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Eric Muraille

Immunologist, FNRS Senior Research Associate, Faculty of Medicine, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Université Libre de Bruxelles

Master en Sciences Zoologiques (orientation biologie moléculaire) à l'Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Belgique.

Doctorat en Sciences Zoologiques (immunologie cellulaire) à l'ULB (1992-1997).

Spécialisation postdoctorale en biochimie (1997-1999, Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Biologie Humaine et Moléculaire, ULB), en parasitologie (1999-2002, Laboratoire de Parasitologie, ULB) et en immunologie infectieuse (2002-2004, Institut de Pharmacologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, INSERM URM 6097, Nice, France).

Présentement Maître de recherche au F.R.S.-FNRS., attaché au laboratoire de Parasitologie de la Faculté de Médecine de l'ULB et collaborateur scientifique à l'Unité de recherche en biologie des micro-organismes (URBM) de l'Université de Namur (UNamur).

Je me consacre principalement à l'étude théorique et expérimentale de la relation hôte pathogène, ainsi qu'à l'enseignement de l'Immunologie. Je tente également de contribuer au développement de la théorie de l'évolution.

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Eric Nordberg

Senior Lecturer (Applied Ecology and Landscape Management), University of New England
2010. BSc - Wildlife and Fisheries Science - Pennsylvania State University - USA
2013. MSc - Biology - Middle Tennessee State University - USA
2018. PhD - Ecology - James Cook University - Australia

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Eric Robinson

Professor in Psychology, University of Liverpool
Eric Robinson is a behavioural scientist with a background in experimental psychology. His research examines obesity and psychological influences on how much people eat and drink.
He receives funding from the MRC and ESRC for his current research.
He has previously received research funding from food industry members, such as Unilever.

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Eric Segall

Eric Segall graduated from Emory University, Phi Beta Kappa, Summa Cum Laude, and from Vanderbilt Law School where he was the Research Editor for the Law Review and member of Order of the Coif. He clerked for the Honorable Charles Moye, Jr., Chief Judge for the Northern District of Georgia, and Albert J. Henderson of the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. After his clerkships, he worked for Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, and the United States Department of Justice, before joining the GSU faculty in 1991.

Professor Segall teaches federal courts and constitutional law I and II. He is the author of the book Supreme Myths: Why the Supreme Court is not a Court and its Justices are not Judges. His articles on constitutional law have appeared in, among others, the Stanford Law Review, the UCLA Law Review, the George Washington Law Review, the Washington University Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, the Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy, and Constitutional Commentary. He has served on the Executive Committee of the AALS section on federal courts, and has given numerous speeches both inside and outside the academy on constitutional law questions and the Supreme Court. He appears regularly on the national XM Radio show StandUp with Pete Dominick talking about the Supreme Court and constitutional law.

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Eric Shaw

I was educated at the Universities of Sheffield, Leeds and Manchester. I joined Stirling University in 1990. Prior to that I worked at Manchester Polytechnic (now Manchester Metropolitan University). Before becoming an academic, I was a researcher in the International Department of the Labour Party.

I have written five books on the Labour party (the last, with Gerry Hassan, entilted 'The Strange Death of Labour Scotland' published 2012).

My main research interests are all aspects of the British Labour Party and the Scottish Labour party. I am at present working on a study of the ideology of the Labour party under the Miliband leadership.

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Eric Tevoedjre

Lecturer International Relations, African Politics, Regional Integration in Africa, and International Economics, Institut catholique de Lille (ICL)
I received my Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore (MD) in International Relations/Comparative Government.
I was project manager for USAID (Cotonou, Benin)
I currently teach International Relations, African Politics, Regional Integration in Africa, and International Economics at Catholic University, Lille (France)

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Eric Vanderduys

Research Scientist, Field Ecology, CSIRO
Eric is a field biologist studying a wide range of terrestrial fauna, including flying-foxes, koalas, snakes and the effects of differing land management activities (e.g. grazing, clearing, weeds, fire, feral species) on vertebrate fauna.

He maintains the Black-throated Finch database on behalf of the Black-throated Finch Recovery Team.

