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Emma Cunningham

Senior Lecturer Criminology, University of East London
I am thoroughly enjoying my work at the fabulously diverse University of East London. As a working class academic I have adopted an intersectional feminist approach to my research, teaching, and engagement which tackles some of the most urgent problems across policing. I am interested in how police culture remains toxic, how stop and search impacts community relations and how policewomen continue to undertake their role and responsibilities, remain resilient and stay in policing even given their own lived-experiences. At its heart, my scholarly activities are driven by a pursuit of equality, diversity and social justice and my work has made important contributions to our understanding of the history of women’s integration in policing and the arguments of sameness and difference which were used and applied to women, contributing to a deeper understanding of the challenges women in policing face and have faced. I have been asked by different media outlets for my expert comments for articles in The Guardian and INEWS, and I have made appearances on T.V programmes such as BBC NEWS Channel, Sky News, Channel 5 News and on the radio for 5 Live, BBC Wales and BBC Hertfordshire and Worcester. In working for UEL I have become involved in networks, blogs, and in writing short articles for the Sunday Times and Open Access Government articles about policing, misogyny and the toxic culture recently exposed in policing. I am asking questions about participation, in/exclusion, and using creative methods and approaches to present a more nuanced and complicated picture of policing problems.

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Emma Dupuy

Postdoctoral researcher, cognitive neuroscience, Université de Montréal
Researcher in cognitive neuroscience, my work focuses on brain plasticity in adults and its behavioral expression within cognitive and motor functioning. In a postdoctoral position, I address the phenomenon in older adults by investigating the neurocognitive and functional changes induced by lifestyle interventions, i.e., physical activity, cognitive training, and more recently cultural activities (museum visits).

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Emma Fingler

PhD Candidate in Political Studies, Queen's University, Ontario
Emma Fingler (she/her) is a SSHRC-funded doctoral candidate of Political Studies at Queen’s University researching gender, disaster response operations, and regional governance in South and Southeast Asia. She is a Doctoral Fellow with the Research Network on Women, Peace and Security (RN-WPS) at McGill University and is a Graduate Research Fellow with the Centre for International and Defence Policy (CIDP) at Queen’s University. Emma is also a Teaching Fellow at Queen’s University. Prior to joining Queen’s, she was the Special Assistant to the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Kathmandu Nepal. She holds an M.A. in Global Governance from the University of Waterloo’s Balsillie School of International Affairs and a B.A. Hons. in Political Studies from Bishop’s University.

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Emma Frost

PhD candidate, Australian Centre for Health Engagement, Evidence and Values, University of Wollongong
Emma is a PhD Candidate working on public engagement in healthcare AI at the Australian Centre for Health Engagement, Evidence and Values.

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Emma Garlett

Legal Academic and Industry Fellow, Centre for Social Responsibility in Mining, The University of Queensland
Emma Garlett is a Nyungar-Nyiyaparli-Yamatji Traditional Owner from Geraldton. Emma has experience working in the mining industry, academia, media and as a lawyer.

Emma is an Industry Fellow at the Sustainable Minerals Institute at The University of Queensland. She conducts legal and policy research to guide the future of sustainable mining, application of ESG principles, and green investment in natural resource management. She has a special interest in Traditional Owner inclusion in mining as it relates to the application of ESG principles. She has presented her legal research to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and various international (UCLA, University of Arizona) and domestic conferences (ANU, NELA, EDO).

Emma is an Adjunct Professor, Global and Engagement and Advisory Board Member of the National Centre for Reconciliation, Truth and Justice at Federation University. She also has a casual appointment at Curtin Law School.

Emma is a regular First Nations legal and business social commentator, and writes weekly columns in print and online for The West Australian. She is the host of Paint it Blak on YouTube, a partnership project between Seven West Media and Google.

Emma was appointed to and sits on both the Law Society of Western Australia’s Commercial Law Committee and Indigenous Legal Issues Committee. She is also a Tribunal Member of the West Australian Football Commission.

