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Hannah Earp

Postdoctoral Research Associate, Marine Ecology, Newcastle University
I am a marine ecologist at Newcastle University (UK). My research involves investigating the structure of kelp forest and mud flat ecosystems and understanding how they are changing in response to climate stressors and human activities, alongside developing/testing techniques to restore these vital ecosystems. I am also interested in understanding how artificial structures in marine environments influence biodiversity and how we can enhance these structures to promote marine life.

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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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Hannah Jackson

University of Technology Sydney
Hannah Jackson is a PhD Candidate at the University of Technology Sydney where she is working to improve efficiency and equity in medication use during pregnancy. Hannah has a Bachelor of Pharmacy and a Master of Public Health.

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Hannah Johnson

Professor of English, University of Pittsburgh
Hannah Johnson is Associate Professor of English and affiliated faculty with the Collaboratory Against Hate, and Programs in Medieval and Renaissance Studies and Jewish Studies. She works primarily on the history of antisemitism, forms of exclusionary rhetoric, intellectual history, Jewish-Christian relations, religious literature, and the history of gender. She is an avid supporter of Pitt’s Study Abroad programs, having taught students in London, York, and Sydney over the years. Johnson regularly teaches courses on conspiracy theories, historical witchcraft accusations, and the fairy tradition, among other topics.

Johnson is currently with working with Simone Marshall, of the University of Otago, to complete an academic trade book titled The First Era of Fake News: Witch-Hunting, Antisemitism and Islamophobia. She was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to support this work, to begin in January 2022 in New Zealand. Early research on this project took place under the aegis of a distinguished short-term fellowship from the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. The First Era of Fake News is an accessible introduction to the historical use of damaging rhetoric to isolate and persecute specific outgroups during the medieval and early modern periods of European history. Working within a venerable tradition of public scholarship, the work will present a synthetic account of recent historical, social-psychological, and narratological insights from the study of the disparate threads of anti-Jewish and anti-Muslim rhetorics and the misogynist history of the early modern witch hunts. The First Era of Fake News will explore the patterns and dangers of persecutory rhetoric through scholarly exposition, evocative narrative, and accessible breakdowns of critical terms and concepts. This volume functions as a guide for identifying and deconstructing violent rhetorics of exclusion, offering readers tools for thinking critically about such rhetoric as it appears in our contemporary moment, in part by demystifying the relationships between stories and legends people told one another in the past, and narratives we often hear reflected in representations of outgroups in the present.

Johnson’s previous book, completed with the support of a fellowship from the American Council of Learn Societies and co-authored with Heather Blurton, is The Critics and the Prioress: Antisemitism, Criticism and Chaucer’s Prioress’s Tale (Michigan, 2017). This work re-examines the critical history of Chaucer’s most controversial Canterbury tale, highlighting how scholarship on The Prioress’s Tale has been fundamentally shaped by various impasses resulting from critics’ struggles with the poem’s repetition of a damaging antisemitic legend. Surveying both the history of criticism and the state of the field, The Critics and the Prioress attempts to chart productive new avenues for research using the tools of intellectual history, a new vision of source studies, and the resources of aesthetics, gender studies, and the history of the book.

Johnson’s first monograph, Blood Libel: The Ritual Murder Accusation at the Limit of Jewish History (Michigan, 2012), examines the underlying ethical commitments that have historically structured academic investigations of a libelous historical myth, originating in the Middle Ages, that Jewish communities murder Christian children. Examining one of the earliest examples of such a legend, the twelfth-century account of the death of William of Norwich, Johnson highlights how juridical questions of guilt and innocence, crime and libel, have structured the conversation surrounding this legend from the beginning and have had profound effects on the generations of scholars who have taken up these controversial myths.

Her work has been funded by the Fulbright Foundation, American Council of Learned Societies, Hewlett Foundation, Beinecke Foundation, and others. She co-edited a special issue of the journal postmedieval with colleague Nina Caputo on “The Holocaust and the Middle Ages.”

