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Huchen Liu

Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Nebraska Omaha
Huchen Liu is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Nebraska Omaha. His researches American politics, with focuses on interest groups and national political institutions.

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Huda Syyed

PhD Candidate & Tutor, Charles Darwin University
Huda Syyed has worked in academia and the non-profit sector and hopes to actively contribute to research and development efforts in the future. Her current topic of research focuses on the practice of ‘Female Genital Cutting’ and explores the lack of data, political activism and understanding regarding it in Pakistan. Her main academic interests include gender, culture, and politicised religion. She is currently a PhD candidate and casual tutor at Charles Darwin University. She completed her undergraduate degree from University of Karachi and pursued a Master’s degree in International Relations at QueenMary University of London. In between, she completed a certificate course at The Graduate Institute Geneva. In the past, she has worked as a Research Assistant for academic projects and on issues of Gender-Based-Violence. She was visiting faculty lecturer at Bahria University and taught the course of “International Organisations”.

https://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol24/iss1/18/
Twitter Handle: @hsyyed88 https://twitter.com/hsyyed88
Research Portal: https://researchers.cdu.edu.au/en/persons/huda-syyed

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Hugh Breakey

Hugh Breakey is a Research Fellow at Griffith University’s Institute for Ethics, Governance and Law. His work stretches across the philosophical subdisciplines of political philosophy, normative ethics, moral psychology, governance studies and applied philosophy. He is the author of 'Intellectual Liberty: Natural Rights and Intellectual Property' (Ashgate) and the co-author (alongside Charles Sampford and Ramesh Thakur) of 'Enhancing Protection Capacity: Policy Guide to the Responsibility to Protect and the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflicts'.

His works explore the ethical challenges arising in such diverse fields as peacekeeping, institutional governance, climate change, sustainable tourism, private property, medicine, and international law, published in journals including The Philosophical Quarterly, The Modern Law Review and Political Studies. He has taught philosophy and ethics at the University of Queensland, Queensland University of Technology and Bond University. Since 2013, Hugh has served as President of the Australian Association for Professional and Applied Ethics. He is currently working on two federally funded research projects, one on professionalization of the financial services industry, and the other on the integrity of the global climate regime.

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Hugh Campbell

Professor of Sociology, Gender Studies and Criminology, University of Otago
Hugh has a long relationship with both the University of Otago and the Centre for Sustainability. He was an undergraduate at the University in the 1980s, and then completed a Masters in Social Anthropology at the university in 1988. He then spent time at Lincoln University where an academic interest in rural sociology, agriculture and sustainability began to form. Following completion of his PhD in Rural Sociology at the Centre for Rural Social Research, Charles Sturt University, New South Wales, he returned to the University of Otago in 1994 and developed university courses on rural society in New Zealand and on the global politics of food. In 2000, he was appointed founding Director of the Centre for the Study of Agriculture, Food and Environment at the University of Otago – the centre that subsequently grew into the Centre for Sustainability.

During his career at Otago, Hugh has had leadership roles in many research projects funded by the Ministry of Science and Innovation (MSI). From 1995–2002, he was the Programme Leader of an MSI-funded programme, Greening Food: Social and Industry Dynamics. This programme examined the social and economic dimensions of developing sustainable agriculture in New Zealand. Specifically, the programme examined the development of organic production and Integrated Pest Management systems by food export organisations like Zespri and ENZA.

After 2003, Hugh co-led the social research team in the MSI-funded Agriculture Research Group on Sustainability (ARGOS) Programme. Working with the kiwifruit, dairy, and sheep/beef sectors, the ARGOS programme brought together 30 researchers from Otago and Lincoln Universities, and from the Agribusiness Group in Christchurch. It undertook a long-term study of social, economic and environmental dynamics on a group of over 100 farms and orchards in New Zealand. That project was extended through 2013–2018 as the NZ Sustainability Dashboard project.