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Emma Heffernan

Associate Professor in Architecture, University of Sydney
Dr Emma Heffernan is an Associate Professor in Architecture in the School of Architecture, Design & Planning at The University of Sydney. Emma is a UK Registered Architect with over a decade of experience in architectural practice in the UK. Emma has strengths in leadership in Teaching and Learning, and a developing portfolio of pedagogical research. Emma’s teaching and curriculum development are enriched by the experience and knowledge she brings from her first career as an architect, together with her research in sustainable buildings. Emma is a passionate teacher, who supports and challenges her students to apply themselves to real-world problems. Emma’s research has a policy and practice focus, and is underpinned by a concern for how our homes and communities can support healthy, affordable and sustainable lives. Her research interests and expertise include a circular economy in the built environment, construction waste, sustainable construction, energy efficient design in residential buildings, zero carbon homebuilding, net zero apartment buildings, sustainable communities, and collaborative housing.

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Emma Higgins

Lecturer in Ecology, University of South Wales
I am a lecturer in ecology at the University of South Wales, my research interests are focused on the use of conservation technology to monitor the natural world, for example developing techniques and workflows for ecology research and wildlife conservation.

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Emma Hitchcock

PhD Candidate in Management, Auckland University of Technology
Emma-Louise Hitchcock is a PhD Candidate in Management at Auckland University of Technology with an interest in workplace diversity, equity and inclusion. She was awarded First Class Honours for her Master's research, “Smashing the patriarchy and creating a gender equal society through pay transparency”.

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Emma Hitchings

Professor of Family Law, University of Bristol
Emma Hitchings is a Professor of Family Law at the University of Bristol Law School. She is an expert on financial remedies on divorce and family justice issues, and has been the lead or joint investigator on a range of empirical studies in family law and family justice, including Financial settlements following divorce (Nuffield); Pre-nuptial agreements (Law Commission); Everyday financial remedy cases (Nuffield); Fee-charging McKenzie Friends (Bar Council) and Litigants in Person in private family law cases (Ministry of Justice). She has written widely on issues in family law. A key theme underpinning her research has been exploring how family law works in practice and its impact on individuals, professionals and the family justice system.

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Emma Ireton

Associate Professor, Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University
Prior to joining Nottingham Law School, Emma spent 12 years as a solicitor in commercial practice, in the fields of public inquiries, commercial litigation, and environmental law, including working on the Saville public inquiry into the events of Bloody Sunday.

Her research specialism is applied public inquiry law and procedure, particularly focusing on promoting greater public and academic understanding of the public inquiry process and improving public inquiry practice. She is a member of the NLS Research Centre for Conflict Rights and Justice.

Emma’s role includes curriculum development and course design for vocational and practitioner courses. Emma's focus is on bridging the gap between legal academia and practice. She works closely with leading solicitors, barristers and members of the judiciary to enhance curriculum design, write academic and practitioner publications, and on practice-focused research projects.

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Emma Johnston

Professor and Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research), UNSW Australia

Professor & Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research) at the University of New South Wales.

Fields of Research: aquatic ecology, ecotoxicology, marine bioinvasions

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Emma Macdonald

Charles Huang Chair in International Business and Director, Stephen Young Institute, University of Strathclyde
Emma Macdonald is a professor at Strathclyde Business School where she is Charles Huang Chair in International Business and Director of the Stephen Young Institute.

Emma joined Strathclyde in 2023 as inaugural Director of the Stephen Young Institute which focuses on international and sustainable business. Emma was at Cranfield School of Management for a decade, holding a number of different roles including coDirector of the Cranfield Customer Management Forum for nine years and leader of Cranfield's popular Customer Centric Strategy programme for five years. Emma was Head of the Sustainability and Marketing faculty groups when she left Cranfield to join University of Warwick. As Professor of Marketing at Warwick Business School for four years, Emma led on the prestigious London MBA receiving multiple teaching commendations and an award for pastoral care.

Emma has consulted to organisations across the globe in business and nonprofit sectors, in product and service industries, and in business-to-consumer, business-to-business and government sectors. She has launched and led open and custom executive programmes including on customer experience management and marketing planning. She is Visiting Professor in Cranfield’s Sustainable Business Group. Emma’s research in sustainability and marketing has been published in Harvard Business Review, and in top-ranked journals including Journal of Marketing, Journal of Product Innovation Management and Journal of Business Research.

