University), and was a visiting scholar at Nanjing University. She has provided written advice for the Central and East European Law Initiative of the American Bar Association, and provided advice in cases before the Refugee Review Tribunal.

Alice was awarded the LawAsia Research Award in 1998, and has also been the recipient of a number of travelling scholarships and research grants.

Alice has also been involved in the design and delivery of a number of AusAid-funded international trade law short-courses aimed at government officials from Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Burma.

Her research and supervision interests include corporate governance in Asia, cross-border issues of corporate governance in China and Hong Kong, women directors in China and India, Australia-China relations, international law and its applicability to transnational corporations, sovereign bankruptcy, and international law and unequal treaties in international law.

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Alice Hayward

Molecular Biologist, The University of Queensland
I am a plant molecular physiologist in the Mitter Lab at the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation. Our team primarily focuses on innovating tissue culture technologies for plant species in close partnership with industry and stakeholders. We deliver world-first propagation protocols for difficult and recalcitrant crops species as well as biotechnologies for crop improvement and cryobanking of recalcitrant plant germplasm. We also have a dedicated research stream in crop genomics and molecular biology. We aim to improve efficiency and resilience in our plant industries as well as support conservation of our key germplasm and endangered species. Our flagship species has been the avocado, and our team has been involved with producing the first genome sequence for avocado as well as the world's first commercial tissue culture pipelines for avocado propagation and cryopreservation. We are now extending this to other key crop species such as macadamia, as well as endangered native species with collaborators. Our ongoing vision is continued extension of these technologies to new species and crops for both horticultural and environmental outcomes.

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Alice Hazlehurst

Postgraduate Researcher, University of Leeds
I am a postgraduate researcher at the University of Leeds School of Design. My research interests lie in quantifying the release of microplastics from the domestic laundry of textile fabrics.

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Alice Masterson

Alice Masterson is a Visiting Lecturer in Music at the University of York and Fordham London. Her research interests include posthumous fame; the singing voice and its ascribed meanings; audience perception of ‘authenticity’; and women's experiences in music. Her doctoral thesis explored the posthumous legacies of female musicians who were vilified for their lifestyles while living, particularly the ways in which they seem to find public ‘redemption’ through death.

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Alice Welsh

Research fellow, University of York
LLM in International Human Rights Law and Practice (York), PhD Law (York)

I joined York Law School in 2011, where I completed an LLB and then an LLM at the Centre for Applied Human Rights. I will also be completing an Economic and Social Research Council PhD studentship on EU workers’ social rights in the UK in 2020, where I have undertaken placements at the AIRE Centre and Glendon College, York University in Toronto. I am currently a Research Fellow working on the EU Legal Action Research Clinic - a ESRC Governance After Brexit project (EEA PSRC).

Prior to this, I have worked at the Public Law Project as a Research Fellow looking at the EU Settlement Scheme and as a caseworker at the Refugee Council.

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Alicia Grealy

Research Projects Officer, CSIRO
I graduated with a Bachelor of Science with Honours from the University of Queensland (Qld, Australia) in 2011, and gained a doctorate from the Curtin University (WA, Australia) in 2017. I undertook a post-doctoral position at the Australian National University (ACT, Australia) in 2018-2019, and joined the National Research Collections Australia at CSIRO in 2020. My interests include using ancient and historical DNA to study evolution, and improving molecular methods to recover DNA from fossils and museum specimens.

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Alicia Sabatino

Master's Student in Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Alicia received her Bachelor’s degree in Geography and Environmental Science with a minor in Computer Science from the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where she is also completing her M.S. degree. Her Master’s research focuses on the racial-sexual geographies of incarceration in the United States. She also contributes to various research projects around cities, housing and technology using critical GIS methods.

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Alimuddin Zumla

Professor of Infectious Diseases and International Health, UCL
Professor Sir Alimuddin Zumla is professor of infectious diseases and international health at University College London. He is also a consultant infectious diseases at UCLH, honorary consultant at Royal Free Hospital, and holds a UK NIHR senior Investigator award. His London and overseas research activities span the interface between clinical investigation and biomedical science, with the long-term goals of understanding the pathogenesis of respiratory tract infections, and emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases with epidemic potential, afflicting adults and children, and developing methods for rapid diagnosis, better treatment and control.

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Alison Gerlach

Assistant Professor, School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria
Alison Gerlach is an Assistant Professor who joined the School of Child & Youth Care at the University of Victoria in British Columbia in August 2018. Alison’s research and scholarship focuses on informing systems change for equity-oriented child- and family-centred care in diverse early years and healthcare contexts with Indigenous and non-Indigenous families and children who experience structural forms of marginalization and a greater risk of health inequities.

Alison’s work draws on 25 years of providing occupational therapy with dis/abled children in diverse community and family contexts, and in partnership with Indigenous organizations and First Nations in British Columbia. Alison is particularly interested in the continuities between children’s early experiences of adversity, dis/ability, and health inequities and the development of inclusive, responsive, and equity-oriented structural, organizational, and practice level approaches. She is committed to community-based participatory research that engages with communities, organizations, families, and children as research partners.

