Menu

Search

Ismaila Aderolu

Lecturer , Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta

  More

Less

Ismar Volić

Professor of Mathematics, Director of Institute for Mathematics and Democracy, Wellesley College
Ismar Volić is a professor of mathematics at Wellesley College. His research area is algebraic topology. He has written over 30 scientific articles and three books, and has delivered some 300 lectures in over 20 countries. He also interested in the the ways mathematics and politics intersect. He teaches classes in this area and has co-founded the Institute for Mathematics and Democracy.

  More

Less

Isobel Cook

PhD candidate in English, University of Sheffield
Current University of Sheffield PhD candidate in the school of English, supervised by Professor Adam Piette. Researching British antinuclear poetry since 1960.

MA Literature, Culture, Media from the University of Lund, Sweden (2019). BA in English, University of York (2017).

  More

Less

Isobel Elstob

Assistant Professor in Art History, University of Nottingham
I specialise in modern and contemporary art history and theory in Britain and America. I am particularly interested in how the historical past has been visualized by artists working in the 1980s and beyond. My research also often applies analytic models derived from historiography, narratology, and literary theory to its study of the visual arts.

Research interests:

Neo-Victorian studies, with a particular interest in the visual arts

Connections between literary and art theory

Histories of how art and science interact

Contemporary art and memory studies

Modern and contemporary Black art histories

Histories of display

  More

Less

Issam Mudawar

Betty Ruth and Milton B. Hollander Family Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University
Dr. Mudawar's research interests lie in boiling, condensation, two-phase flow, high heat flux, thermal management systems, cryogenic systems, space vehicles, Lunar and Martian environments, microgravity, experiments on International Space Station and electronic cooling

  More

Less

Istvan David

Assistant Professor, Computer Science, McMaster University
Istvan David is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at McMaster University, Canada, where he leads the Sustainable Systems and Methods Lab. His research focuses on sustainable systems engineering, Digital Twins, and automation of model- and simulator inference. Istvan is a seasoned industry professional, having filled multiple management and technical roles in the past decade.

  More

Less

Itai Bavli

Postdoctoral research fellow, Applied Ethics, University of British Columbia
I am currently a BU/UBC Postdoctoral Fellow jointly appointed by the School of Public Health, Boston University (BU) and the Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics, at the University of British Columbia (UBC)

  More

Less

Ivan Gan

Assistant Professor of Communication Studies, University of Houston-Downtown
I earned my Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. Prior to receiving an MA in Organizational Communication, I earned a J.D. from the University of New South Wales and a Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from the Australian National University. My research areas: Conflict Management in Nursing Teams; Nurses’ Careers and Work Arrangements; Nurse Management and Leadership Communication; and Basic Research on Negotiations.

  More

Less

Ivan Haigh

Professor in sea level and flooding, University of Southampton
For the past 20 years I have worked on a wide range of coastal projects in industry and academia, focusing on: (1) assessing changes in mean and extreme sea levels, and associated coastal flooding and erosion; and (2) translating global projections of sea level changes down to local scales to inform risk-based management and policy. I am interested in sea level variations from time scales of minutes, through to long term changes, and have considerable experience in analysing observational data and applying hydrodynamic models.

  More

Less

Ivan Smirnov

Research Fellow, University of Technology Sydney
As a computational social scientist, I use big data, machine learning, and AI to understand human behavior and complex social phenomena. My primary focus is on inequality and biases in socio-technical systems.

  More

Less

Iván Villaverde Canosa

PhD Candidate in Geography, University of Leeds
I am a second-year PhD candidate at the University of Leeds. My research focuses on how people at the community level perceive, experience, and respond to wildfires in high-latitude contexts, including the Arctic and surrounding boreal regions. I am interested in understanding why people throughout the high North are more or less vulnerable to the effects of wildfires and how we can increase their resilience. I have been involved in various projects at under- and postgraduate levels focusing on assessing climate impacts and vulnerability in spatially explicit and context-specific ways and tracking climate change adaptation at global and regional levels. I am also active in publishing my scholarly contributions in the peer-reviewed literature.

Research interests
– Wildfire risk and adaptation
– Community vulnerability and resilience
– Climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction
– Compound impacts

  More

Less

Ivano Bongiovanni

Ivano is a PhD Candidate for the School of Management at the Queensland University of Technology and a Sessional Academic in Contemporary Strategic Management at the same institution. He also holds affiliation as a Faculty Member at the SDA Bocconi School of Management of "L. Bocconi" University in Milan.

His thesis adopts a complex systems approach and examines the organisational vulnerability to Safety and Security Disruptions in Australian airports.

With a background in International Relations and Security Management built up in Europe, Ivano has extensive professional and academic experience in the fields of Risk and Crisis Management, Management Consulting and Management of International Organisations.

  More

Less

Ivo Labbe

ARC Future Fellow / Associate Professor, Swinburne University of Technology
Current:
ARC Future Fellow / Associate professor Swinburne University of Technology
Highly cited researcher 2017-2022

Former:
Assistant Professor Leiden University
NASA Hubble Fellow
Carnegie Fellow

  More

Less

Ivor Stuart

Ivor Stuart is a freshwater fisheries researcher with the Gulbali Institute, Charles Sturt University. His areas of interest include fish migration, fishways and invasive species control. Ivor has worked in many rivers in eastern Australia and south-east Asia.

