Menu

Search

Min J. Kim

Visiting Assistant Professor at the George Washington University; Visiting Researcher, United Nations University
Min J. Kim is a Visiting Assistant Professor of International Affairs and the Associate Director of the MA program in Security Policy Studies in the Elliott School of International Affairs. She is also an affiliated faculty at the Elliott School's Institute for Korean Studies. In addition to the academic appointment, She serves as a visiting researcher at the United Nations University World Institute for Development (UNU-WIDER).

Her research focuses on political and security issues in border and frontier areas, state-minority relations, and territorial politics.

She holds a Ph.D. in International Relations from American University and an MA in Conflict Resolution from Georgetown University.

  More

Less

Min Young Oh

Lecturer in Animation, University of Greenwich
Min Young Oh has been working as an animator and animation director in a variety of formats including commercials, independent films, and documentaries. She is an award-winning director and her films have screened at numerous film festivals around the world, including eight Oscar qualifying film festivals. She is interested in storytelling and character development through imagery and movement. Her interests range from experimental animation to high end commercial films. She has been sharing her skills and knowledge with students in different universities around the world and is now settled at the University of Greenwich.

  More

Less

Mina Kinghorn

Senior Project Coordinator, The University of Queensland
Mina is a non-Indigenous woman and research coordinator who has worked in varying capacities within First Nations health research and curriculum. Her research experiences have focused broadly on cancer and wellbeing, and primary healthcare challenges.

She is passionate about the role of education in health equity and has worked across several projects within the University of Queensland designing and developing new curriculum that integrates Indigenous Knowledges within health-related programs (BEnvSci, MPH, MEpi, MD). Most recently, she completed a pilot course and evaluation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and Wellbeing (INDH7002) which will be the first compulsory First Nations heath course in a Master of Public Health and Master of Epidemiology in Australia (2023).

Mina is currently the Senior Project Coordinator (Services) for the Let’s Yarn About Sleep program.

  More

Less

Ming Du

Ming Du is professor and director of the Centre for Chinese Law and Policy at Durham Law School.

His current research focuses on the theoretical and structural issues of global economic governance (trade, investment and finance), China's approach to international law, and the development of the rule of law in contemporary China. He also retains a strong interest in corporate law and cross-border business transactions in which he practiced as a qualified lawyer in both New York and Beijing for a number of years.

  More

Less

Minjeong Kim

Associate professor, UMass Lowell
My expertise includes the literacy and language development of children with diverse backgrounds, multicultural children's literature, and teacher education.

Education:

Ph.D.: Integrated Teaching and Learning, (2008), The Ohio State University - Columbus, OH
Supporting Area: Early Childhood Education and Literacy Studies
Dissertation/Thesis Title: Early literacy learning of young children with and without hearing loss: Written narrative development

MA: Special Education, (2002), Dankook University - Seoul, Korea
Supporting Area: Deaf and Communication Disorder Education
Dissertation/Thesis Title: Story grammar, writing strategies and text knowledge in hearing impaired children with different levels of writing proficiencies.

BA: Special Education (Specialty Area: Deaf Education), (2000), Dankook University - Seoul, Korea
Supporting Area: Specialty Area: Deaf Education

Selected Awards and Honors

AERA SIG Award (2006), Service, Community - American Educational Research Association Special Interest Group

College of Education Scholarship (2006), Scholarship/Research - The Ohio State University

Ray Travel Award (2006), Service, University - The Ohio State University

Teacher Training Award (2002) - Korea Institute for Special Education

Department Scholarship (2001) - Department of Education, Dankook University, Seoul, Korea

LG Global Challenger Award in Education and Art (1998) - LG Seoul, Korea

LG International Study Program Award (1998)

Selected Publications

Kim, M.J. (2006). "Conceptualizing early childhood literacy for literacy education of children with special needs," Korean Journal of Special Education, 41 183-214.

Kim, M.J. (2002). "Story grammar, writing strategies and text knowledge in hearing impaired children with different levels of writing proficiencies.," Korean Journal of Special Education, 37 143-170.

Selected Presentations

The States of Southeast Asian Communities in New England - The 2014 States of Southeast Asian American Studies, October 2014 - Minneapolis, MN

Finding a voice through storytelling, 2011 - New Orleans, LA.

