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Philippe Huneman

Directeur de recherche CNRS, Institut d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences et des techniques, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Directeur de recherche l'Institut d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences et des techniques (CNRS), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne.
Formé d’abord en mathématiques, il s'est spécialisé dans la philosophie de la biologie, en particulier évolutive, et de l'écologie. Il a écrit de nombreux articles sur des questions relatives au concept d'organisme, à la sélection naturelle, l'écologie théorique ou aux modalités de l'explication biologique, et il a entre autres publié "Métaphysique et biologie. Kant et la constitution du concept d'organisme" (Kimé, 2008), "Pourquoi? Une question pour découvrir le monde." (Flammarion/Autrement 2020)
et codirigé "From groups to individuals" (avec Frédéric Bouchard; MIT Press 2013), "Les Mondes Darwiniens" (avec Thomas Heams, Guillaume Lecointre, Marc Silberstein; Matériologiques, 2011), "Challenging the Modern Synthesis" (Oxford University Press, 2017) avec Denis Walsh, et “Temps de la nature, nature du temps“ (CNRS Ed ) avec Christophe Bouton.
Publications disponible sur http://philippehuneman.wordpress.com
Responsable de de l'équipe "Philosophie de la biologie et de la médecine“ de l'IHPST, et du GDR CNRS Sapienv "les savoirs de l'environnement", il dirige actuellement le projet ANR-DFG "Generalizing Darwinism“ avec Thomas Reydon (Hanovre) , et prépare un livre sur le scientisme et un autre sur ce qu'il nomme "les sociétés du profilage".

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Philippe M. Frowd

Associate professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
Philippe M. Frowd is Associate Professor at the School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada. His research focuses on borders and migration, critical security studies and African politics. As part of a multi-faceted research trajectory, he has also come to research and write on issues related to the politics of surveillance and privacy for diverse audiences.

His current research focuses on the transnational governance of security, with a particular emphasis on border control and migration management technologies and policies.

He is working on two parallel projects. The first focuses on the automation/digitisation of border security in Canada through electronic visas, applications and airport kiosks. The second concerns intervention policy in and around the G5 Sahel and its place in the evolving security architecture of West Africa.

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Philippe Van Cappellen

Professor of Biogeochemistry and Canada Excellence Research Chair Laureate in Ecohydrology, University of Waterloo
I joined the University of Waterloo as the Canada Excellence Research Chair in Ecohydrology in 2011. Previously, I was a Professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology and at Utrecht University. My research combines laboratory studies with field observations and theoretical developments to understand and model the processes that regulate water chemistry, carbon and nutrient cycling, microbial activity, and mineral transformations – in agricultural and urban landscapes, lentic and lotic systems, and coastal marine environments. My work further includes the detection and environmental fate and transport of trace contaminants (metals, metalloids, hydrocarbons, microplastics, nanomaterials), the calibration of geochemical (paleo)proxies, and the development of new water quality sensors. I also uses remote sensing data time series and regional climate projections to forecast future changes in lake and soil biogeochemistry

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Phillip Dawson

Professor and Co-Director, Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning, Deakin University
Professor Phillip (Phill) Dawson is the Co-Director of the Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning (CRADLE) at Deakin University. He researches assessment in higher education, with a focus on feedback, artificial intelligence, cheating and integrity. His two latest books are 'Defending Assessment Security in a Digital World: Preventing E-Cheating and Supporting Academic Integrity in Higher Education' (Routledge, 2021) and the co-edited volume 'Re-imagining University Assessment in a Digital World' (Springer, 2020).

Prof Dawson holds a PhD in Higher Education and a first-class honours degree in Computer Science. He has more than 20 years of experience working in Australian higher education, and he has been awarded four university-level teaching awards and a citation from the Australian Learning and Teaching Council. He has led major higher education research projects funded by the Australian Research Council, the Office for Learning and Teaching, and a variety of educational technology companies.

Phill is a regular contributor to public debate on higher education. His work has been featured on ABC TV, The Australian, The Age, Times Higher Education, the BBC, VICE, Vox, the Financial Times, the Geelong Advertiser, and discussed in the Australian parliament. In his spare time, Phill performs comedy, including in the academia-themed improv show The Peer Revue, which he also produces.