  More

Less

Iwan Williams

Senior Lecturer in Media, Swansea University
Iwan Williams is a Senior Lecturer at Swansea University, whose teaching and research interests include Sports Communications and Public Relations. Prior to his academic career, Iwan worked as a communications consultant in the UK, New Zealand and Australia. Siaradwr Cymraeg.

  More

Less

Izzy Moore

Reader in Human Movement and Sports Medicine, Cardiff Metropolitan University
My research has focused on understanding how and why we move the way we do, from both a performance and injury perspective. I obtained my PhD on efficient running from the University of Exeter and have since led several injury epidemiology projects working directly with sporting governing bodies to inform injury prevention and management policies. My interests lie in female athlete health, brain health and running, having received national and international research awards within the field. I specialise in postpartum return to sport and concussion.

  More

Less

J. Aaron Hardwick

Orchestra Director and Assistant Professor of Music, Wake Forest University
James “Aaron” Hardwick has established a reputation as an outstanding conductor, educator, and collaborator — setting himself apart with his engaging, charismatic and musically precise approach on and off the podium. Highly versatile and musically insightful, his artistic collaborations span multiple genres including standard classical repertoire, musical theater, opera, video game music, popular music, and new works.

As a Professional Conductor & Musician

Hardwick has worked with the Winston-Salem Symphony, Ruebush Brass Ensemble, Brevard Philharmonic, Rochester Philharmonic, Williamsburg Symphony, Aiken Symphony Orchestra, CICA (Collaborations in Contemporary Art) Ensemble, Shenandoah Conservatory Symphony, University of South Carolina Symphony Orchestra, East Carolina University Symphony Orchestra, Bay Youth Orchestras of Virginia, among others. He was a finalist for the 2021 Erno Lányi International Conducting Competition and participated in the 2020 European Union International Conducting Competition. He is an Eastman School of Music Summer Conducting Fellow with the Rochester Philharmonic, and a two-time Conductor’s Institute of South Carolina Conducting Fellow. As a professional violist, he has performed with the New York City Ballet Company, Shenandoah Summer Music Theater, Shenandoah Conservatory Symphony, University of South Carolina (UofSC) Opera, UofSC Symphony Orchestra, Brevard Philharmonic and Aiken Symphony Orchestras.

Concerning Video Games & Music

In 2020, Hardwick developed the first Video Game Music course offered at Shenandoah University bridging the gap between the Shenandoah Conservatory and Shenandoah University School of Business. Within a year, he led the first-ever research collaboration between music performance and esports entitled “We Play Together: A Collaboration between Music & Esports.” The project won the Shenandoah University Research Expo (SURE) Award and went on to be featured with the Esports Research Network (ERN) in Sweden. Most recently, he created, “Full Lobby, LLC” a company designed to build creative concert series for symphony orchestras that includes live performance of video game music, and new works. Hardwick is a casual and competitive gamer, former Apex Legends coach, and current advisor for the Wake Forest University Esports Association and Dash City Gaming in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

As an Educator

Passionate about collaboration and music education, Hardwick spearheaded the interdisciplinary concert series, “Paving the Way” with the Wake Forest Symphony Orchestra in 2022. The series seeks to change how symphonic music concerts are curated by collaborating with other scholars, building a narrative around the music that is performed, and elevating underrepresented composers and artists. He was named one of Hampton Roads’ “Most Outstanding Music Educators” two years in a row by the Virginia Symphony, was nominated by the Grammy Foundation® and the Recording Academy® as a quarterfinalist for the Music Educator Award in 2014, and received the Distinguished Music Educator’s Award from Yale University in 2011. He continues to work with youth ensembles, educators, and community members as a conductor and clinician.

As a Scholar

Published in 2021, his research entitled “Performing Game Sound: The American Symphony Orchestra and Video Game Music” explores live Video Game Music performance by symphonies and how Video Game Music can help orchestras diversify programming, build audiences and audience engagement, and aid in financial sustainability. His article “A Walkthrough: Connecting Gaming and Your Performance Ensembles” was featured in the North Carolina Music Educators Journal (Summer 2022) and explores how music teachers can engage with their students through video game music. He continues to teach and develop the Video Game Music class, (now taught at Wake Forest University) which has been host to a number of leading video game composers. His research and future publications grow as he continues to develop this course.

Concerning Credentials

Hardwick received his Doctor of Musical Arts in Performance (Conducting) at Shenandoah Conservatory. He earned a Master’s Degree in Orchestral Conducting from the University of South Carolina and a Bachelor’s Degree in Music from East Carolina University. He also holds a Graduate Certificate in Esports Management from Shenandoah University. He is a professional conductor and recently appointed Orchestra Director and an Assistant Professor of Music at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, NC.