Contextualization and de-contextualization of narrative practices in classroom, 2010 - Denver, CO

What counts as homeless context, 2010 - Columbus ,OH

What does context mean?, 2010 - Denver, CO

Narrative development of children with hearing loss as language socialization, 2009 - San Diego, CA

Pedagogies of possibility for critical consciousness, 2009

Discourse Analysis in Education Conference in Columbus - Discourse Analysis in Education Conference , 2008 - Ohio

Pedagogies of possibility for critical consciousness, 2008

Using and analyzing video data in ethnographic and cross-disciplinary studies of learning settings from multiple perspectives, 2008 - New York

- American Educational Research Association, 2007 - Chicago, IL

Children building on peers, 2007 - Chicago, IL
Understanding narrative development as intertextual practices, 2007 - Chicago, IL

Reconceptualizing genre development in preschool childrens' oral and written narratives, 2006 - San Francisco, CA

Social construction of intertextuality of deaf children during literacy events, 2006 - San Francisco, CA

Intertextuality and reading at an elementary level, 2005 - Pittsburg, PA

Reconceptualizing genre development in preschool children's written narratives, 2005 - Wisconsin

Social construction of gender through preschool children's oral storytelling events, 2005 - Montreal Canada

Selected Contracts, Fellowships, Grants and Sponsored Research

KF Korean Studies Workshop for Educators 2013 (2013), -
Kim, M.J. (Principal)
Min Kim (2010), Grant - The Korea Foundation
Kim, M. (Principal)
Min Kim (2010), - University of Massachusetts Lowell
Kim, M. (Principal)
KF Korean Studies Workshop for Education 2012 (2012), -
Kim, M.J. (Principal)
KF Korean Studies Workshop for Education (2011), -
Kim, M.J. (Principal)
KF Korean Studies Workshop for Education (2010), -
Kim, M.J. (Principal)
Min Kim (2009), Grant - Paguin Adams Grant
Kim, M. (Principal)
Min Kim (2009), Grant - Tewksbury Public Schools
Kim, M. (Co-Principal)
Min Kim (2009), Grant - University of Massachusetts Lowell
Kim, M.
Tewksbury and UML K-12 Literacy Instruction Partnership for Professional Development (2009), Grant - Massachusetts Department of Secondary and Elementary Education
Bifuh-Ambe, E. (Principal), Kim, M.J., Simmons, J.W.,
Min Kim (2008), Grant - City of Woburn
Kim, M.
Professional Development in Early Literacy (2009), -
Kim, M.J. (Principal)
Alumni Research Grant (), Grant - Ohio State University
Kim, M.
Graduate Student Conference Grant (), Grant - The Ohio State University
Kim, M.

  More

Less

Minnita Daniel-Cox

Associate Professor of Music, University of Dayton
Dr. Minnita Daniel-Cox attended Bowling Green State University, where she received a Bachelor of Music in Music Performance, and the University of Michigan, where she earned her Masters of Music and her Doctorate of Musical Arts degrees.

In 2014, Dr. Daniel-Cox established the Dunbar Music Archive and has presented her research for the National Association of Teachers of Singing, the National Opera Association, College Music Society, Society for American Music, National Association for Music Education, International Society for Music Education, Song Collaborators Consortia, Ohio Music Education Association and the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives.

She has performed Dunbar Archive repertoire recitals in venues across the United States including the University of Michigan, Bowling Green State University, University of Puget Sound, Ohio Northern University, Central Michigan University, Detroit Musicians Association, Taylor University and Hanover University with a recital tour in Stara Zagora, Haskovo and Plovdiv, Bulgaria.

Dr. Daniel-Cox has received over $350,000 in funding for her Dunbar work, including two National Endowment for the Humanities grants and a Mellon Foundation grant for the Dunbar Project.

Dr. Daniel-Cox is an active member of the African American Art Song Alliance, National Association of Negro Musicians, National Association of Teachers of Singing and is an alumna of the NATS Intern Program. She serves on the board of the NOA and is Co-Chair of the Inclusivity, Diversity, Equity and Access (IDEA) Initiative for the National Opera Association.

Dr. Daniel-Cox regularly appears with the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, the Springfield Symphony Orchestra, the Miami Valley Symphony Orchestra and the Bach Society of Dayton. Recently, she has performed the roles of Anna Gomez in Menotti’s The Consul and Sister Rose in Dead Man Walking with Dayton Opera. She is regularly featured in broadcasts with for WDPR Discover Classical.

