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Timothy Johnson

Horace T. Morse Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Law, University of Minnesota
I am Horace T. Morse Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Law. Over my 24 year career I have published several books, including Oral Arguments and Coalition Formation on the U.S. Supreme Court, A Good Quarrel, Oral Arguments and Decision Making on the U.S. Supreme Court, and The Logic of American Politics (10th edition). My research also appears in a variety of academic journals including the American Political Science Review, the Journal of Politics, and the Law and Society Review. Along with legal and political commentary my work has been covered by The Economist, The Guardian, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, NPR, C-SPAN, Slate, USA Today, ABC, and CNN.

In 2018 I was named a semi-finalist for the prestigious Robert F. Cherry Award for Great Teaching and was awarded the American Political Science Association's Distinguished Teaching Award.

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Timothy Matthews

Lecturer in Psychology, University of Greenwich
Dr. Timothy Matthews completed his PhD at King's College London in 2017, where he conducted research into loneliness in adolescence and early adulthood. He was subsequently awarded a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship to continue his work in this area at KCL, and then joined the University of Greenwich in 2023 as a lecturer in psychology. His research output to date has focused on how loneliness in young people is associated with impairments in multiple areas of health and functioning, ranging from mental and physical health problems to employment prospects.

Dr. Matthews' research is highly inter-disciplinary, and integrates methods from diverse scientific disciplines including epidemiology, behavioural genetics, immunology and computer science. His current research aims to investigate how novel technology can inform ways of measuring and combating loneliness in the digital age. His research has previously received coverage in The Guardian, BBC Science Focus and New Scientist, and was also featured in the BBC Radio 4 documentary, 'The Anatomy of Loneliness'.

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Timothy Peace

Lecturer in Politics, University of Glasgow
Timothy Peace is a Lecturer in Politics at the University of Glasgow. He is the author of European Social Movements and Muslim Activism (Palgrave 2015) and Muslims and Political Participation in Britain (Routledge 2015).

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Timothy Piatkowski

Lecturer in Psychology, Griffith University
My research is focused on harm reduction, particularly among those who consume performance and image enhancing drugs. My work emerges at the intersection of applied psychology and harm reduction, through enhancing engagement in harm minimisation behaviours.

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Timothy Randhir

Professor (Full) of Watershed Management, Water Resources, Water Quality, Ecohydrology, Complex Systems, Ecological Economics, and Sustainability., UMass Amherst
Professor Randhir’s primary interests include water resources, watershed management, water quality, ecological economics, complex systems, ecology, dynamic modeling and optimization, spatial analysis and simulation, Institutional economics, systems modeling, climate change, land use policy, international trade and development, common pool resources, and natural resources policy.

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Timothy Stott

Associate Professor in Modern and Contemporary Art History, Department of Art History & Architecture, Trinity College Dublin
I am a historian of contemporary art, design, and visual culture. My teaching covers modern and contemporary art, visual culture, and design. I teach modules on global postmodern and contemporary art and on art, design, and nature since the 1930s. Past and present PhD researchers have studied a history of Irish and British adventure playgrounds, Irish interior design for autism, Irish data centre architecture, cybernetic art in post-war Argentina, participatory arts institutions, commemorative exhibitions, queer Irish art, and the visual culture of climate science. I welcome proposals for a research degree from suitably qualified applicants.

My research has previously focussed on the ‘social turn’ in art and design from the 1960s on, published as Play and Participation in Contemporary Arts Practices in 2015 and in the journals Art History, Art Journal, and Journal of Design History. In 2019, I edited a special issue of Sculpture Journal on toys and modern sculpture. Current research focuses on ecocritical art and design history, the visual culture of science, and the contribution of art/design history to the environmental humanities. Buckminster Fuller’s World Game and Its Legacy (2021) studies the design strategies, gameplay, and modelling techniques of the World Game and related projects from the late 1960s to the present. Nervous Systems: Art, Systems, and Politics since the 1960s (2022), co-edited with Johanna Gosse, is a collection of essays that expand the study of systems art to address race, gender, embodiment, and the politics of global networks and infrastructures. I am Chair (2020-23) of the Environmental Humanities Working Group for the Irish Humanities Alliance at the Royal Irish Academy. I am also a member of the Trinity Centre for Environmental Humanities.