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Phillip McGarry

Ph.D. Candidate in Experimental Psychology, University of Tennessee
Phillip P. McGarry is a Ph.D. candidate in experimental psychology and graduate fellow at the University of Tennessee. His research interests include political polarization, motivation and moral psychology.

Notable publications include (with P. J. Hampson & T. L. Hulsey), “Moral Affordance, Moral Expertise, and Virtue” in Theory and Psychology (2021) and (with R. F. Corwyn), “An Expectancy Value Theory Predicts Achievement in Undergraduate Statistics Through Academic Delay of Gratification” in Statistics Education Research Journal (2020).

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Phillip O'Neill

Professor Phillip O’Neill is Director of the Centre for Western Sydney at Western Sydney University. Previously he was Foundation Director of the Urban Research Centre at WSU, and Director of the Centre for Urban and Regional Studies at the University of Newcastle.

Phillip is a widely published international scholar with expertise relating to economic and industrial change especially in large cities.

He had held visiting research fellowships at Bristol University, The University of Massachusetts, the National University of Singapore, the University of Oxford and University College London. Phillip was Editor-in-Chief of the journal Geographical Research 2010-14. He sits on the editorial boards of a number of leading international journals and is a member of the advisory board of iBuild, a leading UK infrastructure research venture.

Phillip has held six prestigious Australian Research Council grants including his current grants which investigate Australia’s obstinate infrastructure problems and international infrastructure financing trends.

Phillip writes regular columns for the Fairfax regional and community press and is a prominent media commentator.

In recent times he has completed a 25 year outlook study of employment for Western Sydney, an investigation of mortgage distress in significantly affected Western Sydney neighbourhoods, a detailed audit of Sydney’s threatened agricultural lands, and a path-breaking analysis of Sydney's fresh fruit and vegetable supply chains.

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Phillip Wild

Senior Research Fellow, CAEEPR, Griffith University
Dr Phillip Wild has a PhD from the University of Queensland specialising in the field of macro-economic modelling. His main area of research since 2009 has been in Energy Economics with a particular focus on wholesale electricity market modelling of the Australian National Electricity Market (NEM), integration of variable renewables (e.g. wind, solar PV, hybrid gas-solar thermal), levelized cost modelling, the role that renewable hydrogen might play in decarbonisation pathways and network balancing, energy policy issues linked to these research topics, agent based modelling and econometric modelling of National Energy Market (NEM) spot price and load time series data.

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Phiona Stanley

Associate Professor of Intercultural Communications (Tourism and Languages), Edinburgh Napier University
Phiona Stanley has degrees from the University of Edinburgh (MA Honours in Politics, 1994), the University of Sydney (MEd, 2006), and Monash University (PhD, 2010); in addition, she has vocational qualifications in TESOL --RSA Cert (1993) and RSA Dip (1997)-- and the DELE Superiór in Spanish (2002). She currently works as Associate Professor of Intercultural Business Communication at Edinburgh Napier University in Scotland.

Phiona's academic publishing includes five Routledge books on topics including: Westerners teaching English in China, backpackers learning Spanish and engaging in volunteer work/staying in homestays in Latin America, and the gendered cultural pressures women experience to 'fit in' socially, even now. Methodologically, she has contributed to autoethnography, editing two books on the research method's intersections with culture/the intercultural. She has also published around 40 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.

Thematically, Phiona's work is all about mobilities and about the 'intercultural' in its broadest sense: complex comings and goings of humans, non-humans, and objects in specific times and places. Within a broad focus on how cultures operate, she is particularly interested in gender, embodiment, and other normative 'rules', and in the tensions between conventionality and singularity. This has required an ambitious traversing of disciplinary boundaries and innovative cross-pollination of theory.

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Phoebe Hart

Associate Professor, Film Screen & Animation, Queensland University of Technology
Dr Phoebe Hart is a writer, director and producer of documentaries, factual content and children’s television, an associate professor in film, screen and animation at the Queensland University of Technology, and principal of Hartflicker, a video and film production company. She is known particularly for her autobiographical road trip movie, Orchids: My Intersex Adventure. Her book Crafting Contemporary Documentaries and Docuseries for Global Screens: Documania (2024) is published by an imprint of Rowman & Littleford.