From 2009–2014, Hugh was co-PI of the Marsden fund project Biological Economies: Making and Knowing New Rural Values. This project brought together researchers from across rural sociology and geography in New Zealand and resulted in the publication of two collections:

Biological Economies: Experimentation and the politics of agri-food frontiers (2016)

The New Biological Economy. How New Zealanders are creating value from the land (2018)

As a researcher, Hugh has published work on the social and economic dynamics of 'greening' food systems, the politics of sustainability under neoliberal governance, achieving sustainability via audits, food waste, transitions in agriculture and food systems in New Zealand, and theories of global food regimes.

In 2020, he published a book with Bloomsbury Academic –Farming Inside Invisible Worlds: Modernist Agriculture and its Consequences – on the agency of farms in the colonisation of New Zealand, the creation of modernist farming as the dominant for of land-use in New Zealand, and the many ways in which alternatives to modernist farming are emerging. The book is available on open access at www.bloomsburycollections.com

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Hugh Craig

Professor of English, University of Newcastle
We have a Centre for Literary and Linguistic Computing at Newcastle, which I now direct. It was started by John Burrows, now Emeritus Prof, in 1989. We started with strictly literary topics, and that is still the heart of things, but language is such wonderfully rich data, in regular use, as well as in plays, poems and novels, that new stylistic problems constantly present themselves. What can the language we write tell us about our cognitive functioning, or about the life stages we might share with a wider population? How does language change over time, within an art form like drama, and outside the theatre? What's the interaction between personal styles and house styles for journalists?

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Hugh Davies

Research Associate, Charles Darwin University
My research focuses on the processes that are causing the widespread decline of native mammals across the tropical savannas of northern Australia, and novel approaches to land management that may be able to slow, and even reverse, their decline.

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Hugh Hunt

Dr Hugh Hunt is a Reader in Cambridge University's Engineering Department and recipient of the Royal Academy of Engineering Rooke Award for the public promotion of engineering.

His research interests include railway noise and vibration, gyroscopes and boomerangs, wave power, vibration of bell towers, and renewable energy.

He is Keeper of the Clock at Trinity College Cambridge.

His television documentaries on Channel 4 (UK), PBS Nova (USA), Discovery, History Channel, SBS (Australia) include:
2011 Dambusters, building the Bouncing bomb (Bombing Hitler's Dams)
2012 Escape from Colditz (Escape from Nazi Alcatraz)
2012 Digging the Great Escape
2013 Zeppelin Terror Attack
2014 D-day 360
2015 Building Hitler's Supergun: The Plot to Destroy London.

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Hugh Lippincott

Associate Professor of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara
Hugh Lippincott has been a professor at the University of California Santa Barbara since 2019. His research focuses on the direct detection of dark matter, having worked on a variety of experiments and techniques at SNOLAB and elsewhere. Lippincott received his PhD from Yale University for work on liquid argon and neon detectors, including with the MiniCLEAN and DEAP collaborations. He was a Lederman Postdoctoral Fellow at Fermilab working on the COUPP bubble chamber experiments, before becoming a Wilson Fellow at Fermilab as a member of the PICO collaboration. Lippincott joined the LUX-ZEPLIN (LZ) experiment in 2014, for which he has served in many capacities, including as Spokesperson from 2021-2023.

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Hugh Martin

Hugh Martin is the coordinator of the Masters of Journalism Innovation program at La Trobe University.

Hugh has worked in a variety of digital editorial and publishing roles with Australia’s biggest news publishers. He was Editor of theage.com.au, Editor of News.com.au at News Corp and General Manager of APN Online, a division of APN News & Media.

He received a Walkley Award in 2004, and is a winner of two Melbourne Press Club Awards.

In 2014 he was a recipient of the Google/Walkley Foundation Grant for Innovation in Journalism.