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Hannah Maitland

PhD Candidate in the Department of Gender, Feminist, and Women's Studies, York University, Canada
My name is Hannah and I live and work on Treaty 13 territory in Tkaronto, where I'm a Ph.D. Candidate in the Gender, Feminist, and Women’s Studies Department at York University. I am a feminist researcher and emerging Girls' Studies scholar who researches girl activists, their politics, and their relationships with their mothers and mother figures.

My other research areas include youth activism, sex education, and sex education controversies. Beyond my research, I am the co-founder of the Ontario Digital Literacy and Access Network (ODLAN), producer for the Resisting the Script and the Sexuality Studies Spotlight podcasts and involved with other organizations and projects that help foster intergenerational relationships in 2S-LGBTQ+ communities. You can find some of my writing in Sex Education and Shameless Magazine.

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Hannah Mason

Research assistant, James Cook University
Miss Hannah Mason is a lecturer, researcher, and HDR student at the College of Public Health, Medical, and Veterinary Sciences at James Cook University.

Hannah has worked on a broad range of public health and safety research projects, including exploring the impact of heatwaves on health systems, arc flash safety, mobile plant safety, and rural road safety.

Hannah’s research interests include health systems management, climate resilience, and rural and remote health.

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Hannah Orban

Associate Disability Program, Grattan Institute
Hannah Orban is an Associate in Grattan’s Disability Program. Hannah advocates for the equality of people with disability through evidence-based public policy that is led by the disability community. She brings her experience as a sibling to people with disabilities to her work, as well as her professional experience in the government and non-profit sectors.

In Washington D.C., Hannah worked alongside leaders in disability policy in the U.S. as the Eileen Sweeney Graduate Intern in Disability Policy with the National Academy of Social Insurance, and the Century Foundation’s Disability Economic Justice Team. Previously, Hannah worked as a research assistant in economics at the University of Michigan, and in public and disability policy in the NSW Department of Education.

Hannah has a Master of Public Policy from the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, the University of Michigan, where she studied as a Fulbright scholar. She holds a Bachelor of Arts (First Class Honours) in Philosophy from the University of Sydney.

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Hannah Wakeford

Associate professor, University of Bristol
Hannah Wakeford is an Associate Professor in Astrophysics at the University of Bristol, UK where she leads a group investigating the atmosphere of exoplanets using space based telescopes.

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Hannah Watson

Researcher in Evolutionary Ecology, Lund University
I am a researcher studying how birds cope with environmental challenges. The goal of my research is to understand how humans impact the health and behaviour of birds. I lead research projects on how urbanisation, supplementary feeding and habitat modification affect birds.

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Hannah Wechkunanukul

Associate Professor in Public Health, Torrens University Australia
Associate Professor Hannah is a senior academic educator of Public Health Department, and a researcher at Centre for Healthy Sustainable Development (CHSD).

Hannah has a background in pharmacy practice, health service management, community health and primary health care. Her expertise covering mixed methods study, co-design, data correlation, systematic review and meta-analysis. Her research projects focus on inequities, inequality and accessibility among disadvantage population specially culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) population; health service; prevention and self-care management; digital health innovation; and climate change.

Her recent study has established evidence of the delay in seeking medical care for cardiac symptoms among ethnic groups globally and nationally which has assisted researchers and clinicians to be more aware and better understand ethnic differences in health behaviour and the need of cultural competence in healthcare system.

Hannah has worked collaboratively with the Public Health Information Development Unit (PHIDU) in establishing data map correlating clinical data and population health areas (SA) which can be a useful tool for further investigation, and serve as a resource for education.

Hannah currently working with multidisciplinary team involving researchers, industry partners and consumers on digital innovation projects to improve accessibility to health service and empower disadvantaged populations nationally and internationally.