Selected publications
Nervous Systems: Art, Systems, and Politics since the 1960s, co-edited with Johanna Gosse, Duke University Press, 2022.

Buckminster Fuller's World Game and Its Legacy, Routledge, 2021.

‘Ecocritical Art History’, Art History 43, no. 3, May 2020, pp. 640-645.

‘Systems in Play: Simon Nicholson’s Design 12 Course, University of California, Berkeley, 1966’, Journal of Design History 32, no. 3, September 2019, pp. 223–239.

‘Operable Abstraction: How Toys Changed the Logic of Modern Sculpture’, Sculpture Journal 28, no. 2, 2019, pp. 161-173.

‘Something from Nothing: Tino Sehgal’s Systemic Objects’, Thresholds, 47, 2019.

‘Ludic Pedagogies at the College of Environmental Design, UC Berkeley, 1966 to 1972’, in Kjetil Fallan, ed. The Culture of Nature in the History of Design, Abingdon: Routledge, 2019.

‘When Attitudes Became Toys: Jasia Reichardt’s Play Orbit’, Art History 41, no.2, April 2018, pp. 344-369.

‘How Things Grow: Gabriel Orozco’s Samurai Tree: Invariants (2005)’, Art Journal 76, nos. 3-4, Fall 2017, pp. 32-47.

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Timothy Weber

Research Officer for School of Engineering, Australian National University
Tim is a Research Officer with the Australian National University’s 100% Renewable Energy Team. He is currently undertaking research into 100% renewable electricity pathways, developing the Global Pumped Hydro Energy Storage Atlas algorithm, and modelling firming provided by electrical energy storage systems. Tim completed a Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) in 2021 and received First Class Honours for his research on energy arbitrage modelling for utility-scale batteries and pumped hydro storage systems in the National Electricity Market. He has a background working on the Large-scale Renewable Energy Target operations and supporting the team that is delivering the Australian Government’s Hydrogen Guarantee of Origin pilot project.

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Timothy Gordon Walmsley

Senior Lecturer in Process and Energy Engineering, University of Waikato
I am an active researcher and Assistant Director of the Ahuora Centre for Smart Energy Systems with a PhD in Engineering from the University of Waikato, a Docent degree from Brno University of Technology (Czechia), a Chartered Engineer and Member of the Institute of Chemical Engineers in the UK, and a Member of Engineering New Zealand.

My research mission is to create disruptive energy technology and integrated systems to accelerate the decarbonisation of New Zealand’s energy sector. I also relish the privilege to teach and mentor the next generation of chemical, process, mechanical, and energy engineers. Our engineering students have amazing potential, and I enjoy challenging them to have the audacity to become the engineering leaders of the future.

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Timothy H. Parker

Professor of Biology and Environmental Studies, Whitman College
Research Interests: evolution and ecology, especially of birds; sources of bias in empirical research.

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Timothy J. Mahony

Professor, Centre for Animal Science, The University of Queensland
My research interests are in molecular virology and are focused on improving viral disease control in production animals such as cattle and poultry. My group is characterising the molecular interactions between invading pathogens and the subsequent host responses with the goal of developing new vaccines and diagnostic technologies. A key component of this work includes improving the basic understanding of the molecular mechanisms that underpin and drive viral virulence (the capacity to cause disease) and pathogen evolution. We have utilised next-generation sequencing technologies to sequence the genomes of herpesviruses and adenoviruses from various species including, cattle, chickens, marsupials, horses, and crocodiles. My team is also investigating the role of virally encoded non-coding RNAS in virulence, virus replication, and disease development. The outcomes of these research activities are also being used to understand viral gene function and the development of novel vaccines to increase livestock productivity.

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Timothy J. Moore

John and Penelope Biggs Distinguished Professor of Classics, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
​Professor Moore's work concentrates on several areas of classical antiquity, including the comic theater of Greece and Rome, Greek and Roman music, and Roman historiography.

Moore's current projects include articles on music, meter and dance in ancient theater, an online database of the meters of Greek and Roman drama, and a long-range project on musical theatre in ancient Greece and Rome. He also has interests in the history of theater, especially American musical theater and Japanese Kyōgen comedy.