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Emma McNicol

Research Fellow at Monash Sustainable Development Institute, Monash University
Dr Emma McNicol is a Research Fellow at Monash University's Sustainable Development Institute. Emma is an expert in feminist theory and has published widely on male violence, intersectionality and Simone de Beauvoir's work. Emma's current research project, National Indigenous Disaster Resilience, champions First Nations leadership in the face of natural hazards intensified by climate crisis.

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Emma Pakula

Senior Research and Policy Officer, Burnet Institute
A senior research and policy officer at The Burnet Institute in COVID-19 and health emergencies. She is experienced in program management and policy in public health, health system strengthening, emergency response and international development.

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Emma Palmer-Cooper

Lecturer in Psychology, Centre for Innovation in Mental Health, University of Southampton
Dr Emma Palmer-Cooper is a Lecturer in Psychology within the Centre for Innovation in Mental Health. My research primarily focuses on self-awareness in relation to mental health and related thought processes, psychological wellbeing, and creativity. I have a focus on developing digital interventions (eHealth) for mental health support, and understanding user attitudes towards AI.

I am also interested in Public Engagement, involving patients and the public in the design and communication of psychological and healthcare research.

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Emma  Power

Emma Power

Associate Professor Emma Power is a speech pathologist and academic at the University of Technology Sydney. She has worked in the area of communication disorders following acquired brain injury for over 23 years in a variety of clinical and academic positions.

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Emma Rettner

PhD Candidate in Materials Science and Engineering, Colorado State University
Emma's research interests include polymer chemistry, block copolymer design and organic materials.

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Emma Sherratt

Senior Research Fellow in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Adelaide
I am an evolutionary biologist, interested in understanding how the Earth's biodiversity came to be. In 2011, I completed a PhD at the Natural History Museum, London, on a group of cryptic amphibians called caecilians. They are limbless, head-first burrowing animals, and I used museum-based collections and cutting-edge imaging techniques to investigate how their skull evolved.

Since then I have held research appointments at institutions including Harvard University, Australian National University and University of Adelaide. I have studied a diversity of animals including rabbits, bivalved scallops, lizards, frogs and their tadpoles, and sea snakes. I am an expert in the statistical analysis of organismal form, a software creator, and a passionate educator.

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Emma Soye

Researcher, Queen's University Belfast
Dr Emma Soye has a PhD in Social Work and Social Care. She is the author of 'Peer Relationships at School: New Perspectives on Migration and Diversity', published by Bristol University Press. Emma has conducted research on social cohesion for international organisations including UNICEF, the International Rescue Committee, and Save the Children UK.

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Emma Su

Assistant Professor of Management, University of Dayton

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Emma Thomson

Clinical Professor of Infectious Diseases and Associate Director, MRC-Centre for Virus Research, University of Glasgow
I am an infectious diseases physician and researcher specialising in virus research. I have a strong interest in emerging viral infections in sub-Saharan Africa

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Emma Tomlinson

Associate Professor, Trinity College Dublin
MSci in Geology - University of Bristol, UK (2001)
PhD in Geochemistry - University College London, UR (2005)
Thesis title: The role of fluid in the growth of natural diamond

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Emma Turley

Senior Lecturer in Criminology, CQUniversity Australia
Dr Emma L Turley is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology and a Chartered Psychologist with the British Psychological Society. Emma is a critical psychologist and has a broad range of interdisciplinary research interests that span criminology and psychology. Her specialist areas of interest include gender, social justice, inequalities, LGBTQI+ issues, feminism, sexualities, and the digital world. She is also interested in qualitative research methods, especially phenomenology and experiential research, and the use of innovative data collection techniques.

Emma has published in the areas of sexualities, particularly marginalised sexual cultures, subculture, gendered violence, social media, gender inequalities, women’s wellbeing, and activism. Emma is a co-editor of the British Psychological Society's Psychology of Women & Equalities Review, and editorial advisory board member for British Mensa's Androgyny journal.