He is also the author of Field Guide to the Frogs of Queensland.

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Eric Williams

I'm a professor of sustainability at Rochester Institute of Technology. Recently I work models of energy technologies to inform policy. In the past I worked on environmental assessment and management of Information Technology.

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Eric Yoshida

Professor of Medicine, University of British Columbia
Dr. Eric Yoshida is a Professor of Medicine, University of British Columbia and a Gastroenterologist/Hepatologist at the Vancouver General Hospital. He is a hepatologist within the Liver Transplant Program, Vancouver General Hospital and BC Transplant (an agency of the Provincial Health Services Authority)

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Eric Carmona Martinez

Scientist, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ
Eric Carmona Martinez is a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Biological & Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He joined Gothenburg in 2023 from the the Department of Effect-Directed Analysis where he had worked since 2019 as a postdoc on the Kleingewässermonitoring (KgM) project analysing data on water pollution using different software.

Eric has a bachelor's degree in environmental sciences and a master’s degree in environmental toxicology from the Faculty of Biology, University of Valencia. He did several internships at the Research Centre for Desertification and the Public Health Research Centre.

Eric got a PhD in chemistry, also from the University of Valencia. His thesis entitled “Pollutants of emerging concern in the environment. Turia River as study case” was carried out at the food and environmental research group of the University of Valencia and the Spanish National Research Council. During his PhD Eric was working at the TrAMS group of the University of Athens and the Aquatic Ecotox group at the University of Eastern Finland.

He published several papers (ResearchGate) with high impact and participated in different projects such as Mefturia, SCARCE-Consolider and Eco2Tools.

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Eric D. Carter

Professor of Geography and Global Health, Macalester College
Eric D. Carter is the Edens Professor of Geography and Global Health at Macalester College in Saint Paul, Minnesota, where he has taught since 2012. He received a Bachelor's degree in History from the University of California, Berkeley (1994), and a Master's (1999) and PhD (2005) in Geography from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Before joining the Macalester faculty, Carter taught at Millersville University (Pennsylvania) and Grinnell College (Iowa). He was also a visiting faculty member at the National University of Tucumán (Argentina) in 2015.

Carter’s interdisciplinary research lies at the nexus between medical geography, political ecology, and the history of public health, with a regional focus on Latin America. Main areas of research interest include the political ecology of infectious and vector-borne diseases; environmental and social history of disease control; social medicine and public health in Latin America; and the biopolitics of public health interventions.

His first book, Enemy in the Blood: Malaria, Environment, and Development in Argentina (2012), received the Elinor Melville Prize for best book in Latin American Environmental History from the Conference on Latin American History. His second book, In Pursuit of Health Equity: A History of Latin American Social Medicine (2023) is the result of seven years of research, mainly in Argentina, Chile, and Costa Rica, supported by fellowships from the US Fulbright Scholar Program and the American Council of Learned Societies.

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Eric Hengyu Yu

Ph.D. Student in Educational Theory and Policy and Demography, Penn State
Research interests are early childhood education, child development, and socio-demographic inequality of educational outcomes.

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Eric Van Rythoven

Instructor in Political Science, Carleton University
I specialize in International Politics with a focus on International Security and Canadian Foreign Policy.

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Erica Borgstrom

Professor of Medical Anthropology, The Open University
I am a Professor of Medical Anthropology at The Open Univeristy. My specialist area in research and teaching is death and dying, with an emphasis on end-of-life care and bereavement. I use my anthropological skills to disrupt the normative concepts in end-of-life care by foregrounding people’s everyday experiences and the structural and discursive elements that shape how care is provided. I also lead the university's Open Thanatology group, focusing on education and research about death-related topics.

I'm co-editor of the journal Mortality and on the council for the Association for the Study of Death and Society. I am a Fellow the Royal Anthropological Institute and Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA).

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Erica Coslor

Senior Lecturer in Management, The University of Melbourne
As a Senior Lecturer in Management at the University of Melbourne and the newly appointed Program Director for several of the Master of Management programs (MM, HR, Marketing), I enjoy finding links between my research and my teaching into classes like Strategic Management.