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Tina Kiefer

Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
Tina Kiefer is a Professor of Organisational Behaviour at Warwick Business School, the University of Warwick.

Her main research areas focus on emotions at work, in particular in the context of ongoing radical organisational change and innovation. She focuses on the employees' and leaders' experiences at work, including topics such as understanding justice, wellbeing, or the psychological contract. Her research often takes an everyday event-based approach to understanding the work experience. She uses a variety of qualitative and quantitative research methods, and she works closely with organisations in both private and public sectors to ensure her work is meaningful to practice. She conducted a number of studies researching the impact of ongoing governmental budget cuts and changes to work triggered by the Covid-19 Pandemic. Tina has published her work in the highest ranked journals and received numerous grants and awards. Tina currently acts as the Assistant Dean for widening participation, leading to implement WBS' ambitious strategy to be an inclusive school, offering chances to talented students from under-represented groups.

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Tina Sharifi

PhD Candidate, Human Resource Management, York University, Canada
Tina Sharifi is a PhD Candidate at the School of Human Resource Management at York University.
As a passionate, thoughtful and creative HR academic with significant industry experience, her work and research aims to embolden and empower equity-deserving individuals in the workplace. In particular, her academic research endeavors to spotlight the critical voices and contributions of BIPOC women in leadership and management. Other critical areas of research interest include, authenticity, companion animals and calling. Her research has been published and presented at various national and international conferences.

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Tina van de Flierdt

Professor of Isotope Geochemistry, Imperial College London
Tina van de Flierdt is a Professor of Isotope Geochemistry and Head of the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London.

She grew up on a dairy farm in rural Germany and is a passionate football fan and potter. Her academic background includes a Diploma in geology from the University of Bonn (Germany), a PhD in Natural Science from the ETH Zurich (Switzerland), and Fellowship, Research Scientist and Lecturer positions at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University (USA). She co-leads the MAGIC isotope facility at Imperial College London (UK).

Her research spans a variety of fields from understanding chemical cycles of trace elements and pollutants in the ocean, over reconstruction of ocean circulation and its relationship to climate, to the history of the polar ice sheets and their vulnerability to future climate change.

Tina is particularly interested in the response of the Antarctic Ice Sheet to warmer temperatures and implications for future sea level around the world. She is a stubborn optimist and values working across disciplines and in collaboration with diverse teams of people.

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Tinashe Mushayanyama

Online Assistant Lecturer, University of South Africa
Tinashe holds a PhD in public administration (University of Pretoria), an MSc in agricultural economics cum laude (University of Kwazulu Natal), a B Com Economics Hons (University of Natal), a BSc in Economics Hons (University of Zimbabwe) and a Diploma in Cost & Management Accounting (IACSA). He has written several articles on his research interests, including social mobility, social policy and food security.

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Tinashe Sithole

Visiting Research Fellow at the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Johannesburg

Dr Tinashe Sithole is a post-doctoral research fellow at the SARChI Chair: African Diplomacy and Foreign Policy at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. His thesis focused on the influence of political settlements on the governance of natural resources in post-liberation Zimbabwe and South Africa. He holds a Master of Arts (Politics) degree from the University of Johannesburg focusing on the African Union's role in managing election-related conflict. His research interests focus on democracy, governance and international political economy, especially challenges of development for African states in the global world, elections, human security and peace and conflict.

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Tinashe P. Kanosvamhira

Graduate, University of the Western Cape
Tinashe’s research is located within the domain of human geography with sub-Saharan Africa as the geographical focus. His research interests are drawn from a broad range of socio-spatial issues, including governance, livelihood strategies of the poor, food security and food systems. He holds a PhD in Urban Geography from the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. He is currently a researcher with the African Centre for Cities at the University of the Cape Town.

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Tinashe Timothy Harry

Senior Lecturer in Industrial and Organisational Psychology, Nelson Mandela University
I am a registered Industrial Psychologist with the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA). I have extensive experience in areas such as Psycho-Legal, Organisational Development, and HR Consulting. I have published research articles in various areas, including psychobiography, career psychology, graduate employability, labour market experiences, self-initiated expatriates, and human capital development in local and international journals. My research interests are in women's health issues and mental disorders in the workplace, graduate employability, psychobiography, and logotherapy (meaning-centered therapy).