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Hannah Wilson

Teaching Fellow in Holocaust History, Nottingham Trent University
Dr. Hannah Wilson is a teaching fellow in Holocaust history at the University of Leicester, and a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Public History, Heritage and Memory at Nottingham Trent University. In 2022, she obtained her PhD for her thesis “Let my Cry Have No Place, let it Cry through Everything: The Material Memory of Sobibor Death Camp”. She is the former Content Director for the World ORT 'Music & The Holocaust' project. She received her Masters in Holocaust and Genocide Studies from the University of Haifa, Israel. She is Communications Officer for the British and Irish Association for Holocaust Studies, and has interned at the Jewish Historical Institute (Warsaw), the Ghetto Fighters' House Museum (Israel) and Imperial War Museum (London). Since 2014, she has worked on the archaeological excavations at Sobibor and Treblinka death camps.

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Hannah Lauren Murray

Associate lecturer, Literature, The University of Melbourne
Hannah Lauren Murray teaches literature at the University of Melbourne and is Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Liverpool. Her research focuses on depictions of race, in particularly whiteness, in early US fiction. She has published research on Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Brockden Brown, and early American utopian fiction, and her monograph 'Liminal Whiteness in Early US Fiction' was published with Edinburgh University Press in 2021.

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Hannah-Louise Clark

Senior Lecturer, Global Economic and Social History, University of Glasgow
I am a global historian of economic and social history. I study the global dynamics of health and social welfare, cross-cultural translations of knowledge and professional categories, historical discrimination in health professions, and epidemics. My past, current and future research focuses on Africa in its Islamic, European, and global contexts between 1800 and the present, with a particular focus on Algeria.

I hold PhD and MA degrees in History/History of Science from Princeton University (2014 and 2010), a diploma in Arabic language and culture from the American University in Cairo (2008), an AM degree in Regional Studies-Middle East from Harvard University (2005), and a BA Honours in Modern History from the University of Oxford (2002). I have been fortunate to live and study in Algeria, Egypt, France, Lebanon, Morocco, the UK, and the United States. I've worked at Harvard as an administrator, Oxford as a fixed-term lecturer, and at Glasgow in History and now in Economic and Social History.

At Glasgow, I teach courses on innovation and the history of science, technology, and medicine in the modern Middle East and North Africa. I enjoy collaborating with students and colleagues in Glasgow's Archives & Special Collections to run "global history hackathons".

I am currently writing a book about hygienic surveillance in colonized Algeria. The book is based on study of handwritten and typed documents in Arabic and French used by Algerian medical auxiliaries. These sources reveal how racialized religious categories and managerial processes shaped the delivery of public health in Algeria.

My other full-time jobs are being a Type 1 diabetic and a parent.

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Hanne Kirstine Adriansen

Associate Professor, School of Education, Aarhus University

As well as being an associate professor, Dr Adriansen also serves as international adviser at Aarhus University. Her research focuses on higher education and scientific knowledge production, including the internationalisation of higher education. Her most recent publication is Higher Education and Capacity Building in Africa: The Geography and Power of Knowledge Under Changing Conditions.

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Hannes Leroy

Professor of Leadership Development, Rotterdam School of Management
Hannes Leroy is interested in authentic leadership and how to develop it. That interest includes not only a passionate and critical view of the concept of authenticity but his past work also includes a better understanding of its unique outcomes (e.g., safety, error hiding and work engagement), antecedents (e.g., mindfulness training), and similarities and differences from related concepts (i.e., leader behavioral integrity, leader communication transparency). On the development side he is passionate about authenticity both in terms of developing leaders to use their unique or authentic self as a source of their leadership strength as well as the idea of real (i.e., actually moving the needle) leadership development.

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Hannes Read

Policy and Data Analyst, University of Birmingham
Hannes joined City-REDI as a Policy and Data Analyst in February 2021. He has experience working on economic development research projects in local government and with business improvement districts.

Hannes has recently worked at Lancaster City Council actively engaging with the economic recovery and resilience in the response to Covid-19. He has also worked closely on the council’s Community Wealth Building Strategy for sustainable and inclusive economic prosperity.