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Hugh McLeod

I am a historian specialising in the religious history of the 19th and 20th century. I recently retired from my Birmingham chair, but I am still very active in research and postgraduate supervision.
As a Fellow of the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Studies at Uppsala, I was part of a group researching long-term patterns of religious change in the modern west – in particular, the differences and similarities between the religious trajectories of the US and Western Europe since the 1790s.
My latest book, Religion and the Rise of Sport in England (Oxford University Press, 2022), looks at the relationship between religion and sport as it went through phases of repulsion in the first half of the 19th century, growing attraction in the middle decades of the century, intimacy in the later 19th century, and gradual separation in the 20th century.
My earlier book, The Religious Crisis of the 1960s (OUP, 2007), analyses a time of decisive religious change throughout the western world. In many countries there was a rapid decline in church-going, and at the same time the religious options widened dramatically. The book makes extensive use of oral history in order to show how the changes were experienced by “ordinary people”.

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Hugh Thomas

Hugh is interested in the Neolithic to Bronze Age monumental landscapes of Saudi Arabia, specifically the transition from a ritual to funerary landscape that occurred in the region between c.5000-2800 BCE. This was part of his research in the Aerial Archaeology in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Project (AAKSA), a multifaceted project which he directed from 2020-2023, and included remote sensing, helicopter photography, ground survey, and excavation. The project identified hundreds of thousands of stone-built structures across the Northwest of Saudi Arabia. These include monumental Neolithic ritual structures known as ‘mustatil’, Bronze Age funerary structures, and domestic structures of all periods. This work will continue as the Prehistoric AlUla and Khaybar Excavation Project (PAKEP), recently started at the University of Sydney (2023-2027).

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Hugo Gaillard

Maître de conférences en Sciences de gestion, Le Mans Université
Docteur en Sciences de Gestion
Maître de Conférences en Management
Laboratoire ARGUMans, Le Mans Université

Thématiques de recherche :

- postures de régulation de l'expression religieuse au travail
- carrières durables et nouvelles formes de travail
- partage de la gouvernance et performance(s)

Docteur en Sciences de Gestion
Maître de Conférences en Management
Laboratoire ARGUMans, Le Mans Université

Thématiques de recherche :

- postures de régulation de l'expression religieuse au travail
- carrières durables et nouvelles formes de travail
- partage de la gouvernance et performance(s)

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Hugo Loning

PhD candidate in Behavioural Ecology, Wageningen University
Hugo Loning completed his Bachelor in Biology at the Universiteit Leiden in 2014 with a thesis on anthropogenic noise effects on blackbird song. Becoming more and more interested in animal ecology and bioacoustics, he continued his studies at Wageningen University. Here he conducted research on artificial light colour effects on bat roosting ecology at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW) and conducted a comparative study on acoustic adaptation in neotropical frog species in Panama in collaboration with the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. After obtaining his Master degree in Biology in 2018, he continued as PhD at the Behavioural Ecology Group in Wageningen. Here he studies vocal communication in wild zebra finches. This is done under supervision of Marc Naguib (Wageningen University) and in collaboration with Simon Griffith (Macquarie University, Sydney).

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Hugues François

Ingénieur de recherche tourisme et système d'information, Inrae
Mon doctorat mobilise la théorie des ressources territoriales pour proposer une approche originale de la diversification comme une transition de la valorisation de ressources génériques vers celle des ressources spécifiques. Mes travaux plus récents visaient à donner un cadre pour la généralisation de ces travaux en construisant la BD Stations. Durant les dernières années, cette BDD a notamment permis de développer une chaine de modélisation numérique de l'enneigement des domaines skiables originale, en collaboration avec le CNRM Centre d’étude de la neige.

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Hulya Dagdeviren

Professor of Economic Development, University of Hertfordshire

Hulya Dagdeviren is Professor of Economic Development at the Business School of University of Hertfordshire. Her research has focused on privatisation of public services and poverty and inequality. She published widely on water and electricity sector reforms. Her recent publications are on contractual disputes and renegotiations in privatised public utilities.

