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H V Jagadish

H V Jagadish is the Bernard A Galler Collegiate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Michigan. His area of work is Data Science.

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Haaris Mateen

Assistant Professor, University of Houston

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Habibeh Khoshbouei

For the past two decades, my research, supported by NINDS and NIDA, has been focused on understanding the cellular mechanisms of dopamine transmission in both healthy and diseased conditions, including drug addiction, neuropsychiatric disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases. A major challenge in treating disorders where brain dopamine levels are dysregulated is identifying the precise molecular mechanisms involved and developing targeted therapies to address them.

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Hadi Hemmati

Associate Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, York University, Canada
Dr. Hadi Hemmati is an associate professor at the electrical engineering and computer science department, at York University. Previously he was an associate professor at the electrical and software engineering department at the University of Calgary, AB, Canada. In the past, he was also an assistant professor at the University of Manitoba, and a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Waterloo, and Queen’s university. He received his PhD from the University of Oslo, Norway. His main research interests are automated software engineering (with a focus on software testing, debugging, and repair), and trustworthy AI (with a focus on robustness and explainability). His research has a strong focus on pragmatic software/ML solutions for large-scale systems and empirically investigating them in practice. He has been a PI on multiple industry research projects in different domains such as IT, aviation, insurance, urban development, fintech, and beyond.

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Hadi Mohasel Afshar

Lead Research Scientist, University of Technology Sydney
After obtaining my Ph.D. from Australian National University in 2016, for 3 years I have been a senior computer scientist at an American company called VoiceBox. In 2019 I joined the University of Sydney as a senior research scientist. In 2023 I joined the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) where I currently work. My official job title is Lead Research Scientist.

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Hae Yeon Lee

PhD student, University of Texas at Austin
Hae Yeon Lee is a PhD student studying adolescent development at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. Her research examines individual and environmental factors that contribute to social stress during adolescence. With field experiment and intervention approaches, her research also aims to identify effective psychological means to alleviate adolescent stress.

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Haekal Al Asyari

Lecturer, Universitas Gadjah Mada and Ph.D. Cancidate, University of Debrecen
Haekal Al Asyari is a lecturer of International Law, at the Law School of Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia. He is also currently a PhD student at the Law Faculty of the University of Debrecen, Hungary.

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Haemin Dennis Park

Assistant Professor of Management, Drexel University

Areas of Expertise
- IPO
- Knowledge-based View of the Firm
- Technology Entrepreneurship
- Venture capital

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Hafizh Rafizal Adnan

PhD Student in Information Systems and Analytics, National University of Singapore
I am Hafizh Rafizal Adnan. Currently a PhD student at School of Computing, National University of Singapore. I was previously a lecturer at Faculty of Computer Science, Universitas Indonesia. My research interest includes information systems adoption, enterprise architecture, e-government, and IS for social good.

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Hager Jemel-Fornetty

Associate professor, EDHEC Business School
- Management de la diversité
- Leadership inclusif
- Egalité Femmes-Hommes
- Violences Sexistes et Sexuelles

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Hailey Meaklim

Sleep Psychologist and Researcher, The University of Melbourne
Dr Hailey Meaklim is a sleep psychologist, researcher, and founder of My Better Sleep. She is passionate about improving access to evidence-based treatments for sleep problems, like insomnia.

She works as a psychologist at St Vincent’s Hospital Sleep Centre and is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences at the University of Melbourne. She also founded My Better Sleep in 2023, as part of the Melbourne Accelerator Program, to increase access to evidence-based sleep and insomnia information.

Hailey has completed a Bachelor of Science (Honours in Psychology) degree from The University of Melbourne, a Master of Psychology from Swinburne University of Technology and a PhD in Psychology from Monash University. Her PhD focused on translating evidence-based sleep and insomnia knowledge into healthcare training programs.

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Haiyan Jiang

Professor of Earth and Environment, Florida International University
Dr. Jiang’s expertise is in satellite remote sensing techniques that can detect various characteristics of weather systems. She successfully applied these technologies to study hurricane rainfall, convection, winds, and warm-core structures. A coherent theme of her research is to advance our understanding of hurricane intensity and intensity change. She developed long-term satellite-based tropical cyclone databases and used these tools to study the climatology of hurricanes and to develop algorithms for estimating current intensity and predicting rapid intensification of tropical cyclones. Her research has been funded by NASA, NOAA, and NSF.