He has an MA in Local and Regional Development from Newcastle University, where he developed his research interests around inclusive economic development, policy, and place.

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Hanno Rein

Associate Professor, Physical and Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto
I currently work at the University of Toronto at Scarborough where I am a member of the Department for Physical and Environmental Sciences. My graduate appointments are at the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and the Department of Physics.

I'm very interested in numerical methods, in particular N-body codes and integration methods for planetary systems. Other research interests include planet formation, stochastic processes, planet migration, celestial mechanics, and Saturn's rings. I like to explore the posibility of using novel high performance computing platforms for astrophysics.

Make sure to check out my REBOUND code. It is an open source N-body code which gives you access to the world's fastest and most accurate numerical integrators. You can do almost anything with it from long-term symplectic orbit integrations to collisional shearing-sheet simulations of Saturn's rings. The installation takes literally 30 seconds and it comes with an easy to use python interface. It's really cool and I'm very proud of it.

You also don't want to miss the Exoplanet App. It is a free smartphone application for the iPhone/iPad that I wrote. It let's you explore almost the entire universe, including the cosmic microwave background, galaxy clusters, our Milky Way, the Solar System and all discovered extra-solar planets. Several million people have already downloaded it!

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Hans J. Ohff

Hans J Ohff is a visiting research fellow at The University of Adelaide and a former CEO of the Australian Submarine Corporation.

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Hans Vollaard

Dr. Hans (J.P.) Vollaard is a lecturer of Dutch and European Politics at the Institute of Political Science since 2007. Before that he studied Political Science and was a PhD candidate at the same institute. His PhD research project explored changing political territoriality in the European Union. His other fields of interests are Euroscepticism in the Netherlands and Christians in (Dutch) politics.

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Hans Westerbeek

Hans Westerbeek is Professor of Sport Business and Dean of the College of Sport and Exercise Science, incorporating the Institute of Sport, Exercise and Active Living (ISEAL) at Victoria University in Melbourne, Australia.

He also holds an appointment as Chair of Sport Management at the Free University of Brussels (Belgium) and as Professor of Sport Business as the Real Madrid Graduate School (Spain).

Previously he was Head of the School of Sport, Tourism and Hospitality Management and Professor of Sport Management at La Trobe University in Melbourne.

Prior to his academic appointments he worked as an academic and consultant in the fields of international marketing and sport business.

Hans has consulted to professional sport organisations, (inter)national and state sport associations, and local and state government in multiple countries, such as FIFA, IMG, Giro d'Italia, Sport Business Group, the governments of the United Arab Emirates, New Zealand, Australia and the Netherlands and Saujana Limited Group (Malaysia).

He has written 23 books on sport management, sport marketing and sport business related topics and he frequently consulted by the international media as a sport business expert.

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Hantian Zhang

Senior Lecturer in Media, Sheffield Hallam University
I am a Senior Lecturer in Media and the Course Leader for BAHons (Media). I am currently teaching multiple modules for BA(Hons) Media and MA in Global Communication and Media.

My research focuses on cultural and technical aspects of social media including influencers, platforms, content, audience, participatory culture and algorithmic networks. My current research focuses on YouTube video networks, audience engagement with YouTubers, and gamification elements on online streaming apps.

I was awarded a PhD in Digital Media and Communication, and an MSc in Design and Digital Media (with Distinction) both at the University of Edinburgh.