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Huma Saeed

Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University
Dr. Saeed received her medical degree at King Edward Medical University, Pakistan. She subsequently pursued her post-graduate medical training in the United States, completing her residency in Internal Medicine at University of Chicago (NorthShore), fellowship in Infectious Diseases at Rush University Medical Center and advanced fellowship in Transplant Infectious Diseases at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester. She is ABIM and Royal College board certified in Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases. Her areas of clinical expertise and research interests include infections in immunocompromised hosts, solid organ and stem cell transplantation and HIV/AIDS. Her research work focuses on evaluating solid organ transplantation outcomes in Patients Living With HIV (PLWH) as well as HIV/Hepatitis B and HIV/Hepatitis C co-infected transplant recipients.

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Humeira Iqtidar

Dr Humeira Iqtidar joined King's College London in 2011. She has studied at the University of Cambridge (UK), McGill University (Canada) and Quaid-e-Azam University (Pakistan). Before joining King's, Humeira was based at the University of Cambridge as a fellow of King’s College and the Centre of South Asian Studies.

Humeira is a Lecturer in Politics of South Asia. She is also the Principal Investigator on the Tolerance in Contemporary Muslim Politics: Political Theory beyond the West project and Co-Convenor for the London Comparative Political Theory Workshop.
Research

Humeira’s research is concerned with exploring the contours of social and political theory particularly in the South Asian context. She is interested in the shifting demarcations of state and market, society and economy, secularism and secularization. She has carried out ethnographic research with two Islamist parties in Pakistan, Jamaat-e-Islami and Jamaat-ud-Dawa for her previous research project. Currently her research has two key strands. One explores ideas and practices related to tolerance within the Pakistani context. The other engages with the relationship between liberalization and piety in both UK and Pakistan.
Humeira's research has featured in interviews and articles in The Guardian, BBC World Service, Voice of America, Der Spiegel, Social Science Research Council Online, The Dawn, Express Tribune and Open Democracy.

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Hunter Douglas

PhD Candidate, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
Hunter is a climate science PhD candidate with a background in environmental engineering. He holds master's degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Singapore University of Technology and Design, and a bachelor degree from Duke University. His current research concerns the pathway dependence of climate change emergence to greenhouse gas forcing in global climate models.

Born and raised in Wellington, New Zealand, Hunter has worked for science and engineering consultancies in the US and New Zealand. He is a Manager at PwC New Zealand, working in the Sustainability and Climate Change team on enabling the transition to a low-emissions economy.

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Husein Haveliwala

Student Journalist/Assistant Producer, Don't Call Me Resilient

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Husna Ismail

Epidemiologist, National Institute for Communicable Diseases
Dr. Ismail is a Field Epidemiologist with formal training as a Medical Scientist, Epidemiology and Biostatistics. Dr. Ismail works at the Centre for Healthcare-Associated Infections, Antimicrobial Resistance and Mycoses at the National Institute for Communicable Diseases in Johannesburg, South Africa. Dr. Ismail has accumulated over ten years’ worth of experience in surveillance and outbreak response. Dr Ismail is currently involved in surveillance projects for antimicrobial resistance, one of them being the Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System.

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Hussein Abou Saleh

Docteur associé au Centre d'études et de recherches internationales (CERI), Sciences Po

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Hussein Dia

I am a Civil Engineer with credentials in Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS), transport planning and modelling. I have 30 years of engineering experience and have previously held a number of ITS positions including Director, ITS Research Laboratory at the University of Queensland and Director, ITS Australia.

My interests are in next generation smart infrastructure systems and the convergence of technology, infrastructure and human elements in our urban environments.

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Hussein Gharakhani

Assistant Professor of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, Mississippi State University
Education:
Ph.D., Biosystems Engineering, Mississippi State University.
M.S., Mechanical Engineering of Agricultural Machinery, University of Tehran.
B.S., Agricultural Machinery Engineering, University of Tabriz.