Phoebe has worked with many production companies and television networks, including Network Ten, Wildbear Entertainment, Freshwater Pictures, Vizible Entertainment, Octagon CSI, Beyond, Turner Entertainment Inc., Brisbane International Film Festival and Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Her work has been broadcast on Showtime, ARTE, Special Broadcasting Station, Nine Network, Schweizer Fernsehen, Televisión Española, UR (Swedish Educational Broadcasting Company), DBS Israel, OUTtv, Stan and ArtMedia.

In 2009 Hart was awarded her doctorate from Queensland University of Technology, of which Orchids was a central element of her doctoral studies. This documentary took six years for the principal documenters (sisters Phoebe and Bonnie Hart) to film, using a variety of cameras including semi-professional digital cameras, domestic VHS camcorders, and Super 8.

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Phoebe Runciman

Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute of Sport and Exercise Medicine, Stellenbosch University

Phoebe Runciman is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute of Sport and Exercise Medicine, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town. She was awarded her PhD in Exercise Science from the University of Cape Town, after completing her undergraduate degree in Sport Science and her Honours degree in Biokinetics. Her primary research focusses on individuals with disability, including performance, fatigue and exercise pacing strategies of elite athletes with cerebral palsy, brain regulation and muscle activity during exercise, functional capacity and biomechanics of lower limb amputees using bionic or mechanical knee and ankle prostheses, as well as epidemiology of injury and illness of athletes with disability at major sporting competitions (Summer and Winter Paralympic Games).

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Phoebe V Moore

Professor of Management and the Futures of Work at the Essex School of Business, University of Essex
I am an internationally regarded scholar writing about technology and work, with a focus on quantified work and worker struggle. I write about artificial intelligence and its discontents; occupational safety and health and digitalisation; psychosocial pressures and the limits of algorithmic management.

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Phyllis Awor

Lecturer in Public Health, Makerere University
I am a medical doctor (MBChB) with also an MSc. in International Health and a PhD in International Health

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Pierluigi Mancarella

Chair Professor of Electrical Power Systems, The University of Melbourne
Pierluigi Mancarella is the Chair Professor of Electrical Power Systems at the University of Melbourne, Australia, and Professor of Smart Energy Systems at the University of Manchester, UK. His key research interests include techno-economic modelling and analysis of multi-energy systems, grid integration of renewables and distributed energy resources, energy infrastructure planning under uncertainty, and security, reliability, and resilience of low-carbon networks.

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Piero S. Colla

Chargé de cours à l’université de Strasbourg, laboratoire « Mondes germaniques et nord-européens », Université de Strasbourg
Historian, Sociologist

Ph D at the EHESS Paris

Member of the Advisory consultative committee of the Council of Europe's Observatory on History Teaching

Official at the European Economic and Social Committee (Brussels)

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Pierre Failler

Professor in Economics and Director of the Centre for Blue Governance, UNESCO Chair in Ocean Governance, University of Portsmouth
Prof. Failler is the director of the Centre for Blue Governance. He holds the Unesco Chair in Ocean Governance. He has coordinated complex research projects with multidisciplinary teams for more than 25 years in Europe, Africa, Asia, Caribbean, and Pacific coastal countries (more than 40 to date) in collaboration with national research institutions and universities and a close link with policy bodies. He has recently coordinated the Blue Economy Strategy for the African Union, the Regional Action Plan for the Blue Economy of the Indian Ocean Commission, the Blue Economy Strategy of the Intergovernmental Authority for Development as well as the Blue Economy Strategy for Bangladesh, Seychelles, Guinea, The Bahamas, Jamaica, Madagascar and Tanzania. He has authored and co-authored about 160 journal articles and 350 book chapters, research reports, consultancy reports, etc. He is also a scientific evaluator for several research councils in the UK, Europe, North America, Africa, and Asia.

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Pierre Micheletti

Responsable du diplôme «Santé -- Solidarité -- Précarité» à la Faculté de médecine de Grenoble, Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA)
Médecin, diplômé de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Santé Publique.