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Hanya Pielichaty

Associate Professor, Marketing Languages and Tourism, University of Lincoln
Hanya is Associate Professor at Lincoln and focuses her pedagogic approach, research and external activities in the areas of sports, gender and inclusive education. Hanya is a Principal Fellow (PFHEA) of Advance HE and the Director of Student Inclusion with the Eleanor Glanville Institute. She ensures her passion for equity and diversity is embedded in student-centred activity and research. In 2021, Hanya founded the Critical Pedagogies in Sport international network, a space for academics to understand and challenge constraining power structures in sports-based higher education. Hanya is an international author and specialises in the discipline of sociology of sport. Hanya is also a proud Trustee for the Lincoln City Foundation and Director & Independent Trustee of the Active Partnerships National Board. Hanya promotes an inclusive leadership style through which she created HEAR4U, a Fellowship Support Network. HEAR4U supports the university with its fellowship accreditation scheme. Furthermore, she has years of experience (present and previous) of programme leadership, running the following: MSc (Hons) International Sports Business Management, BA (Hons) Sports Business Management and BSc (Hons) Events Management degrees within the department. Hanya's research interests stem from her own experiences of playing football over a 20 year period and a fascination with gender, participation, identity and family relationships.

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Hao Peng

Postdoctoral Fellow in Computational Social Science, Northwestern University
Hao Peng is a Postdoc at the Kellogg School of Management, affiliated with the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems at Northwestern University. His research is in computational social science, social networks, and innovation management. He studies the dissemination of innovation, AI for scientific advancement, and diversity in science & business. His research aims to generate novel insights that can help organizations leverage the full potential of human capital and machine intelligence to accelerate discoveries and breakthroughs. Dr. Peng holds a Ph.D. from University of Michigan School of Information. His work has been published in top venues such as PNAS and Science Advances, and reported by international media outlets including The Washington Post, Le Monde, and New Scientist.

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Hao Yuan Kueh

Associate Professor of Bioengineering, University of Washington
The Kueh Lab studies the molecular circuitry controlling cell fate decisions in immune cells. We seek to understand how these circuits work in living cells, and what design principles underlie their operation. These studies aim to lay foundations for engineering immune cells to fight cancer and other life-threatening diseases.

We adopt an interdisciplinary approach, combining live-cell imaging, mathematical modeling, powerful mouse reporter models, and modern genetic and biochemical approaches.

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Haohui Chen

Senior Research Scientist, Data61
Dr. Haohui Chen is a Senior Research Scientist at Data61, CSIRO, specializing in applied statistics, machine learning, natural language processing, and computational social sciences. His profound understanding of structured and unstructured datasets has been instrumental in numerous research and industrial projects, where he has developed efficient NLP AI models. His key strengths lie in utilizing these insights for complex socio-economic modelling and analysis. He has evaluated societal impacts of shifts in automation technologies, employment structures, work skills, and labour force participation. Haohui's notable contributions extend to high-profile research projects, including the National Digital Capability Framework and the Green Energy Jobs Dictionary. Additionally, he serves on the editorial board of Humanities and Social Sciences Communications (a Nature Portfolio journal). Throughout his career, Haohui has co-authored influential papers published in peer-reviewed journals, some of which have been featured in Science News and the Washington Post. He also participated in the Shanghai Open Data App Challenge (SODA) in 2015 and won the Excellence Award.

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Haoyang Zhai

PhD Candidate, The University of Melbourne
I am a PhD candidate and Graduate Research Teaching fellow in the School of Cultural and Communication at the University of Melbourne. My doctoral project focuses on spirituality and digital media, looking specifically at China. My current research interests lie in digital media, communication governance, digital ethnography, and China.

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Harald Fox

Senior Lecturer of Particle Physics, Lancaster University
I am member of the ATLAS collaboration at CERN's Large Hadron Collider. I am interested in the newly discovered Higgs boson, investigating whether it contributes to the difference between matter and anti-matter and using it as a portal to investigate new physics beyond the Standard Model. I am also interested in outreach for schools, working on our particle physics simulation http://lppp.lancs.ac.uk . In addition I am looking into options to harness the highly penetrative power of muons for applications beyond particle physics. For future detectors I am also interested in silicon sensors.