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Haizea Barcenilla

Haizea Barcenilla cuenta con un máster en Comisariado por Goldsmiths College, University of London, y es doctora en Historia del Arte por la Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, donde es profesora agregada. Sus líneas de investigación se centran en el análisis de la construcción de los discursos históricos desde una perspectiva de género, prestando especial atención a los formatos expositivos y al arte contemporáneo. Es co-investigadora principal, junto con Maite Méndez, del proyecto I+D "Desnortadas. Territorios de género en la creación artística contemporánea" en el que colaboran miembros de la Universidad de Málaga y de la Universidad del País Vasco. Escribe una columna quincenal sobre arte en el periódico Berria y ha comisariado varias exposiciones, entre ellas "Baginen Bagara. Mujeres artistas, lógicas de la (in)visibilidad" en el San Telmo Museoa de Donostia junto con Garazi Ansa y el proyecto "Andrekale" del colectivo Señora Polaroiska.

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Hajar Yazdiha

Assistant Professor of Sociology, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Hajar Yazdiha is an Assistant Professor of Sociology, faculty affiliate of the Equity Research Institute, a 2022-23 Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow, and a William T. Grant Advanced Quantitative Critical Methods (AQCM) Scholar of the Institute in Critical Quantitative, Computational, and Mixed Methodologies (2020-23). Dr. Yazdiha received her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and is a former Turpanjian Postdoctoral Fellow of the Chair in Civil Society and Social Change. Dr. Yazdiha's research examines the mechanisms underlying the politics of inclusion and exclusion as they shape intergroup boundaries, ethno-racial identities, and intergroup relations. This work crosses subfields of race and ethnicity, migration, social movements, culture, and law using mixed methods including interview, survey, historical, and computational text analysis. Her book project is forthcoming in May 2023 with Princeton University Press titled, "The Struggle for the People’s King: How Politics Transforms the Memory of the Civil Rights Movement." The book examines how a wide range of rivaling social movements across the political spectrum – from the Muslim Rights Movement to the Nativist Movement - deploy competing interpretations of the Civil Rights Movement to make claims around national identity and inclusion. Comparing how rival movements constituted by minority and majority groups with a range of identities — racial, gender, sexuality, religious, moral, political — battle over collective memory, the book documents how political action becomes directed toward divergent imagined futures. In other research projects, Dr. Yazdiha investigates these questions through three central lines of inquiry. A first strand of research explores how social exclusion is produced in macro-structures like laws, policies, and media. A second strand of research explores how and when groups develop perceptions of ‘groupness’ and collective identity in relation to these broader structures. A third strand of research investigates the collective behaviors that result from perceptions of groupness and their outcomes. This research provides new insights into the relationship between macro-level institutional structures, meso-level group processes of collective identity formation and collective behavior, and micro-level perceptions, emotions, and mental health. This body of research works to expose the covert consequences of institutional practices to show how systems of inequality are reproduced and examine how everyday actors develop strategies to resist, contest, and create social change.

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Hakan Acar

Senior Lecturer in Social Work, Liverpool Hope University
I completed my PhD at Hacettepe University (Turkey) School of Social Work in 2006. I worked as executive member of IFSW Europe e.V. (International Federation of Social Workers, European Region) (2012-2015) and EASSW (European Association of School of Social Work) (2015-2019). My research interests cover street children, child labour, child protection systems, social work values and ethics, youth policy, poverty, and social work education. I am currently working as a Senior Lecturer in Social Work at Liverpool Hope University.

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Hakan Yilmazkuday

Professor of Economics, Florida International University
Focusing on areas such as COVID-19, international economics, regional economics, macroeconomics, together with growth and development, Dr. Yilmazkuday has published more than 85 articles in refereed journals, some of which focus on understanding the research productivity in the field of economics. He has been named as an FIU Top Scholar in 2016 in the category of Notable Academic Appointments. He has served as the Executive Secretary of the International Economics and Finance Society. He is affiliated with the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute as a research associate. He has been a visiting scholar at the Research Department of the International Monetary Fund, a consultant to the World Bank, and a contributing partner of the Center for International Price Research at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Yilmazkuday's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation.