Ill entreprend ses premières expériences à l’étranger en 1985. Sa thèse de médecine (1986) porte sur « La politique de l’enfant unique en République Populaire de Chine », à l’occasion d’un séjour au « Sichuan Medical College » de Cheng Du.
Il rejoint Médecins du Monde (MDM)en 1987 comme chef de mission au Guatemala. Il devient le directeur des programmes de MDM en 1996, puis sera élu à la présidence de 2006 à 2009.
De 2008 à 2020 il enseigne à l’Institut d’Etudes politiques de Grenoble où il codirige le master « Politiques et Pratiques des Organisations Internationales ».
Il est l’auteur de nombreux articles dans la presse écrite nationale.

Autres fonctions occupées dans le champ de la santé :
• Directeur de la santé de la ville de Grenoble (2000-2008)
• Conseiller technique et membre du Directoire de l’hôpital psychiatrique de St Egrève (2009-2014)
• Président de l’Association des Centres de Santé (Agecsa)(2009-2014)
• Vice-président de la Fédération Nationale des Centres de Santé (2010-2012)
• Président de la Commission santé et membre du Conseil d’Administration de l’Uniopss (2012-2016)
• Membre du Conseil National de la santé mentale (2014-2016)

Dernier ouvrage paru : « 0,03 % : pour une transformation de l'aide humanitaire internationale », éditions Parole, septembre 2020.

http://pierremicheletti.parolesautourdunlivre.fr

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Pierre Sinclair de Gioia Ca

Associate Professor of Business Law, Heriot-Watt University

I am currently Associate Professor of Business Law at the School of Management and Languages at Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh, where I started as lecturer in 2008. I was appointed Associate Professor in 2012. I have a permanent basis contract and I work full-time.

I am currently course-leader of International Banking and Financial Law (fourth your, honours’ level) and Employment Law (third year). In the past I have also been in charge of courses in Company Law at the Dubai Campus (2008/2009), International Trade Law (2012/2013) and a course of Law in HR Management (2008 to /2015). I am a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA; since 2010) and a member of the Scottish Graduate School of Arts and Humanities (since 2014).

In 2012, I won the student award at HWU for ‘Best Lecturer, Innovative Feedback’ and in 2014 I was awarded the prize as ‘Most Supportive Lecturer’ in the Business Management Department. In 2015, I have just completed the ‘treble’: I won the University special ‘Suave Award’. Prior to my appointment at Heriot-Watt University, I was tutor at the University of Edinburgh – Law School, in both contract law and tort, and visiting lecturer in Business Law I and Business Law II at Glasgow Caledonian University.

Graduating in Law from the University of Bari, Italy (summa cum laude) I then went on to complete my Ph.D. in Banking and Financial Law (Siena). I also have an LL.M. in European and International Trade Law (with distinction; Glasgow Caledonian University), a MSc in Banking and Finance (Siena) and a PGCAP (Post-graduate Course in Academic Practice; Heriot-Watt University). Additionally, I have a Diploma in Classical Studies (Lyceum Gymnasium 60/60). I am qualified as a lawyer in both Italy (Avvocato) and Scotland (Solicitor and Notary Public).

Following the completion of my Law degree I worked as a lawyer in the legal department of a number of large corporate banking and financial institutions (IMI, SAN PAOLO IMI, Deutsche Bank, where I was the head of the Corporate and Investment Banking Legal Department) as well as for the international Law Firm Baker & McKenzie (where I was Senior Associate in the Practice Group Banking, Finance and Securities). Latterly, I have worked and I am still working independently as a legal advisor and advocate providing legal assistance in the negotiation of international commercial and financial contracts (derivatives, credit derivatives, loans, syndicated loans, securitizations) to a number of corporations and financial institutions in Europe. I also provide advice in structured finance (securitizations) and capital markets transactions (M&As, take-overs, IPOs).

To date, I have contributed to more than 50 publications in the area of Business Law, with topics spanning Banking and Financial Law, Company Law, Employment Law and the Comparative Analysis in law. In 2014 I wrote with Matthias Haentjens, professor of Banking Law at the University of Leiden Law School, a textbook in European Banking and Financial Law; the book has been published by Routledge UK in June 2015. I am a member of the Editorial Board of both the Rivista Trimestrale di Diritto dell’Economia.

At Heriot-Watt University, I have been the Director of the Business Management Degree Programme since 2011. In the last 7 years, I have promoted and finalised the conclusion of partnerships with a number of Universities, among the others: Carlos III; Ca’ Foscari University of Venice; Ludwig Maximillian University Munich.