She is currently the Associate Professor of Voice and Coordinator of the Voice Area at the University of Dayton, where she teaches applied lessons and music courses, serves as Artistic Director of the yearly musical/opera productions, coordinates the Dayton Opera Apprentice Program, and coordinates the Vocal Performance Institute, a summer program for high school-aged singers.

  More

Less

Minran Liu

Lecturer in International Relations, University of Sydney
Dr Minran Liu is a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sydney. He is concurrently a lecturer in International Political Studies at UNSW Canberra at the Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA). He received his PhD in International Relations at the University of Sydney. His research interests span Chinese defence and foreign policy, Asia-Pacific security, the interplay between domestic and international spheres, Australia-China relations, and International Relations theory.

  More

Less

Minyon Avent

Antimicrobial Stewardship Pharmacist, The University of Queensland
Dr Minyon Avent is an Antimicrobial Stewardship pharmacist at the Queensland Statewide Antimicrobial Stewardship Program and a Consultant Clinical Research Pharmacist at The University of Queensland Centre. She has many years of experience in developing and implementing programmes for the appropriate use of antibiotics in tertiary health care institutions, rural and regional areas as well as the general practice setting. Her research interests are the optimisation of antibiotics.

  More

Less

Miquel Serra Raventós

Catedràtic j. de Psicologia Cognitiva y experto senior de la Comisión de Bioètica, Universitat de Barcelona

  More

Less

Mira Sucharov

Professor of Political Science, Carleton University
Dr. Mira Sucharov is Professor of Political Science. She holds a PhD in Government from Georgetown University, an MA in Political Science from the University of Toronto, and a BA in Middle East Studies from McGill University. She is the author of Borders and Belonging: A Memoir (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), Public Influence: A Guide to Op-Ed Writing and Social Media Engagement (University of Toronto Press, 2019), and The International Self: Psychoanalysis and the Search for Israeli-Palestinian Peace (SUNY Press, 2005). She is co-editor (with Aaron J. Hahn Tapper) of Social Justice and Israel/Palestine: Foundational & Contemporary Debates (University of Toronto Press, 2019), and (with Eric Van Rythoven) Methodology and Emotion in International Relations: Parsing the Passions (Routledge, 2019). She is currently writing a dual travel-memoir with Omar M. Dajani on space, place and emotion in Israel/Palestine, and they are developing a podcast on the past and future of Jaffa, called “The Vacant Lot.”

Her many op-ed pieces have appeared in Haaretz, The Forward, The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, JTA, Jewish Currents, The Ottawa Citizen, The Daily Beast and Huffington Post. She is also a frequent media commentator, having appeared on CBC, CTV, Global News, Agence-France Press, and NPR affiliate KDNK; and having been quoted in Vox, The New York Times, Buzzfeed, The Globe and Mail, The National Post and Al Jazeera. In 2019, she won the Faculty of Public Affairs award for Excellence in Public Commentary.

Dr. Sucharov is a nine-time teaching award winner, including having won the highest university teaching award in Ontario. At Carleton, she has developed courses in Israeli-Palestinian relations, op-ed writing and social media engagement, graphic novels and political identity, and Netflix and politics.

She is the founding co-chair of the Jewish Politics Division at the Association for Jewish Studies, and is immediate past co-editor of AJS Perspectives.

  More

Less

Miracle Chinwenmeri Uche

Lecturer in Law, University of Westminster
PhD (International Criminal Law)-University of Essex

LLB­­-Girne American University Cyprus

LLM (Public International Law)-Leiden University, The Netherlands

Diploma in Contemporary Challenges to International Human Rights Law-Abo Akademi University, Finland

  More

Less

Miranda Kitterlin-Lynch

Associate Professor, Coca-Cola Endowed Professor, Florida International University
Dr. Miranda Kitterlin-Lynch is an Associate Professor in the Chaplin School of Hospitality and Tourism Management at Florida International University. She received her doctoral degree in Hospitality Administration from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is a Past President of the SECSA Federation of the International Council on Hotel, Restaurant and Institutional Education (ICHRIE), the current ICHRIE Director of Member Services and Development, Chair of Membership for the International Society of Travel and Tourism Educators (ISTTE), as well as the Associate Editor for the International Hospitality Review. In 2017, Dr. Kitterlin-Lynch received the FIU Faculty Senate Award for Excellence in Teaching. Dr. Kitterlin-Lynch is a Coca Cola Endowed Professor, the recipient of international and domestic Best Paper awards, and has published over 100 peer-reviewed articles, conference proceedings, and trade/industry publications. She has also edited a textbook in her area of specialty, and given a number of media interviews.