Specialty Areas:
Robotic Manipulators
Robotic End-effectors
Artificial Intelligence
2D and 3D Perception
Sensors and Control Systems

Research Interests:
Agricultural Robotics and Automation
Simulation of Automated Agricultural Systems
Off-road Robots
Precision Agriculture
UGV and UAV Applications in Agriculture

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Huw Lewis

Senior Lecturer in Politics, Aberystwyth University

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Huw Nolan

Animal Welfare scientist and pop culture researcher, University of New England
Huw Nolan is an animal welfare scientist at the University of New England, NSW. Huw’s research investigates the impact human imagination, beliefs and intuitions have on the welfare of animals. Huw is a co-founder of PopCRN, Australia's premier pop culture research network.

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Huw Price

Emeritus Fellow, Trinity College, University of Cambridge
Huw Price is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Bonn and an Emeritus Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. In Cambridge he was previously Bertrand Russell Professor of Philosophy (2011—20), Academic Director of the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (2016—21), and co-founder, with Martin Rees and Jaan Tallinn, of the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk. Before moving to Cambridge in 2011 he was ARC Federation Fellow and Challis Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sydney, where he was founding Director of the Centre for Time.

His publications include 'Facts and the Function of Truth' (Blackwell, 1988), 'Time's Arrow and Archimedes' Point' (OUP, 1996), 'Naturalism Without Mirrors' (OUP, 2011), 'Expressivism, Pragmatism and Representationalism' (CUP, 2013) and a range of articles in journals such as Nature, Mind, The Journal of Philosophy and the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. He is also co-editor (with Richard Corry) of 'Causation, Physics, and the Constitution of Reality: Russell's Republic Revisited' (OUP, 2007).

He is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Fellow and a former Member of Council of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He was consulting editor for the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy from 1995-2006, and is an associate editor of The Australasian Journal of Philosophy and a member of the editorial boards of Contemporary Pragmatism, Logic and Philosophy of Science, the Routledge International Library of Philosophy, and the European Journal for Philosophy of Science.

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Huw D. Jones

Lecturer in Film Studies, University of Southampton
I am a Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Southampton, UK. My teaching and research focuses on contemporary British and European cinema, with a particular focus on the film business and audiences. My latest book, "Transnational European Cinema: Representation, Audiences, Identity," is available now from Palgrave Macmillan.

- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/huw-d-jones-film/
- Staff profile: https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5xlmrz/doctor-huw-jones
- Book: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-44595-8

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Huw Thomas Peacock

Research assistant , University of Tasmania
Research assistant / Digital media engagement officer / MRes student

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Hyeran Jo

Associate Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University
Hyeran Jo is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science at Texas A&M University in U.S.A. She studies international institutions, international law, and civil conflicts. Her book, Compliant Rebels: Rebel Groups and International Law in World Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2015), won the Chadwick Alger Prize in 2016, the best book in the field of international organization, awarded by the International Studies Association. Her work can also be found in journals such as International Organization, Journal of Conflict Resolution, British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Peace Research, and Law and Contemporary Problems. Her research has been supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation, Buffett Foundation, and Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung.

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Hylke Beck

Assistant Professor, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
Professor Beck's interests lie in leveraging the latest developments in machine learning, remote sensing, and modeling to recognize, understand, and manage climate hazards such as floods, droughts, and heat waves.