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Emma Worden-Sapper

PhD Student in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder

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Emma A. Jane

Associate Professor, UNSW Sydney
Emma A. Jane - formerly published as Emma Tom - is an Associate Professor at UNSW Sydney. She researches the social implications of emerging technologies using complexity theory frameworks and transdisciplinary methods to interrogate the issues and consider proposed interventions. She has presented the findings of her research to the Australian Human Rights Commission, the Australian government's Workplace Gender Equality Agency, and the Festival of Dangerous Ideas at the Sydney Opera House. Prior to her career in academia, Dr Jane spent nearly 25 years working in the print, broadcast, and electronic media. Over the course of her working life, she has received multiple awards and prizes for her scholarly work, her journalism, and her fiction. Her 11th book, Diagnosis Normal, is a hybrid memoir published by Penguin Random House in 2022. In her spare time, she enjoys coding with AI and using OpenAI's DALL·E 2 to generate images of exuberant axolotls on their way to queer discos.

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Emma C. Edwards

Career Development Fellow in Engineering, University of Oxford
Emma completed her BSc in mathematics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2012. She then worked as a research assistant for a year at the University of Edinburgh's Institute for Energy Systems, where she was introduced to wave energy. Emma completed her PhD at MIT in 2020, and her thesis, supervised by Professor Dick Yue, was titled ‘Optimization of the geometry of axisymmetric point absorber wave energy converters.’ She then held a part-time postdoctoral position at MIT with Professor Yue for a year.

She then completed a postdoctoral research fellowship from 2021-2023 at the University of Plymouth, working with Professor Deborah Greaves and Dr Martyn Hann, expanding her expertise to floating offshore wind turbines and physical modelling at one of the global hubs for offshore renewable energy research. From 2018-2022, in addition to her PhD and postdoctoral research, Emma competed as professional cyclist. In October 2023 she started as a Career Development Fellow in Engineering at St Peter's College, University of Oxford.

Her research focuses on fluid mechanics and its application to offshore renewable energy (ORE). Her main area of interest is around the hydrodynamics of wave-structure interaction, particular for floating bodies, and its impact on the performance of devices--principally floating offshore wind turbines and wave energy converters.

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Emma Forton Magavern

Clinical Research Fellow, Centre of Clinical Pharmacology and Precision Medicine, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London
Emma is a Medical doctor and a PhD candidate at the William Harvey Research Institute, QMUL, working with Professor Mark Caulfield. She completed a BA in English prior to her MD and subsequent MScs in Bioethics and Genomics. Through training in clinical medicine, humanities, genetics and pharmacology she has developed an interest in the scientific merits, clinical potential and implementation challenges of pharmacogenomics. She was co-secretary of the RCP/BPS working group on pharmacogenomics and led the ESC pharmacotherapy working group pharmacogenomics position paper.

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Emma G Duerden

Canada Research Chair, Neuroscience & Learning Disorders, Assistant Professor, Western University

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Emma Loosley Leeming

Professor of Middle Eastern and Caucasian Christianities, University of Exeter
Emma studied for a BA in History and History of Art at the University of York (1991-1994), where she specialised in the Medieval and Renaissance periods. She then worked back in time and took an MA (1994-1995) in Classical and Byzantine Art at the Courtauld Institute, University of London. It was during her MA that she discovered Late Antique Syria, which became the subject of her PhD thesis at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.

After graduating from SOAS in February 2001 she spent three years living and working as an archaeologist, fund-raiser, secretary and potato-peeler for the Community of Al-Khalil at Deir Mar Musa al-Habashi in Syria. The Community is dedicated to hospitality and Christian-Islamic dialogue and she spent the summers directing an archaeological excavation for the Community at their other monastery, Deir Mar Elian in Qaryatayn, and the rest of the year dealing with all English correspondence, greeting guests and helping with general chores (hence potato-peeling). During this period she was a visiting lecturer at SOAS and at the Université Saint Esprit de Kaslik in Lebanon. She also worked for the Abu Dhabi Ministry of Information as an archaeologist studying the artefacts found at a sixth-century monastery on the island of Sir Bani Yas.

In January 2004 she took up a position teaching Oriental Christian and Islamic Art at the University of Manchester and in 2010 she was appointed Senior Lecturer. During this time she was also a visiting lecturer at the Art University of Isfahan, Iran, the Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Georgia, the University of Tehran, the Teacher Training University of Tehran and the Amirkabir Polytechnic College, Tehran, Iran

She joined the University of Exeter in April 2013 and from 2012-2017 she worked on a five-year European Research Council funded project entitled Architecture and Asceticism: Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity exploring the purported Syrian evangelisation of Georgia in the fifth century and which sought to answer why the Georgians left the Oriental Orthodox fold to join with the Constantinopolitan Church in the early seventh century.