Based in my sociological training at the University of Chicago, my research is focused on new market emergence, firm and product categories, legitimacy, valuation and calculative practices. I've had the opportunity to further my theoretical interests in several different contexts, including the emergence of art as a legitimate financial asset category and Grid computing. Along with work on management innovations like flexible working and cross-disciplinary teams, I am looking forward to working in new areas along with my PhD students.

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Erica Ellingson

Professor in Astrophysics, Emeritus, University of Colorado Boulder
My research interests include multi-wavelength observations of high redshift galaxy clusters to measure dark matter mass distributions and quantify the effects of environment on galaxy formation and evolution. I am also a co-editor of the Journal of Skyscape Archaeology and develop educational materials on cultural astronomy.

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Erica Frantz

Associate Professor of Political Science, Michigan State University
Erica Frantz (Ph.D., UCLA, 2008) is an associate professor in Political Science at Michigan State University. From 2011 to 2015, she was an assistant professor in Political Science at Bridgewater State University, and from 2008 to 2011 she worked as an analyst at the Institute for Physical Sciences. Her research and teaching interests include authoritarian politics, democratization, conflict, and development. She is particularly interested in the security and policy implications of autocratic rule. She has published four books on dictatorships and development, as well as articles in journals such as Perspectives on Politics, British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Peace Research, and Annual Review of Political Science.

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Erica Jansen

Assistant Professor of Nutritional Sciences, University of Michigan
Dr. Jansen is a nutritional epidemiologist who focuses on diet and sleep in relation to health along the lifespan, but particularly during adolescence. She has several lines of research, including the examination of: 1) how early nutritional environments affect childhood obesity and timing of puberty; 2) how various aspects of sleep- including duration, timing, and quality- affect development of cardiometabolic risk; 3) the bidirectional associations between sleep and diet; 4) role of toxicants in sleep and cardiometabolic outcomes; and 5) epigenetic markers or mediators that underlie relationships between sleep and cardiometabolic health. Dr. Jansen conducts her research mostly within the ELEMENT cohort, a Mexican birth cohort that has been followed for over 25 years.

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Erica Neuman

Assistant Professor of Accounting, University of Dayton
Erica Neuman, PhD, CPA is an Assistant Professor of Accounting at the University of Dayton where she teaches advanced financial accounting and tax to both undergraduate and graduate students. Her research examines tax compliance and the use of technology by taxing authorities. She has presented her research at international conferences including the American Taxation Association Midyear Meeting and the National Tax Association's Annual Conference on Taxation. Her published research includes 'Big Data Analytics in IRS Audit Procedures and its Effects on Tax Compliance: A Moderated Mediation Analysis' published in the Journal of the American Taxation Association.

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Erica Jacqueline Licht

Research Project Director, Institutional Antiracism and Accountability Project (IARA), Harvard Kennedy School
Erica Licht has been engaged in racial equity and organizational change research and training for over 15 years. She is currently Research Projects Director at the Institutional Antiracism and Accountability Project (IARA) at Harvard University where she leads and co-designs IARA’s projects and partnerships. Erica is a Fulbright Scholar, and holds a Masters in Public Administration from the Harvard Kennedy School and a Masters in Justice Policy from the London School of Economics where she was a Maguire Fellow.

Prior to IARA, Erica served as Assistant Director at the Center on Culture, Race, and Equity at Bank Street College in New York City, and as a Fellow with Race Forward and the Government Alliance for Racial Equity. Her career has focused on collaborative community and institutional change programs globally, including consulting with the Center for Creative Leadership in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the Lemann Foundation in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and Lagos State University and Alternatives to Violence International in Lagos, Nigeria.

Erica is an expert facilitator, and has taught course work on justice reform at the University of the West Indies, Mona, and on adaptive leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School. Her writing has appeared in The Boston Globe, CNN and Learning for Justice. She co-hosts the podcast Untying Knots and is a Fellow with the Jewish Studio Project.