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Alison Pennington

Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Politics, Philosophy and Economics, La Trobe University
Alison Pennington is an economist and writer. She is an Adjunct Senior Research Fellow in Politics, Philosophy and Economics at La Trobe University, and the author of Gen F'd: How Young Australians Can Reclaim Their Uncertain Futures (Crikey Reads/Hardie Grant).

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Alistair Rieu-Clarke

Professor of Law, Northumbria University, Newcastle
Professor Rieu-Clarke's research interests lie in the interface between international law, sustainable development and transboundary waters. Alistair’s research has taken him to many of the major transboundary river basins in the world, and he has conducted several major multi-disciplinary research projects in Europe, Southern and Eastern Africa, Central America and South-East Asia. Since September 2017, Alistair has been working as a legal advisor to one of the UN agencies responsible for the implementation of the SDGs, namely the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). As well as working for UNECE on SDG6.5.2 (transboundary water cooperation), Alistair has assisted in the implementation of the pilot reporting mechanism under the Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes.

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Alix Woolard

Dr Alix Woolard has a Ph.D. in Psychology and researches ways to better understand and treat childhood trauma. Dr Woolard is a senior researcher at Embrace at Telethon Kids.

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Allan McCay

Law Teacher, University of Sydney

Allan McCay is an Affiliate Member of the Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics, at Macquarie University and teaches at the University of Sydney Foundation Program.

He has taught at the law schools of the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales, and the Business School at the University of Sydney. Allan trained as a solicitor in Scotland and has also practiced in Hong Kong

He completed his PhD at the University of Sydney in 2013 and his thesis considered the ethical and legal merits of behavioural genetics based pleas in mitigation in sentencing. He is interested in free will, philosophy of punishment and the criminal law’s response to neuroscience.

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Allen Cheng

Professor in Infectious Diseases Epidemiology, Monash University
Allen Cheng is a specialist in infectious diseases and an epidemiologist. He is Professor/Director of Infectious Diseases at Monash Health and the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash University in Melbourne, and is involved in the treatment of patients with infectious diseases, and providing advice to governments on communicable diseases control. He is also involved in in surveillance for influenza-related hospital admissions through the FluCAN system, based at 21 hospitals nationally. He was previously Deputy Victorian Chief Health Officer, and a past Co-Chair of the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation and the Advisory Committee for Vaccines.

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Allison Anderson

Lecturer in tourism planning and development, CQUniversity Australia

Tropical cities are my research area, especially how many are developing from being the 'supporting act' to the 'main event' for tourists. My research looks particularly at how tropical cities are innovating their urban landscapes to move beyond the traditional huts, colonial-style architecture, beaches and palm trees and emerge as complex and cosmopolitan sites of tourist and resident activity.

I recently submitted my PhD through James Cook University on Urban design and tourism in the tropics. I have worked as a tourism research and development consultant and strategic planner for a number of years, and hold a BSc (Hons) (Geography) from Victoria University of Wellington, NZ (1998).

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Allison Christy

Graduate Research Assistant, Boise State University
Allison is finishing her PhD in Materials Science and Engineering from Boise State University. She holds undergraduate degrees in Environmental Chemistry and in Political Science, and has a passion for applying her technical skills to tackle sustainability problems.

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Allison Garefino

Research Scholar; Clinical Director of Children and Family Programs, Kennesaw State University
Dr. Garefino is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh and earned her Ph.D. in clinical Psychology from the State University of New York at Buffalo. She is the Clinical Director of the Children and Family Programs (CFP) and Research Scholar in Wellstar College of Health and Human Services at Kennesaw State University (KSU). She was a Part-Time Assistant Professor in the psychology department of KSU, and the recipient of their Part-Time Distinguished Teaching Award three years in a row. Her clinical and research interests include increasing the dissemination and effectiveness of behavioral interventions for the treatment of the disruptive behavior disorders across multiple settings.

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Allison Kelliher

Assistant Professor, Department of Family & Community Medicine, University of North Dakota
Allison Kelliher, MD, is Koyukon Athabascan, Dena, from Nome, Alaska. She is the Director of the American Indian Collaborative Research Network (AICoRN), a Practice-Based Research Network at the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences where she is also an Assistant Professor. She also serves as faculty at the University of Washington School of Medicine and University of Alaska Anchorage and serves on the Board of Directors for the Association of American Indian Physicians. She is the first and only physician trained as a Traditional Healer in a Tribal Health setting and weaves this into her practice as a Family and Integrative Physician. She is a board member for the Association of American Indian Physicians, and University of Alaska Fairbanks Alumnus of the year. She recently published a chapter in a textbook Walking Together, Working Together Engaging Wisdom for Indigenous Well-Being.

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