I have been Visiting Scholar in Banking and Financial Law at the law school of the University of Leiden (Hazelhoff Centre for the Financial law) since July 2014. I am also Professor of the Ph.D. School in Employment Law and Human Capital Formation at the University of Bergamo and Adjunct Professor of International Financial Law, at the University of Padua (‘MASCI’ post-graduate programme in International Commerce). In academic year 2014/2015, I was appointed visiting lecturer in labour law at the Law School of the University of Stirling, where I delivered an entire course to 20 students. At Ca' Foscari, University of Venice, I have been Visiting and Adjunct Professor in Mergers and Acquisitions (Law) since 2015.

I am fluent in English and Italian and conversant in both French and Spanish and I am dual citizen (British and Italian). I learned Latin and Ancient Greek for five years when I was at the Gymnasium. I still love the reading of the Roman classics in their original languages.

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Pierre Stallforth

Professor of Bioorganic Chemistry and Paleobiotechnology, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
Pierre studied Chemistry at the University of Oxford, UK. He obtained his PhD under the guidance of Prof. Peter H. Seeberger at ETH Zurich. He then moved to Harvard Medical School where he did his postdoc in the laboratory of Prof. J. Clardy. In December 2013, he moved to the Leibniz-HKI as an independent Junior Research Group Leader. In January 2020 he was promoted to head of the Department of Paleobiotechnology. Since December 2021 he is a Professor of Bioorganic Chemistry and Paleobiotechnology at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena.

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Pierre Walthéry

Senior Research Fellow/Research Associate

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Pierre Waldemar Brouard

Acting director of the Centre for Sexualities, AIDS & Gender, University of Pretoria, University of Pretoria
Pierre is the acting director of the Centre for Sexualities, AIDS & Gender at the University of Pretoria, a registered clinical psychologist, and executive member of the Sexuality and Gender Division of the Psychological Society of South Africa. Pierre has worked in HIV since the mid 1980’s and at the CSA&G since 2001 as a manager, researcher, writer, facilitator and teacher. Interests include sexualities, gender, diversity, transformation and human rights.

Pierre is an external examiner for MA theses, a peer reviewer for a number of journals, sits on the board of the Human Rights Development Initiative, is a Board member of the Professional Association for Transgender Health South Africa (PATHSA) and has served on the Transformation Committee of the Faculty of Humanities.

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Pierre-Brice Bintein

Docteur en sciences physiques, Université Paris Cité
Domaines: physique aux interfaces, transitions de phase.

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Pierre-Philippe Fraiture

Professor of French Studies, University of Warwick
I teach postcolonial literatures and have published on the former Belgian Congo, the DRC and the Congolese philosopher VY Mudimbe. I am now exploring extractivism (and mining) in an African context and via figures such as Sammy Baloji, Fiston Mwanza Mujila and Sinzo Aanza.

Recent publications include:
Fraiture, Pierre-Philippe. (2024). Digging holes, excavating the present, mining the future: extractivism, time, and memory in Fiston Mwanza Mujila’s and Sammy Baloji’s works. Modern & Contemporary France, 32(1), 139–159. https://doi.org/10.1080/09639489.2023.2244906

Fraiture, Pierre-Philippe, Congolese Cultural Production in Africa and the World, French Studies, Volume 78, Issue 1, January 2024, Pages 101–127, https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/knad236

Fraiture, Pierre-Philippe, Langues congolaises et littérature africaine: entretien avec Richard Ali A Mutu, French Studies, Volume 78, Issue 1, January 2024, Pages 128–137, https://doi.org/10.1093/fs/knad235

Fraiture, Pierre-Philippe, Unfinished Histories: Empire and Postcolonial Resonance in Central Africa and Belgium, 2022, Leuven University Press, 426pp. https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/59183

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Pierre-Xavier Meschi

Professeur des Universités en sciences de gestion, Affillié à Skema Business School, IAE Aix-Marseille Graduate School of Management – Aix-Marseille Université
Pierre-Xavier Meschi (Ph.D in Management, IAE Aix-Marseille) is Professor of International Strategy at IAE Aix- Marseille (Aix-Marseille Université) and affiliated scholar at Skema Business School. He attended the ITP (International Teacher Program) at London Business School and the GloColl program at Harvard Business School. He is currently Vice-Dean of Research at IAE Aix-Marseille (Aix-Marseille Université).