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Erich S. Volschenk

Senior Research Associate, Murdoch University
Professionally I wear two hats: primarily as an Environmental Consultant (Short-range endemic invertebrates), and secondarily as research associate at WA Museum and Murdoch University. I am an invertebrate biologist specialising in arachnids and myriapods. I have been studying the scorpions of Australia for over 20 years and am Australia's leading scorpion taxonomist. I also work on pdeudoscorpions when time permits. For the last 10 years, I've also been researching the diversity of soil centipedes (geophilomorpha) and cryptic centipedes (Cryptopidae). In addition to systematic research, I do adhoc research on terrestrial salt lake invertebrates. Most of my research is oriented around systematics and I use both molecular and morphological data to infer phylogenies.

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Erik Eklund

Professor of History, Federation University Australia

Erik usually works at the Gippsland Campus of Federation University Australia as a Professor of History. He is currently the Keith Cameron Professor of Australian History at University College Dublin, covering the period 2015 and 2016.

His expertise covers Australian history especially regional, labour, social and environmental histories. He is also interested in heritage studies, mining in local and global contexts, social policy history, and community engagement.

He is a former Treasurer of the Australian Historical Association (2008 to 2012), and a member of the editorial boards for the journals, 'Labour History' and 'History Australia'. His previous monograph publications include 'Steel Town: the making and breaking of Port Kembla' (MUP, 2002) and 'Mining Towns: making a living, making a life' (UNSW Press, 2012).

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Erik Guzik

Assistant Clinical Professor of Management, University of Montana
Erik holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, with research interests in entrepreneurship, the economic microfoundations of creativity, and the underlying conditions supporting regional and national innovation. He previously taught within the Gabelli School of Business at Roger Williams University and as Associate Professor at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma (USAO) and the University of Montana Western. He also served as Director of the Interdisciplinary Studies Program at USAO, and since 2016, has launched and led PatientOne, a national health-tech startup.

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Erik Kool

Postdoctoral Researcher in Astronomy, Stockholm University

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Erik Melen

Professor of Paediatrics, Karolinska Institutet
My research projects aim to advance the understanding about the complex interplay between genetic and environmental factors involved in lung growth, respiratory and allergic diseases in children. The projects are primarily based on a Swedish birth cohort, BAMSE that allows for unique investigation of lung function, respiratory and allergic diseases in a large number of children up to adulthood. Detailed information about perinatal events, environmental exposures such as air pollution and tobacco smoke exposure from birth and onwards has been collected. Currently, we are also performing a targeted COVID-19 follow-up of the cohort.

In our ongoing genetics projects, genome-wide approaches are primarily used (GWAS, global methylation analyses and RNA sequencing / microarray approaches) together with detailed clinical and epidemiological data. Extensive national and international collaboration is established (e.g. through the PERMEABLE, GABRIEL, EAGLE and MeDALL projects). We are also engaged in exposome-related research within the EXPANSE consortium. From this translational platform for advanced studies using clinical and epidemiological data sets, we are performing projects that will generate exciting new information in areas that have been little explored so far. For example, the long-term consequence of preterm birth and childhood exposures on lung function in young adulthood (CADSET ERS collaboration); identification of subgroups of the population that are particularly vulnerable to air pollution exposures; clarification of new genetic mechanisms for disease development.

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Erik Olstad

Health Sciences Assistant Professor of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis
Erik's research focus is in small animal primary care.

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Erik Peterson

Assistant Professor of American Politics, Rice University
Erik Peterson is an Assistant Professor at Rice University who specializes in American Politics and Political Communication. His current research focuses on the political consequences of the decline of local media outlets in the United States and the growth of online news consumption. In other work he considers the use and interpretation of research methods, such as experiments, to study these topics. His research has appeared in the American Political Science Review, the American Journal of Political Science and the Journal of Politics, as well as other academic journals.

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Erik Christian Olstad

Health Sciences Assistant Professor of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis
Erik's research focus is in small animal primary care.

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Erik S. Herron

Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
Erik Herron is the Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of Political Science at West Virginia University. He has published extensively about politics in Eastern Europe and Eurasia, including the recent book Normalizing Corruption: Failures of Accountability in Ukraine (University of Michigan Press, 2020).