  More

Less

Miranda Stewart

Miranda Stewart is a Professor and Director of the Tax and Transfer Policy Institute at Crawford School of Public Policy, The ANU. She is also a Professor at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne. Her numerous edited or coauthored books include Not-for-Profit Law (2014, with O'Connell and Harding, Cambridge U Press); Tax, Law and Economic Development (2013, with Brauner, Edward Elgar); Housing and Tax Policy (2010: Australian Tax Research Foundation) and Death and Taxes (2014, with Flynn, Thomson). Miranda was a consultant to the Henry Tax Review on housing and has authored many articles in national and international academic journals. She is currently researching tax in a global economy and institutions of tax reform.

  More

Less

Miranda Sheild Johansson

Senior Research Fellow in Social Anthropology, UCL
I am a social anthropologist specialising in the dynamics of fiscal systems and the sociality of tax, with a particular emphasis on the Andean region, where I have undertaken long-term fieldwork in a rural Quechua-speaking community, as well as in the peri-urban zones of Cochabamba city. In 2022 I commenced my UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship project, ‘The Sociality of Tax: A Multiperspective Study of Fiscal Relations (SocTax)’. The project investigates fiscal regimes and cultures in an anthropological fashion comparing Bolivia, the UK, and Sweden, and exploring the types of social relations that paying and not paying tax produce in different ethnographic settings. I'm a member of the Anthropology of Tax network (tax-anthro.net), founder and convenor of EASA's Anthropology of Tax Network, and affiliate of UCL's Centre for Capitalism.

I am also a member of the ERC-funded project 'Anthropologies of Extortion', working as part of an international groups of scholars to map and analyse cultures of extortion. In 2017 I was awarded the Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship for my project 'Becoming a Taxpayer: Fiscal Expansion and Economic Subjectivities in Bolivia'. Before that I worked as a Teaching Fellow in the Anthropology department at UCL 2016/17. I received my Ph.D. in Anthropology from the London School of Economics (ESRC-funded) in 2014, MSc (Research) from London School of Economics (ESRC-funded) in 2007, and MA (hons) in Social Anthropology from the University of Edinburgh in 2005.

  More

Less

Mireille Rebeiz

Chair of Middle East Studies & Associate Professor of Francophone & Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Dickinson College
I received my doctorate in Francophone Studies from Florida State University in 2012. I have a master’s degree in International Law and Human Rights from Université de Rouen in France, and a bachelor’s degree in law from Saint Joseph University in Lebanon. My teaching and research focus on the intersectionality of law, gender, sexuality, oral history, and trauma in the context of armed conflicts with a focus on the Middle East and North Africa. My first book, "Gendering Civil War. Francophone Women’s Writing in Lebanon", for which I earned the AAUW American Fellowship, appeared with Edinburgh University Press in 2022. Nominated for the John Leonard Prize, this book examines French-language narratives published between the 1970s and the present day by Lebanese women authors writing on the Lebanese civil war of 1975-1991. My second book examines Hezbollah’s unlawful activities in Lebanon since 1982, and the manuscript is currently under consideration. My most recent research project focuses on the Beirut barracks bombing of 1983 that killed 241 American servicemembers and 58 French parachutists. In this project, I explore gaps in Lebanese, French, and American histories and writes veterans’ oral stories. In addition to my books, I published several peer reviewed articles in French and English in national and international journals. I am also finishing a second doctorate in international law and terrorism at Penn State Dickinson Law.

  More

Less

Mirella Dottori

Professor, University of Wollongong
Mirella Dottori is Professor within the School of Medical, Indigenous and Health Sciences, University of Wollongong (UOW). Her research combines technologies in human pluripotent stem cell biology, neuroscience and bioengineering to develop cellular models of the human nervous system. Her roles also include Chair of UOW Health and Medical Human Ethics Research Committee and member of Australian Research Council College of Experts.