Since 2017 she has worked with the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi on an initiative to widen participation in Heritage Education amongst children from ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities across Georgia.

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Emma Louise Gorman

Senior Research Fellow, University of Westminster
Emma is a Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Employment Research, University of Westminster. As an applied economist, Emma’s research covers topics in education, labour economics and policy evaluation. Prior to joining the University of Westminster, she held appointments variously at Lancaster University, the University of Glasgow and the New Zealand Treasury, and has conducted research for the UK Department for Education, Social Mobility Commission and Department for Work and Pensions. Emma is a Fellow of the IZA (Institute of Labor Economics) and the GLO (Global Labor Organisation).

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Emmanuel Ameyaw

Researcher, Graduate School of Economics and Management, Tohoku University
Emmanuel Ameyaw is an economist and data scientist with a research interest in money and banking, macroeconomics, monetary economics, financial economics, applied macroeconometrics, central banking and financial institutions, development economics, and data analytics / data science in economics and finance. He obtained his PhD from Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan in 2023. He has authored several papers including
"The relevance of domestic and foreign factors in driving Ghana’s business cycle", "Business cycles in a cocoa and gold economy: Commodity price shocks do not always matter", "Hawkish shift in Ghana’s central bank’s monetary policy reaction function: a fiscal connection", among others.

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Emmanuel Destenay

Research Fellow, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Emmanuel Destenay received his PhD from Sorbonne University. He has held research fellowships at Oxford University, Stanford University, and University College Dublin. His first monograph, Shadows from the Trenches: Veterans of the Great War and the Irish Revolution (1918–1923) received an honorable mention from the American Conference for Irish Studies. Divergent Destinies, his second book, reexamines the interconnection between fears of military service and the rise of Irish republicanism between 1914 and 1918. He is currently finishing a monograph on American humanitarian interventions in France during World War I. He is a research fellow at Sorbonne University.

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Emmanuel Josserand

Emmanuel Josserand is a Professor of management at the University of Technology, Sydney, where he is the Director of the Center of Management and Organisation Studies. His current research interests relate to inter- and intra-organizational networks and social capital, including global supply networks and to individual identity.

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Emmanuel Oluwaseyi Atofarati

PhD Candidate, University of Pretoria
Publications:
Control of vortex shedding around a circular cylinder using bubble tabs in the laminar flow regime
EO Atofarati, AO Muritala, BO Malomo, SA Adio
Nigerian Journal of Technology 39 (4), 1108-1116 1, 2020

Assessing the factors affecting building construction collapse casualty using machine learning techniques: a case of Lagos, Nigeria
OO Awe, EO Atofarati, MO Adeyinka, AP Musa, EO Onasanya
International Journal of Construction Management, 1-9, 2023

The Evaluation of the Power Output of a Locally-Developed Micro Thermal Power Plant in Nigeria
A Morakinyo, EO Atofarati, A Asere
Ife Journal of Technology 28 (1), 18-27, 2021

Molecular Dynamics Simulation Research (From Atomic Fragments to Molecular Compounds)
EO Atofarati

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Emmanuel Pothos

Professor of Psychology, City, University of London
Emmanuel Pothos received a BSc in Physics from Imperial (1995) and DPhil in experimental psychology from Oxford (1998). At an undergraduate student at Imperial he received the Stainley Raimes Memorial Prize, for outstanding performance in first and second year mathematics. Emmanuel has worked at several universities, including Bangor University, Edinburgh University, Crete University, Swansea University, and, since 2009, City, University of London, where he has been a professor since 2014. He has been interested in several topics in cognitive science, including learning, categorization, similarity, language, and (more recently) decision making. He has been part of the quantum cognition research community from the very early days and has contributed some of the early models, for example, concerning the disjunction effect and the conjunction fallacy. He has co-authored two major reviews of the quantum cognition research programme, for the Behavioral and Brain Sciences (2013) and the Annual Review of Psychology (2022). He continues to actively develop quantum cognitive models and explore the potential and boundaries of quantum theory for behavioural modelling. He has 120 journal articles has his work has been funded by several organisations, including the ESRC, the AFOSR, the ONRG, and the Leverhulme Trust.

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