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Erik W. Kolstad

Research professor, Uni Research
I'm a climate researcher at NORCE and the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, and an adjunct researcher at the Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI) Norway, in Bergen, Norway. My main research interests are climate impacts, climate prediction, and climate dynamics.

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Erika Darics

University oDr Darics is an applied linguist interested in the role of language in professional and business contexts, in particular online. In her work she explores how language constitutes social reality, and how to best educate the world about this important knowledge.
She conducts empirical linguistic-discourse analytical research, theorises and educates about language awareness and discourse consciousness. She is an experienced and passionate researcher-educator with a sense of responsibility to nurture a future generation of critical text consumers who are also ethical, responsible and empowered communicators.

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Erika Jiménez

Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the School of Law, Queen's University Belfast
Erika Jiménez is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the School of Law, Queen's University Belfast on a project entitled: Golani youth, human rights and the forgotten occupation.

She is currently writing her first book on Palestinian youth’s views and experiences of human rights in the occupied West Bank as part of the Human Rights Law in Perspective (Hart) series.

She has worked on other projects including a study that explored the experiences of education among minority ethnic and migrant groups in Northern Ireland. Before that she worked as a Research Fellow at the Rights Lab, University of Nottingham in the area of modern slavery research.

Erika is committed to conducting research that amplifies voices and ‘ways of knowing’ that are often side-lined in society and academia. She is also interested in decolonial approaches to human rights, childhood, and research. This has led her to conduct research alongside research advisory groups made up of minoritised populations such as Palestinian youth, refugees and survivors of modern slavery.

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Erika Penney

Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, University of Technology Sydney
Dr Erika Penney is an Education-Focused lecturer, clinical psychologist, and external placement coordinator with the master of clinical psychology program in the Graduate School of Health. She is the Responsible Academic Officer (RAO) for Teaching & Learning within Clinical Psychology.

She has a national reputation as a leader in e-MH education, and is sought after for Personality Disorder, Complex Trauma, and Stigma teaching expertise. She has particular clinical interests in e-mental health, complex trauma, and personality disorders, as well as mental health stigma and improving patient outcomes with trauma-informed care. Prior to her work at UTS, she worked in private and public health hospitals and clinics and brings industry experience to her teaching. More recently, Erika's clinical and empirical interests have included the areas of inter-professional learning, as well as adaptations of therapies to telepsychology formats. She is one of the co-founders of the Australian Telepsychology Collaboration, a group that has designed high quality trainings for university training clinics and the Australian Psychological Society on integrating telepsychology effectively and safely. Erika acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation as the traditional custodians of knowledge and of the land on which our city campus stands and is an ally of First Nations people. She is an official UTS LGBTQIA+ Ally.

* Registered psychologist with endorsement in clinical psychology from the Australian Health Practitioners Regulation Agency (AHPRA).
* Psychology Board of Australia (PsyBA) approved supervisor for higher degree pathways and the clinical psychology endorsement registrar program.
* Member of the Australian Clinical Psychology Association (ACPA).
* Member of the Australian Psychological Society (APS).
* A co-founder of the Australian Telepsychology Collaboration (ATC).
* Chair (Clinical Division) for the NSW-ACT Psychology Placement Consortium (NAPC).
* Collaborator in the Australian Psychology Placement Alliance (APPA).

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Erin Bradshaw

Research Assistant, Monash University
Erin Bradshaw is a research assistant and ECR in journalism in the School of Media, Film and Journalism at Monash University Caulfield.

Bradshaw is the senior research assistant for the ARC funded project "The culture of implementing Freedom of Information in Australia" https://www.monash.edu/arts/media-film-journalism/the-culture-of-implementing-freedom-of-information-in-australia.

Bradshaw focuses on Journalism Studies, Journalism Ethics, and Endometriosis in Journalism

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Erin Cooper-Douglas

Deputy Politics + Society Editor
Erin joined The Conversation after working across radio, television and online media at ABC News for more than six years. In her time with the national broadcaster, she won Best New Journalist at the Tasmanian Media Awards for her multiplatform work, including video-journalism. She did everything from presenting live radio to sub-editing digital stories. Her work has also been published by Reuters, The New York Times and The Mercury. Erin's based in Hobart, Tasmania.

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