His research interests include international joint ventures, international M&As, and emerging multinationals. He has previously published in academic journals such as Asia Pacific Journal of Management, Management International Review, International Business Review, European Management Review, Human Relations, Journal of World Business, Journal of International Management, Journal of Management, British Journal of Management, Advances in Strategic Management and Journal of International Business Studies.

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Pierrick Bruyas

PhD in Law, postdoctoral researcher (Univ. of Strasbourg), guest researcher (Univ. of Aarhus, Denmark), Université de Strasbourg
PhD in Law, member of the CEIE (UR7307), University of Strasbourg, guest researcher (Univ. of Aarhus, Denmark)

Docteur en droit public, membre du CEIE (UR7307), enseignant à l'Université de Strasbourg, chercheur invité (Univ. de Aarhus, Danemark)

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Piers Dawes

Professor, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland
My research concerns i) understanding causes and impacts of hearing impairment, particularly in the context of multimorbidity in older age, ii) prevention and treatment of hearing impairment, and iii) hearing service development and evaluation. My research involves epidemiological modelling with population data sets, clinical trials and hearing health policy. I have authored over 130 publications in peer reviewed journals and books, and I frequently present invited and keynote addresses at international conferences. I have received the British Society of Audiology's TS Littler prize for services to audiology and a prestigious US-UK Fulbright award.

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Piers Howe

Associate Professor in Psychology, The University of Melbourne
A/Prof Piers Howe

Director of the Vision, Cognition and Behaviour Lab

Member of the Complex Human Data Hub

Website: https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/340666-piers-howe

Email: [email protected]

Research: Behavioural experiments to better understand how to use technology to reduce the spread of misinformation, prototyping potential solutions using a Wizard of Oz technique. He is investigating what information humans need to receive in order not to re-tweet/post or spread false information. A/Prof Howe is also looking to develop strategies that “nudge” people to look at more reliable sources of information.

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Pietro Galeone

Research fellow, Bocconi University
Pietro is a postdoctoral researcher at IEP@BU and lecturer at Bocconi University. His research focuses on labour economics and EU integration. Originally from Bari, Italy, he obtained his BA in Social Studies from Harvard University, focusing on the relevance of economics for euroscepticism, with a secondary degree in Astrophysics. He then completed his PhD in Economics at Bocconi University, focusing on labour migration and youth policies. In 2021-2022, he served as economic advisor to the Italian Minister for Labour, representing Italy in the Council of the EU’s employment committee (EMCO) and in the G20 Employment working group, as well as at the European Commission as Youth Guarantee coordinator for Italy.

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Pii-Tuulia Nikula

Principal Academic, Eastern Institute of Technology
Dr Pii-Tuulia Nikula is a Principal Academic at EIT in Napier, New Zealand. Her research spans across the fields of environmental sustainability, public policy, management, higher education and international education. Most of her current research focusses on sustainability issues as they relate to organisational climate mitigation and the use of education agents in international student recruitment. Pii-Tuulia's research has been published in international journals such as Studies in Higher Education, Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management and Journal of Studies in International Education. Pii-Tuulia is a co-editor of two books: Sustainable Education Abroad: Striving for Change and Student Recruitment Agents in International Higher Education: A Multi-Stakeholder Perspective on Challenges and Best Practices. Pii-Tuulia is a co-founder of CANIE (Climate Action Network for International Educators).

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Pilar Camargo-Plazas

Associate Professor, Queen's University, Ontario
Pilar Camargo-Plazas, RN, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the School of Nursing, Queen’s University. Under the umbrella of interpretive inquiry and emancipatory approaches, Dr. Camargo-Plazas’s program of research strives to describe and understand how societies organize and distribute resources and address attention toward economic, political, environmental and social factors and their effects on health outcomes, promotion and disease prevention for equity-deserving groups (e.g., older persons, women, families living on a low income, immigrants, refugees, etc.). By focusing on health equity, her research program aims not only to identify research needs but also to develop strategies for sustainable change and action that promote equity in nursing practices for these groups.