  More

Less

Miren Gutiérrez

Investigadora, activismo de datos, Universidad de Deusto
Investigadora Principal del programa ARES (Analysing Antifeminist Resistances). Doctora en Comunicación, especialista en activismo de datos. Licenciada en Lingüística, Máster en Comunicación. Research Associate at the Overseas Development Institute (Londres)

  More

Less

Miriam Neigert

Lecturer in German Studies, University of New England
Dr Neigert joined UNE in 2018 as a Lecturer and Discipline Convenor of German Studies. She completed her PhD thesis at Justus-Liebig Universität Gießen and Macquarie University Sydney (Cotutelle) on the topic of older language learners at community colleges in Germany. She is passionate about learning and teaching languages and has more than 15 years of teaching experience in a variety of adult and higher education contexts in both Germany and Australia. During her studies at Justus-Liebig Universität, she was part of an e-learning team creating digital language learning material in cooperation with the Goethe-Institut and teaching German online via chats, wikis and on SecondLife. Dr Neigert has taught a variety of lectures and seminars for teachers of TEFL/TESOL and trained teachers in the teaching and learning of German as a foreign language (DaF/DaZ).

Miriam’s research interests include motivation and the language learner self, age and language learning, using digital media in the foreign language classroom, and assessment for language learning.

  More

Less

Mirjam Büdenbender

Mirjam Büdenbender is a doctoral candidate at KU Leuven. Her research is part of the ERC funded project on the ‘Real Estate/Financial Complex’, which investigates the linkages between real estate markets and financial practices in contemporary capitalist societies. Mirjam studies the case of Russia and Poland. In so doing, she explicitly addresses the relationship between real estate and modern financial practices as well as their differential construction in post-Soviet societies.

As part of this project, Mirjam spends several periods of field research in her respective case countries. In Moscow she works as a research intern at the Institute for Urban Economics. Her fieldwork includes interviewing academics and professionals in real estate and related sector, analysing newspapers, government and industry documents, and accessing locally produced secondary material.

Previously Mirjam completed a BA (First Class Honours) in International Relations and Development Studies at the University of Sussex (2011) and a Master (Distinction) in Political Economy at the University of Manchester (2012).

In her previous degrees Mirjam studied the political economy of finance and the financialisation of everyday life through the lenses of housing markets. Her bachelor dissertation investigated the financialisation of the residential housing market in post-Apartheid South Africa. Her master’s thesis explored the historical origins and subsequent failure of the housing market as a growth and welfare model in the UK.

Mirjam speaks German (native language), English (full professional proficiency), Russian (professional proficiency) and French (basic). She has training in NVivo, SPSS and elite interviewing.

  More

Less

Miroslav Radman

Professeur, Inserm
Miroslav Radman is a French-Croatian geneticist and molecular biologist. He graduated in biology from the University of Zagreb, Croatia. In 1969, he received his PhD degree in molecular biology from the Free University of Brussels, Belgium. After working as a postdoctoral researcher with Raymond Devoret (1969-70) at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) at Gif-sur-Yvette, France, he joigned Matthew Meselson at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA (1970-73). He is a former Professor of Molecular Genetics at the Free University of Brussels (1973-83) and Research Director at the French CNRS (Institute J. Monod, Paris, 1983-1997). In 1998, he became professor of Cell Biology at the Medical School of the René Descartes University (Paris-5) and director of the INSERM research Unit 571 "Evolutionary and Medical Molecular Genetics", from which he retired in 2013 as exceptional class professor emeritus.

Miroslav Radman is member of several international clubs and academies. He is also the founder of the Mediterranean Institute for Life Sciences (MedILS) in Split, Croatia. He is the founding member of four start-up biotech companies in the USA and France, and initiator and co-founder of the EITP (European Institute of Technology in Paris) project.

During his career, he has published over 200 research and review articles in the areas of DNA repair, DNA replication, mutagenesis, genetic recombination, evolution, microbiology, cancer research, protein oxidation and aging, that have been cited over 10.000 times. Additionally, he is the author of 2 books of scientific popularization about his recent work on the field of aging.

Three of his personal discoveries are present in standard molecular biology and genetics textbooks worldwide (the SOS response in bacteria; the discovery that the mismatch repair system acts as the genetic barrier between closely related species).
His paper on the molecular basis of extreme radiation and desiccation resistance in the most robust microbe Deinococcus radiodurans in Nature unravelled a 50 years old mystery and was commented in over thousand newspaper articles and TV news worldwide.