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Hyunseon Lee

Research Associate at Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, and Centre for Creative Industries, Media and Screen Studies, SOAS, University of London
Hyunseon Lee, Ph.D. habil., is a London based film and media scholar. She is a Privat-Dozent in Media Studies and Modern German Literature at the Department of German, University of Siegen, and a Research Associate at Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, and Centre for Creative Industries, Media and Screen Studies, SOAS, University of London. She is also a Professional Researcher at the Institute of Humanities, Yonsei University in Seoul.
She has lectured and published widely in the fields of German and comparative literature, film, and media studies, and held various scholarships and fellowships at Yonsei University and Seoul National University, Columbia University in New York City, and Chuo University in Tokyo, and at the Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies/ School of Advanced Study, University of London.
She is author of the books Metamorphosen der Madame Butterfly. Interkulturelle Liebschaften zwischen Literatur, Oper und Film (Heidelberg: University Press Winter, 2020), Geständniszwang und ‘Wahrheit des Charakters’ in der Literatur der DDR. Diskursanalytische Fallstudien (Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2000), Günter de Bruyn – Christoph Hein – Heiner Müller. 3 Interviews (Siegen, MuK 95/96) as well as numerous articles on film, popular culture, gender, German literature and media aesthetics from a transcultural intermedial perspective.
She is co-editor of Mörderinnen (2013), Akira Kurosawa und Seine Zeit (2005), and Opera, Exoticism and Visual Culture (2015), and solo editor of two books Korean Film and Festivals: Global Transcultural flows (2022) and Korean Film and History (2023), both published by Routledge.

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I. Sadaf Farooqi

Wellcome Principal Research Fellow and Professor of Metabolism and Medicine, University of Cambridge
My team studies the molecular and physiological pathways involved in the regulation of human appetite and body weight and their disruption in obesity. Some of the molecular pathways involved in regulating weight also regulate blood pressure and lipid metabolism, and affect an individual's risk of cardiovascular diseases.

One of the links between obesity and cardiovascular disease is leptin. We have identified mutations in leptin gene using candidate gene approach in patients with severe, early onset obesity, and have demonstrated that leptin contributes to hypertension in obese individuals. These results suggest that pharmacological approaches that modulate leptin’s effects on cells could represent a useful therapeutic strategy for the treatment of obesity-associated hypertension and might help prevent a subset of obesity-associated cardiovascular disease.

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Iain Black

Associate Professor in Marketing, Heriot-Watt University

I joined Heriot Watt as a Reader from the University of Edinburgh and before that held the post of senior lecturer at University of Sydney. My main interests revolve around sustainability. I am the Sustainable Consumption theme leader for the International Sustainable Development Research Society and my research focusses on anti-consumption, consumer’s responses to scarcity and how consumers dispose of goods. This has led to policy work exploring ways to rebalance dysfunctional relationships with materialistic consumption. http://allofusfirst.org/library/from-i-to-we-changing-the-narrative-in-scotlands-relationship-with-consumption/
Starting with an interest in how the Scottish Green party were influencing the Scottish Independence referendum, I have spent the last 4 years studying volunteer participation in this event and the marketing practices deployed, including the use of Hope vs Fear appeals. As part of this, I conducted what is the most comprehensive survey of the Yes volunteers to date, the findings of which, published by CommonWeal “available via http://allofusfirst.org/library/the-yes-volunteers-capturing-the-biggest-grassroots-campaign-in-scotlands-history
This work has been widely reported in new media outlets such as Bella Caledonia, Common Space and Independence live and the Scottish Independence podcast. It is also making its way through academic journal review processes.

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Iain Macdonald

My research interests are centred on how heritage (traditional handcrafts) and digital practices fuse to form hybrid methods in moving image design. Practice-led research into my own moving image work formed the core of my doctorate research. My work in education has also informed my pedagogic research into internationalisation, the moving image and lens-based media, forming an argument for future directions in art and design practice.

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Iain Perkes

Senior Lecturer, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, UNSW Sydney
I am a Senior Lecturer at the UNSW, Sydney. I work as a child and adolescent psychiatrist in Sydney Children's Hospital Network where I lead the Kids Mental Health Research group and the clinical service for obsessive-compulsive disorder. I am an Associate Editor for the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. I am an Honorary Scientist with Neuroscience Research Australia and a Research Fellow at the Black Dog Institute. I contribute as a Governing Board member to NSW Health Higher Education Branch. I co-founded a national research collective - OCD BOUNCE - ocd.org.au

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