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Hala Ouweini

Research Associate in Women's Health, Wayne State University
While completing her master's degree, Hala discovered her passion for the vast world of academic and clinical medicine with its endless opportunities. She then graduated with an MD from the American University of Beirut whereby she realized that Women’s health was her primary passion. Thus, she moved to Detroit to join the Office of Women’s Health as a Research Associate with an interest to grow her passion in an environment serving to advance the health and wellbeing of Women and girls.
Hala’s responsibilities at the Office of Women’s Health are distributed over three main pillars:
• Research& Development: Hala coordinates multiple research projects conducted at the Office of Women’s Health including a statewide research network.
• Education & Leadership: Under this pillar, Hala works closely with medical students at Wayne State University to improve their leadership skills through overseeing the Trailblazer Fellowship. Moreover, she organizes the Women's Health Scholarly Concentration for Wayne School of Medicine whereby medical students have an opportunity to participate in research projects on women’s health.
• Implementation Science: Hala coordinates the Well Women's Wednesdays program which is a mobile unit focused on women’s health. She is also involved in the unique Make Your Date campaign aimed at reducing the rate of preterm birth.
Hala ultimately aims to pursue residency training in Obstetrics and Gynecology and follow her dream of having a long-life career of caring for and empowering women of all ages.

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Haleigh Bartos

Associate Professor of the Practice in Strategy and Technology, Carnegie Mellon University
Haleigh Bartos comes to the Carnegie Mellon Institute for Strategy & Technology (CMIST) with more than a decade of experience working in Washington, DC to support policy and at various NGOs. She has a Bachelor’s of Science in Psychology and a Master’s degree in Social Work, both from the University of Pittsburgh. Haleigh’s area of research is sub-Saharan Africa. She has published in the Journal of International Women’s Studies.

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Hali Kil

Assistant Professor, Psychology, Simon Fraser University
Dr. Hali Kil is an Assistant Professor in Psychology at Simon Fraser University. She holds a PhD in Developmental Psychology from the University of Toronto and MA in Social and Cultural Psychology from the University of Alberta. Dr. Kil has published nearly 30 peer-reviewed journal articles on topics relating to parenting, children's development of prosocial behaviour and empathy, mindfulness, mindful parenting, and multiracial and immigrant family and child well-being. She is currently an Associate Editor at the journal 'Mindfulness'.

Dr. Kil's research team in the All Families Lab at SFU conducts research on parent-child relationships, mindful parenting, and immigrant and newcomer family adjustment in Canada and abroad.

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Hallam Stevens

I am an historian of science and technology specializing in the history of the life sciences and the history of information technology. My first book, Life out of sequence: a data driven history of bioinformatics (Chicago, 2013), examined the transformational role of computers and databases in recent biology. I am also the author of Biotechnology and society: an introduction (Chicago, 2016) and the co-editor (with Sarah Richardson) of Postgenomics: Perspectives on Biology After the Genome (Duke, 2015).

My work crosses between history and anthropology and more recently I have written about the political and social impacts of artificial intelligence, big data, and surveillance technologies, particularly in an Asian context. I am currently completing a book about the rise of the life sciences in China.

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Hamado Sawadogo

Chercheur en agronomie , Institut de l'environnement et des recherches agricoles (INERA)

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Hamid Akbary

Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Sociology, University of Calgary
Hamid Akbary is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Sociology at the University of Calgary. He was previously a SSHRC Doctoral Fellow at the University of Calgary where he completed his PhD in sociology (2016-2022) and a Fulbright Fellow at Lehigh University where he completed his MA in sociology (2013-2015). He researches the socio-economic experiences and gender identity reconstruction of ethnic minorities. His work has been published in the Journal of Aging and Social Policy and the Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs.

In addition to his academic affiliation, Hamid Akbary works as an Analyst at the Prairie Regional Data Centre (PRC RDC), Statistics Canada, Government of Canada.

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Hamid Sarmadi

Assistant Professor, School of Information Technology, Halmstad University
Hamid Sarmadi is an Assistant Professor in Halmstad University, sweden. He has a PhD in Computer Vision from the University of Cordoba and a Master's degree in Machine Learning from KTH Royal Institute of Technology. He has years of experience in the field of Computer Vision including research in top institutes such as Max Planck Institute for informatics and University of Luxembourg's SnT center. His general research interests include applications of computer vision and machine learning.

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Hamilton Bean

Associate Professor of Communication, University of Colorado Denver
Hamilton Bean, Ph.D., MBA, APR, is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Colorado Denver. He also serves as Director of the University of Colorado Denver’s International Studies Program. He specializes in the study of communication and security. Since 2005, he has been affiliated with the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) – a U.S. Department of Homeland Security Center of Excellence. His research has been published in numerous international academic journals and edited volumes, and he has won multiple awards for scholarship from the National Communication Association.