  More

Less

Miryam Martinez Martinez

Profesora Adjunta Área de Comercialización e Investigación de Mercados, Universidad CEU San Pablo
Miryam Martinez es Profesora Adjunta del departamento de Economía de la Empresa de la Universidad CEU San Pablo. Es directora del Grado en Marketing de la Facultad de CC EE y EE.
Participa como ponente en diversos congresos y seminarios, así como en proyectos de investigación nacionales e internacionales, dentro de su línea de trabajo: Gender Gap.
Es autora de diversos artículos científicos publicados en revistas de reconocido prestigio internacional como: Sex Roles o Educational Management Administration & Leadership.

  More

Less

Mislav Radic

Assistant Professor, Department of Social and Political Sciences, Bocconi University
I am an Assistant Professor at Bocconi University, and a Research Fellow at University College London. My research and teaching lie at the intersection between Strategic Management and Public Policy. Prior to joining Bocconi, I was a Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
My most recent research agenda is focused on exploring the evolution, dynamics and challenges of voluntary carbon markets.
My research was published in academic journals such as the Journal of Management and the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology, and is frequently featured in prominent media outlets such as the Financial Times, the Guardian, and the BBC. I was the Principal Investigator on the UKRI funded project “Hybrid Organising in the Railway Sector”. In addition, I am a collaborator on Croatian Science Foundation funded project “Resilience Enhancing Policies: Exploring the Role of Public Grants” and on the British Academy funded project "The Great Post Office Scandal".
In addition to academic research, I act as a policy and strategy advisor for several private and public sector organizations, and serve as an active member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Shapers community.

  More

Less

Mitchell Dickau

PhD Candidate, Geography, Planning, and Environment Department, Concordia University
Mitchell Dickau is a student researcher at Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) as well as a PhD candidate studying climate science in the Geography, Planning, and Environment department at Concordia University. In his research, Mitchell uses an intermediate complexity Earth system model to investigate how Earth responds to anthropogenic emissions. His research interests include estimating the size of the remaining carbon budget and investigating how temperature overshoot affects Earth. Mitchell's previous research focussed on the effect of climate change on outdoor skating under various emissions pathways.

Working as a student researcher for the Canadian Centre for Climate Services at ECCC, Mitchell works on a project developing projections of different fire weather indices under a range of future emissions scenarios.

  More

Less

Mitchell Gibbs

Dr Mitchell Gibbs is a Lecturer in the School of Health Sciences, Discipline of Exercise Physiology. Mitchell's research aims at helping people with chronic pain by understanding how to best design biopsychosocial exercise interventions, and, how to disseminate these approaches into practice.

  More

Less

Mitchell Lyons

Senior research fellow, The University of Queensland
Senior Research Fellow in the Remote Sensing Research Centre, University of Queensland; and the Centre for Ecosystem Science, University of New South Wales.

  More

Less

Miya Warrington

Adjunct professor in Natural Resources, University of Manitoba
I am a behavioural ecologist with research interests in the evolution and ecology of animal behaviour with a focus on conservation biology and animal adaptations to environmental change. My research combines field-based mensurative and manipulative experiments with laboratory approaches (e.g. genetics) to explore the evolutionary and ecological drivers of cooperation, and behavioural response to impacts of natural environmental change, and human-induced disturbances (e.g. traffic, noise, and industrial activity) and climate change.

  More

Less

Mmamapudi Kubjane

Researcher, Wits Health Consortium, University of the Witwatersrand
Mmamapudi Kubjane (PhD, UCT) is an epidemiologist and modeller with interests in modelling tuberculosis and population-level impacts of interventions. She currently works as a researcher at the Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office, Wits Health Consortium.

  More

Less

Mmatlou Kalaba

Lecturer in Agricultural Economics, University of Pretoria

Completed PhD at University of Pretoria, specialising in international trade, non-tariff measures, regulatory and policy issues and how they impact international trade and economic development. Hold MSc in Agricultural Economics from Oklahoma State University (OSU). Undergraduate and Honours degrees were completed at University of Limpopo

  More

Less

Modesta Tochukwu Alozie

Lead Research Fellow, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick
PhD, International Development, The Bartlett University College London
M.Sc, Environmental Impact Assessment and Management, The University of Manchester
B.Sc, Biochemistry, Imo State University Owerri, Nigeria

I am the Lead Research Fellow on the Data and Displacement Project at the Department of Politics and International Relations, Univerisity of Warwick.
I also teach P0374 (The Politics of Globalisation)

I also work as a Consultant at the Urban Institute, University of Sheffield. Here, I am part of the LO-Act project, investigating climate change in 100 cities in the Global South. As part of the Lo-Act team, I am investigating climate change initiatives in 33 Nigerian cities.