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Harald Ringbauer

Group Leader, Department of Archaeogenetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
I am a population geneticist who develops and applies computational tools to analyze genomic data. A key research interest of mine is the study of human ancient DNA. This field is rapidly growing - by now thousands of genomes of humans who lived thousands of years ago are being published every single year. I develop new ways to study these ancient genomes and make computational tools available to other researchers. Currently, I hold a junior group leader position at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig (Germany), and I build up a research group in this field.

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Hari KC

Research Fellow, CERC Migration and Integration program, Toronto Metropolitan University
Hari KC is a migration scholar with his broad research interests in the politics of migration pertaining especially to migration and mobility, labour migration (mainly along South Asia-Middle East corridors), migration policy and governance, and gender and migration. In his doctoral research, he explored the issues of Nepali women migrant domestic workers in the Gulf countries in Asia. This research was based on six months of multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Nepal, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates with the funding support of the IDRC Doctoral Research Award. Hari has also collaborated on several research projects, including the “Gender + Migration Hub” (https://gendermigrationhub.org) which seeks to enhance the capacity of governments, civil society and other stakeholders in designing and implementing gender-responsive migration policies and programs. Hari is also associated with the International Migration Research Centre at the Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfrid Laurier University, where he taught a range of undergraduate and graduate courses on migration, citizenship, and global justice, among others. Before joining the CERC, Hari was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Wilfrid Laurier University with his work looking at the nexus between labour migration and food in/security from a gender perspective in the context of South Asia. He has also taught at Tribhuvan University in Nepal and also worked, in various roles, for the BBC Media Action, Embassy of India, and the Carter Centre. Hari has a PhD in Global Governance from the Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfrid Laurier University, and master’s degrees in English and Peace and Conflict Studies from the University of Waterloo.

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Hari Har Jnawali

Instructor, Global Governance, Wilfrid Laurier University
Hari Har Jnawali has a Ph.D. in Global Governance, with a specialization in the international human rights and global justice from the Balsillie School of International Affairs at the University of Waterloo. Dr. Jnawali is particularly interested in examining the states’ responses to minorities’ demand for autonomy and self-determination within states’ borders. He wants to know why autonomy struggles do and do not succeed. He has published several papers on the topics such as international human rights regimes, Indigenous rights, federalism, and regional autonomy. Currently, he is working on a project that examines how all South Asian countries are using population transfer as a strategy to weaken the minorities’ claims to self-determination.

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Harizoly Razafimandimby

Maître de Recherche Gestion des Ressources Naturelles et Développement, FOFIFA
Professional experience :Mes travaux de recherche se focalisent sur la caractérisation des espèces forestières de Madagascar et de leurs habitats en vue de leur gestion durable, plus particulièrement sur le poivre sauvage de Madagascar (Tsiperifery). Chercheur du programme "Forêts naturelles" au FOFIFA - DRFGRN, je suis le conservatrice de la collection d'herbier TEF du FOFIFA .
- Coordinatrice du Dispositif de Recherche et de Formation en Partenariat Forêt & Biodiversité
- Directrice du Département de recherches Forestières et Gestion de Ressources Naturelles (DRFGRN) du FOFIFA
- Formateur en Botanique et écologie forestière au Centre National de Formation de Techniciens Forestiers
- Membre de l'équipe d'accueil "Ecologie et Biodiversité" de l'Ecole Doctorale Gestion des Ressources Naturelles et développement de l'Université d'Antananarivo
- Membre du Groupe des Spécialistes des Plantes de Madagascar

Education: Doctorat en Sciences Agronomiques et Environnement de l'Université d'Antananarivo en 2017

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Harley-Jean Simpson

Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Science, Anglia Ruskin University
Harley Jean’s main interests are Coaches’ Decision-Making, Research Methods, Coach Education/Learning and Pedagogy. Her specialist area is in Sports Coaching, and she is driven by the curiosity of researching and balancing her role as a lecturer/researcher across higher education and working with National Governing Bodies.

PhD topic: Exploring Coaches’ Cognitively and Socially-Rooted Decisions within a Professional Sports Team Context.

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