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Hang Khong

Teaching Associate, Faculty of Education, Monash University, Monash University
Hang Khong earned her Ph.D in teacher professional development at the University of Queensland in 2020. She has been involved in several funded research projects about pre-service and in-service teacher training across different contexts such as Vietnam, Indonesia, and Australia. Her research interests include teacher learning and professional development, initial teacher education, classroom talk, school and pedagogical reform, doctoral education, and education in Vietnam. She has jointly published papers in internationally renowned education journals such as Educational Review, Cambridge Journal of Education, Educational Research, Professional Development in Education, Education and Information Technologies, and book chapters under Routledge, Springer and ABC-CLIO. One of the papers was awarded Educational Review’s Most Read Article in ‘Literacy, Languages and Performing Arts’ stream in 2014.

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Hanna Wilberg

Associate professor - Law, University of Auckland
Hanna Wilberg is an Associate Professor in the Law School at the University of Auckland.

Her research interests lie mainly in two areas: administrative law and the tort liability of public authorities. She also has an interest in public law more generally, particularly statutory interpretation, Bill of Rights, discrimination and Treaty of Waitangi issues. She has published in leading UK and Australian journals and edited collections in these areas. In her administrative law work, one of her main objectives is to help increase the availability of scholarly analysis of New Zealand law in this area, informed by engagement with relevant overseas jurisdictions. In her work on tort liability of public authorities, she addresses an audience across the main common law jurisdictions.

She is currently writing a book on The Principles of Administrative Law in Aotearoa New Zealand, to be published by Hart in 2024. She is also the New Zealand Law Review’s contributor of scholarly reviews of recent developments in Administrative Law.

Hanna's new teaching initiative since 2021 is a course on Social Welfare Law, Policy and Action. This includes a clinical component, offering students the opportunity to write submissions on applications for review under the Social Security Act.

Before joining the Auckland faculty in 2004, Hanna taught at Southampton University in the UK. She was a research assistant to Professor Paul Craig at Oxford; a Judges' Clerk for Richardson P and Tipping, Blanchard, Keith, Thomas, Gault and Henry JJ at the Court of Appeal in Wellington; and practiced law at the Crown Law Office.

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Hannah Andrews

Associate Professor in Film and Media, University of Lincoln
I'm a researcher, writer and teacher specialising in teaching film, TV and media. I've published widely on aesthetic and institutional relationships between film and television, on biographical television programming, and on television representations of real people in drama and comedy. My current project is on televisual caricature - that is, exaggerated, comedic depictions of real individiuals for television. I've taught and supervised a range of subjects in film, television and media, including television history, film and television analysis, media aesthetics, media and creative industries and research methods.

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Hannah Brown

Post-doctoral Fellow; Reproductive Epigenetics, University of Adelaide

Dr Hannah Brown is a researcher at the Robinson Research Institute and Centre for Nanoscale Biophotonics, at the University of Adelaide, Australia. Her research explores the mechanisms underlying how stress during early pregnancy alters the epigenome of the embryo, and causes detrimental, long-term outcomes.

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Hannah Chisholm

Epidemiologist, University of Auckland
PhD in epidemiology. Thesis topic was pertussis vaccine failure in New Zealand children

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Hannah Cross

Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Manchester
I'm a postdoctoral research associate working in the Division of Psychology, Communication and Human Neuroscience at The University of Manchester. I research hearing loss in people with dementia living in care homes and in the community. Currently, I am investigating how common hearing loss is in people with dementia and how accessible hearing assessments and audiology services are for people with dementia. Prior to this, I completed my PhD on hearing loss within care homes and how to improve hearing care provided to residents with dementia. I worked with Rebecca Millman, Piers Dawes, Christopher Armitage and Iracema Leroi on this project.
I have a degree in Psychology and previously worked in care homes as a care assistant.

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Hannah Daly

Professor in Sustainable Energy, University College Cork
I am a Professor in Sustainable Energy at University College Cork. I lead a team of researchers who analyse future pathways for the energy system compatible with steep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions necessary to address climate change. I communicate extensively on the topic of climate action in Ireland, writing a monthly column, At A Time Of Climate Crisis, for the Irish Times, and I engage with and advise government, civil society and industry on decarbonisation.