  More

Less

Modestus Fosu

Associate Professor in Language and Communication Studies, University of Media, Arts and Communication, Ghana Institute of Journalism
Dr Modestus Fosu holds a PhD in media and communication from the University of Leeds. His research interests broadly involve communication, media and language, political participation and journalism education.

His current research focus is on indigenous language broadcasting, communication ethics and climate communication.

He has been involved in various local and international projects aimed at improving journalism education and practice in Ghana and other African countries.

  More

Less

Mohamad El Kari

PhD Candidate in the Department of War Studies, King's College London
Mohamad is a PhD Candidate within the Department of War Studies at King’s College London where his research focuses on protest movements and emotions in Lebanon. His research is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) through the London Interdisciplinary Social Science Doctoral Training Programme (LISS DTP).

Mohamad holds an MA in Political Economy of the Middle East from King’s College London, for which he was awarded a distinction and a postgraduate diploma in Middle East security studies from the University of St Andrews.

During his time at King’s, Mohamad worked as a translator for The Cross-Border Conflict Evidence, Policy, and Trends (XCEPT) research programme. His translation work focused on security and stability in Lebanon and peace-building in Iraq.

Previously, Mohamad worked as a research analyst at the American Enterprise Institute’s Critical Threats Project (CTP) where he was tracking and analysing current and emerging threats to American national security posed by the Salafi-jihadi movement in Yemen and North Africa.

  More

Less

Mohammad Houshmand

Ph.D. Candidate in Civil Engineering, Drexel University
Mohammad, a Ph.D. candidate in Civil Engineering at Drexel University, focuses on bio-inspired self-healing materials with a strong background in advanced material manufacturing and characterization. His current research is dedicated to harnessing nature's ingenuity to develop groundbreaking solutions for damage-responsive self-healing in concrete. He has also been involved in the development of vascular self-responsive composites for thermal regulation in buildings. His previous work includes the performance assessment of organic-based sealants, providing robust protection against concrete degradation. Moreover, Mohammad has worked on the conversion of waste coal combustion by-products into construction materials, striving to foster sustainability and minimize environmental impact.

  More

Less

Mohammad Keyhani

Associate Professor, Entrepreneurship and Innovation, University of Calgary
Mohammad Keyhani is an Associate Professor in Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary. His expertise lies in the areas of digital entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial strategy and generativity. Mohammad's research has been published in top tier peer-reviewed journals and presented in international conferences where he has received multiple best paper and best reviewer awards. Mohammad is also a no-code enthusiast and entrepreneur and an OnDeck No Code Fellow (ODNC2). His other experiences include roles such as business advisor to multiple startups, Lab Strategist at the Creative Destruction Lab Rockies, and a David Rockefeller Fellow at the Trilateral Commission. He received his doctorate in strategic management from the Schulich School of Business, York University in Toronto, Canada, and has a M.Sc. in Entrepreneurship and B.Sc. in Applied Mathematics, both from the University of Tehran, Iran.

  More

Less

Mohammad Najlah

Professor of Pharmaceutics & Nanomedicine, Anglia Ruskin University
Mohammad's research interests focus on the fabrication of multifunctional nanomedicines for drug delivery application. He has excellent experience of higher education as a teacher, researcher, external examiner and manager. Mohammad took a pharmacy degree followed by postgraduate diploma (Industrial Pharmacy) at Damascus University and worked as a community pharmacist. He obtained his PhD (2007) from the University of Manchester, Experience

  More

Less

Mohammad Nure Alam

PhD Candidate in Economics, Macquarie University
I am a PhD candidate in economics at Macquarie University. My research lies at the intersection of economics and public health, using advanced methods in applied econometrics to explore the intricate connections between economic factors and health outcomes. My current focus revolves around investigating socioeconomic inequalities in hearing health. My expertise includes applied econometrics, health technology assessment, health economic modelling, economic evaluation in health care and energy economics.

  More

Less

  21 22 23 24 25 26 27 
  • Market Data
Close

Welcome to EconoTimes

Sign up for daily updates for the most important
stories unfolding in the global economy.