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Tiola Allain

Researcher, Center for Indonesian Policy Studies
- Served 5+ years as a researcher, focusing on strategic and public policy development in Indonesia
- Numerous publications including journal articles, book chapters, and op-eds (including on The Jakarta Post, The Diplomat, and The National Interest).

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Tionne Alliyah Parris

PhD Candidate, History, University of Hertfordshire
Tionne Alliyah Parris is a PhD candidate at the University of Hertfordshire. She specializes in African American protest history, with emphasis on the Black Power Movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Her PhD research focuses on Black Radical Women (namely Communist and communist-affiliated activists) of the mid-20th Century, and the long-term impact of their activism on the Black Power Movement.

Parris is also a coordinator and researcher at the Young Historians Project – a non-profit organization in the United Kingdom that aims to encourage youths of African and Caribbean heritage to study history in Britain. This organization produces a range of historical projects which focus on enriching public knowledge of Black British History.

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Tiriki Onus

Senior Lecturer in Indigenous Art and Culture, Head of the Wilin Centre for Indigenous Arts and Cultural Development, University of Melbourne, The University of Melbourne
Tiriki Onus is a Yorta Yorta and Dja Dja Wurrung artist, academic and Head of the Wilin Centre for Indigenous Arts and Cultural Development and co-director of the university’s Research Unit in Indigenous Arts and Culture at the University of Melbourne. He is a successful visual artist, curator, performance artist and opera singer. His first operatic role was in the premiere of Deborah Cheetham’s Pecan Summer in October 2010. He received the Dame Nellie Melba Opera Trust’s Harold Blair Opera Scholarship in 2012 and 2013. In 2014 Tiriki was awarded the inaugural Hutchinson Indigenous Fellowship at the University of Melbourne, working with numerous Indigenous communities to revitalise traditional technologies of Biganga (possum skin cloak) creation. Most recently, Tiriki co-directed the feature documentary Ablaze which premiered at the 2021 Melbourne International Film Festival to great acclaim. The documentary uncovers a film made 70 years ago by Tiriki’s grandfather, William Bill Onus, an important leader in the Aboriginal rights movement.

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Tisha Joseph Holmes

Associate Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, Florida State University
I am committed to seeking sustainable pathways to reducing risk and building socio-ecological resilience to natural and industrial hazards. My research intends to promote grassroots level capacities through community outreach and participatory engagement. I work to build new bridges between scholarship and practice to uncover the intricacy of issues facing highly vulnerable localities while engaging and empowering communities to identify and direct their pathways towards shaping more resilient places. My teaching philosophy is guided by a desire to expand critical thinking, technical competence and hands-on engagement in order to advance inclusive and socially just solutions to environmental problems faced by marginalized and vulnerable groups.

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Titilope Funmbi Onaolapo

Postdoctoral fellow, University of Pretoria
I am Titilope Onaolapo, a PhD holder in Environmental Geography. I am currently a post doctoral fellow in the department of Architecture, University of Pretoria. My research focuses on green infrastructure planning and management in the city of Tshwane. The research is in collaboration with Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA) and Aarhus University, Denmark, with 3 researchers from South Africa and 2 from Aarhus University.

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Titus Mutwiri

Lecturer, Kenya Methodist University
Titus Mutwiri is a lecturer at Kenya Methodist University, Department of Medical Laboratory Sciences. He is a Kenya registered medical laboratory technologist. He has a BSc in microbiology from Kenya Methodist University and an MSc in medical microbiology from Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology. His MSc thesis was on “Genetic characterisation of Echinococcus granulosus strains from humans in the Turkana community in Kenya”. He has interests in molecular epidemiology and project management.

Titus is on a funded DAAD PhD programme through ILRI. He is a student at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Institute of Tropical Medicine. His PhD research project focuses on “Cystic Echinococcosis in Western Kenya: Distribution and Genetic Diversity”. This project is housed by the ILRI ZooLinK programme.

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Tobias Dennerlein

Assistant Professor of Management, Purdue University
I am a social scientiest and leadership scholar interested in the effects leader behavior can have on employee motivation and downstream performance.