I previously worked at the International Energy Agency (IEA), leading the topic of energy development for the World Energy Outlook (WEO), and at the UCL Energy Institute, developing the UK TIMES Model (UKTM) and helping bring about its adoption by the (former) Department for Energy and Climate Change as the central energy systems tool for the UK government.

Research interests:
Energy Systems Optimisation Modelling (ESOM) - TIMES
Climate change mitigation policy
Carbon budget policy
Energy policy scenarios
Global Integrated Assessment Models
Energy access, clean cooking and SDG 7

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Hannah Fawcett

Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Manchester Metropolitan University
I am a Senior Lecturer in Psychology and the Undergraduate Psychology Programme Leader at Manchester Metropolitan University.

My current research focuses on juror wellbeing and decision making.

My research interests lie in the provision of witness evidence. I am particularly interested in how evidence is provided in court, and the way in which jurors understand, evaluate and use evidence in their decision making process.

I have provided expert consultancy to a number of charities and organisations on the themes of witness and offender behaviour. For example, I have completed consultancy work for the charity InsideJustice examining potential false convictions in the UK criminal Justice System. Previous consultancy work involved working with the British Transport Police in the development of stop-and-search and counter-terrorism police training courses.

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Hannah Foley

PhD Candidate, University of Tasmania
I am an interdisciplinary artist and researcher based in nipaluna/Hobart. My process and research-driven practice considers the phenomenological and relational body; incorporating performance, installation, and sound, each work begins with embodied processes of gestural and lived investigation.

I completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts with Honours (1st Class) at the University of Tasmania in 2021, where I received a University Medal. I am now undertaking doctorate research, drawing on hydrofeminist theory to generate modes of performing and scoring encounters with more-than-human bodies of water. Outside of my own practice, I have been an active board member of Constance Artist Run Initatiative (ARI) since 2020, through which I have facilitated and curated multiple exhibitions and arts projects.

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Hannah Fraser

Postdoctoral Researcher , The University of Melbourne
I am a Post-doctoral researcher working with Fiona Fidler in the School of BioSciences at the University of Melbourne. My time is split between two very interesting and very different projects SWARM and Research on Research.

The Research on Research project involves working on a range of projects aimed at understanding and redressing the reproducibility crisis. I am specifically interested in trying to improve reproducibility in ecology and related fields. At the Ecological Society of America 2017 conference Ashley Barnett and I presented a poster on the rates of questionable research practices in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. The paper will hopefully be in the literature before too long but in the mean time, the headline is that we use questionable research practices a lot….but that’s the same as psychology researchers. The next thing on my list is working out how successful the Transparency and Openness Protocol (TOP) guidelines have been in increasing the openness of publications.

The SWARM project aims to advance collaborative reasoning. There are two branches of this work: one involves developing an online interface to assist group collaboration, the other involves conducting experiments on reasoning and group work to help inform the online interface. I’m involved in the latter and am currently trying to understand how anchoring and production loss are likely to influence the answers group members give in collaborative reasoning tasks

My training is in ecology. I submitted my PhD in January 2017 as part of the Quantitative and Applied Ecology Group, based in the School of BioSciences at the University of Melbourne. During my PhD I investigated uncertainty around ‘woodland birds’; how we classify them, why we classify them differently, how this effects our conclusions and what we can do about it. I was lucky to have supervision from Mick McCarthy, Libby Rumpff and Cindy Hauser from Melbourne Uni and Georgia Garrard of RMIT University.

I began my PhD in 2013 with a thirst to save the environment. However, working around researchers doing ground breaking research changed my perspective slightly. The knowledge that goes into these researchers’ work is phenominal and has the potential to provide important ecological insights but so often the work falls short of being used. I see it as my mission to make sure that the (fantastic) research these people are doing is as useful as it can possibly be.

In my ‘free time’ I put together a nomination to list the Temperate and Sub-tropical Woodland Bird Threatened Ecological Community as a Threatened Ecological Community under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, working closely with researchers from all over Australia.

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Hannah Holmes

Dean and Deputy Pro Vice Chancellor in Business and Law, Manchester Metropolitan University
Hannah is Dean and Deputy Pro Vice Chancellor in Business and Law at Manchester Metropolitan University, leading one of the largest Faculties in the UK. Hannah works in inclusive and collaborative ways and is passionate about helping drive and deliver change which makes a positive contribution to society.

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