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Ping Lam Ip

PhD student, Sociology, University of Alberta
Ping Lam Ip is a PhD student in sociology at the University Alberta. He received his MPhil and BSSc in sociology from Hong Kong Baptist University. His research interests include youth, delinquency, social control, and social theories. His co-authored work has been published in Critical Criminology, The British Journal of Social Work, and Asian Education and Development Studies.

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Pippa Morgan

Lecturer, Political Science, Duke Kunshan University
I am a Lecturer in Political Science at Duke Kunshan University. My research focuses on the political economy of China’s foreign economic relations, Chinese foreign aid, foreign direct investment, and China-Africa relations. More broadly, I am interested in combining quantitative and qualitative methods to understand how history influences contemporary political economy and international relations, and in how political and sociological factors impact prospects for economic development. My teaching interests at Duke Kunshan include global governance, political economy of institutions, and China and the Global South.

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Pippa Norris

Pippa Norris is the McGuire Lecturer in Comparative Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University and ARC Laureate Fellow and Professor of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney.

A political scientist and public speaker, her research compares election and public opinion, political communications, and gender politics. She also served as Director of the Democratic Governance Group in United Nations Development Programme, NY and as an expert consultant to many international organizations such as the World Bank, Council of Europe and OSCE.

In 2011 she was awarded the Johan Skytte prize with Professor Ronald Inglehart for contributing innovative ideas about the relevance and roots of political culture in a global context. This is among the most prestigious prizes relating to the field of political science. She was also awarded the Kathleen Kitzpatrick Australian Laureate Fellowship by the ARC, a 'special recognition' award by the UK Political Studies Association, and a Doctor honoris causa for work 'at the forefront of global political science' by the University of Edinburgh. In 2014 she was awarded IPSA's Karl Deutsch prize.

Her current research focuses upon the Electoral Integrity Project, a major new multi-million 5-year research study. The project research team is based at the Department of Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney. It has been generously supported by many agencies, including the Australian Research Council. Recent and forthcoming publications include Why Elections Fail (2015), Contentious Elections (2015), Why Electoral Integrity Matters (Cambridge University Press 2014), Advancing Electoral Integrity (co-edited, Oxford University Press, 2014), Comparing Democracies 4 (Sage, co-edited April 2014), and also an edited symposium on electoral integrity in Electoral Studies (Oct 2013).

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Polat Gulkan

Professor of Earthquake Structural Engineering, Başkent University
Polat Gulkan is Professor of Earthquake Structural Engineering, Başkent University
Ankara, Türkiye and a fellow of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering.

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Poppy Cullen

Lecturer in International History, Loughborough University
Poppy is a historian of decolonisation and post-colonial relationships between Britain and Africa. She is interested in the transition from colonial to independent states in the 1960s and how organisations and individuals in a variety of fields – military, political, economic, humanitarian – adapted to this transition.

Her book 'Kenya and Britain after Independence Beyond Neo-Colonialism' focused on the political relationship between Britain and Kenya in the decades after independence, the 1960s to 1980s. She examined how political elites in both countries re-thought their relationships after Kenyan independence, and how the different forms of diplomacy practiced by the two states shaped the foreign policies they followed. She argued that British diplomats encouraged personalised rather than bureaucratic policy-making in Kenya. At the same time, they naturalised this kind of personalised politics, often termed neo-patrimonialism, as something inherently ‘African’. Poppy has published on various aspects of Anglo-Kenyan relations in a number of journals.

Her current research is focused on two areas. Firstly, military decolonisation and Africanisation in East Africa. Here, Poppy explores the precarious transformation of colonial armies intended to secure imperial rule to independent African militaries. Secondly, the history of humanitarianism and NGOs in Africa during the period of decolonisation. This includes work on ‘The Big Survey’ of NGOs carried out in the 1960s, and research into the Mau Mau Emergency.

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Pourya Valizadeh

Research Assistant Professor of Agricultural Economics, Texas A&M University
Pourya Valizadeh, Ph.D. is a research assistant professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics. His research interests lie in the economics of food policy, demand and price analysis, and applied econometrics tools for program evaluation and distributional analysis.

Valizadeh’s current research is primarily focused on evaluating the major US food and nutrition assistance programs. He is also conducting research to predict the relative effectiveness of alternative price-based food policies in improving U.S. households’ dietary quality and dietary choices. Prior to joining the faculty at Texas A&M University, he was a postdoctoral research associate at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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