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Tobias Dörr

Associate Professor of Microbiology, Cornell University
My group studies cell envelope stress responses of Gram-negative pathogens. We are defining regulatory pathways and functional networks of enzymes involved in cell wall degradation, modification and synthesis as well as factors required for upholding outer membrane barrier function. We seek to understand these processes to gain insight into the mechanistic underpinnings of cell growth and shape, as well as antibiotic resistance.

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Tobias Ide

Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, Murdoch University
I'm holding PhDs in both Earth Sciences (University of Hamburg, 2015) and Political Science (Brunswick University of Technology, 2019). This makes me well suited to explore interdisciplinary questions about climate change, natural resource, peace and conflict.

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Tobias Kretzschmar

Professor, Southern Cross University

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Tobias Linné

Assistant Professor in Media and Communication Studies, Lund University
I hold a Ph.D. in sociology and am currently employed as assistant professor at the Department of Communication and Media, where I teach at all levels of undergraduate education in media and communication studies.

Since spring of 2012 I am course leader for the course Critical Animals Studies. Animals in Society, Culture and the Media.

During 2013 and 2014 I was coordinator for the research theme “Exploring ‘the Animal Turn’: Changing perspectives on human-animal relations in science, society and culture”, funded by the Pufendorf Institute for Advanced Studies at Lund University.

I spring 2016 I co-founded the Lund University Critical Animal Studies Network.

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Tobias Loetscher

Associate Professor, University of South Australia
I aim to improve the cognitive functioning and well-being of people with brain damage. I'm particularly interested in the use of new technologies, such as Virtual Reality, to achieve this aim.

I am co-directing the Cognitive Ageing and Impairment Neurosciences (CAIN) lab with Prof Hannah Keage. Have a look at our website to learn more about our current research www.cain.science.

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Tobias Rohrbach

Early postdoctoral researcher, University of Fribourg
Tobias Rohrbach works as an early post doc at the Institute of Communication and Media Studies, University of Bern. His research focuses on the intersection of gender and media in political communication, political psychology, and health communication. He specializes in mixed methods designs combining a wide range of methodological approaches, including observational and experimental designs, quantitative and qualitative analysis, as well as computational methods. He completed a joint PhD in communication research (at the University of Fribourg) and in political science (at the University of Amsterdam) on media-based mechanisms of gendered evaluations of political candidates.

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Tobin Miller Shearer

Professor and Chair, History Department: Director of the African-American Studies Program, University of Montana
Tobin Miller Shearer is the Director of the African-American Studies Program at UM and an Professor and Chair of History. He conducts research into the history of race and religion in the United States with a particular emphasis on prayer, the civil rights movement, and white identity. His classes include "Black: From Africa to Hip-Hop," "Voodoo, Muslim, Church: Black Religion," and "The Black Radical Tradition."

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Tobore Okah-Avae

Tobore O. Okah-avae is a PhD Candidate at Lancaster University Law School. His research focuses on Corporate Governance/Corporate Law issues in Anglo-America. His PhD thesis is on the justice of excessive CEO compensation with a particular focus on British and American company executives.

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Toby Jenkins

Associate Professor of Higher Education, University of South Carolina
Jenkins is a highly sought after expert in the areas of diversity, equity & inclusion, cultural inclusiveness in higher education, and student affairs administration. Dr. Jenkins has authored six books focused on the evolving ideologies of culture, family, and education in contemporary society. My Culture, My Color, My Self: Heritage, Resilience and Community in the Lives of Young Adults (Temple University Press, 2013) was named by the Association of American University Press to the list of "Top 100 Books for Understanding Race Relations in the US". Her forthcoming book, The Hip-Hop Mindset: Success Strategies for Educators & Other Professionals” explores what hip-hop culture can teach us about leadership, work ethic, commitment, and resilience.

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Toby Rogers

PhD Candidate, University of Cape Town
I have had a diverse marine research career to date which has ranged from experience in marine consulting and management in the Middle East to research, education and conservation in South Africa and the UK.

My research interests primarily centre on the spatial ecology of marine predators, conservation and overlaps with commercial fisheries.

Currently I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cape Town investigating the spatial ecology of the bronze whaler shark, using a blended approach: tag-recapture, acoustic telemetry and genetics.

I have a strong analytical foundation to apply to research coupled with excellent communication ability, having worked with diverse groups of researchers, NGOs, non-scientists and members of the public.

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