J. Aaron Hardwick is represented by AK Artist Management.
For inquiries please contact [email protected]

  More

Less

J. Maya Hernandez

Ph.D. Candidate in Social Ecology, University of California, Irvine
Maya Hernandez is a interdisciplinary doctoral candidate at UC Irvine with a research focus on understanding the risks and affordances of social technologies on adolescent development and mental health and an emphasis on historically marginalized populations. Her experiences span across developmental science, clinical psychology, public health, and informatics. She leverages quantitative, qualitative, and youth participatory action research approaches with multimodal data collection and analytic strategies.

  More

Less

J. Nicholas Reid

Professor Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Reformed Theological Seminary
J. Nicholas Reid (DPhil Oxon) is the author of Prisons in Ancient Mesopotamia: Confinement and Control until the First Fall of Babylon (Oxford University Press). He is Professor of Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern Studies and Director of the Hybrid MDiv Program at Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando. Nicholas is also a Research Affiliate at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University. His research involves publishing cuneiform texts in various collections around the world, as well as writing on topics of social history, such as slavery, prisons, and labor in ancient Mesopotamia. He has authored numerous articles in leading journals, including Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, International Review of Social History, Revue d’Assyrologie, and Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete. Nicholas also coauthored a monograph on Old Babylonian Letters from Ancient Kish, which will be published later this year in the historic series Oxford Edition of Cuneiform Texts (Oxford University Press).

  More

Less

J. Toby Reiner

Associate Professor of Political Science, Dickinson College
I teach and research contemporary political theory at Dickinson College. In 2020, I published a book on Michael Walzer - Foundation Professor of Social Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and Dissent editor emeritus - with Polity Press, as part of its Key Contemporary Thinkers series. I had earlier written my PhD thesis as an historical study of Walzer's thought. I received my PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2011. I am currently writing a book on the concept of community. In 2023, I organized a conference on Walzer's book Spheres of Justice to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of its publication. I have an M. Phil in International Relations from University of Cambridge (2001). My major interests are in theories of justice and political ideologies. Some of my teaching and research is at the intersection of the two subfields; for example, I have published on just-war theory, global justice, and migration ethics. My planned next book connects the latter two themes. My teaching interests also include the history of political thought, comparative political theory, and ethics.

  More

Less

J. W. Traphagan

Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
J. W. Traphagan is an anthropologist and professor emeritus of Religious Studies and in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations at the University of Texas at Austin and a visiting professor at Waseda University in Tokyo. He’s published nine books and numerous articles in scientific journals. His two most recent books are the ethnographic mystery novel The Blood of Gutoku and his anthropological memoir Embracing Uncertainty: Future Jazz, That 13th Century Buddhist Monk, and the Invention of Cultures.

  More

Less

Jaana Halonen

Research Fellow in Public Health, Stockholm University
Jaana I. Halonen has PhD in epidemiology and she is docent in environmental epidemiology.
Currently she is RDI programme director at Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) coordinating the programme called Safe and healthy living environments, and senior researcher at University of Stockholm. She has earlier work experience as an environmental and occupational epidemiologist from Harvard School of Public Health (outdoor temperature and cardiovascular health), Finnish Institute of Occupational Health (on various topics, incl. home neighbourhood characteristics and health and work stress) and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (traffic-related air pollution and noise and cardio-respiratory health).

  More

Less

Jacinta Brinsley

Jacinta is an exercise physiologist and postdoctoral research fellow. Her research focuses on exercise and mental health.

  More

Less

Jacinta Mwende Maweu

Senior lecturer in Philosophy and Media Studies, University of Nairobi
Dr Jacinta Mwende Maweu is a senior lecturer in philosophy and media studies. Her research interests include social and political philosophy, media and democracy, media and conflicts, political economy of the media and climate change communication.

  More

Less

Jacinta L Johnson

Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, University of South Australia
Dr. Jacinta Johnson is a credentialled Advanced Practice pharmacist with over 10 years of experience in hospital pharmacy. She currently practices across two settings as Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice at the University of South Australia, and as Senior Pharmacist, supporting development of research capacity and culture within the SA Pharmacy, the statewide public hospital pharmacy service. In addition, Jacinta is also a National Board Director of the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia (SHPA), and Chairs the SHPA Residency Advisory Group, the body responsible for guiding development and implementation Foundation and Advanced Training Residencies throughout Australia.

Dr Johnson holds a PhD in Pharmacology from the University Adelaide and has a strong track record of conducting applied research to meet needs identified by the health sector. Her research broadly explores topics related to medicines safety and the role of the pharmacist in this field. Additionally, she has a passion for practitioner development and collaborative health care. Her clinical expertise relates to drugs and the brain, with a focus on the fields of pain management, headache and migraine, Parkinson’s disease and addiction medicine.

Dr Johnsons influence and expertise have been recognised through several awards within the pharmacy profession. In 2018, she was named the Australian Early Career Pharmacist of the Year by the peak body for pharmacists, the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA), and in 2019 she was named the National Emerging Leader of the Year by the Society of Hospital Pharmacists Australia (SHPA). These followed two state awards, the SA/NT PSA Early Career Pharmacist of the Year and the SHPA ‘PL Jeffs’ Early Career Pharmacist award. In 2022, Dr Johnson and her team received the SHPA SA/NT Team Innovation Award for their work supporting hospital pharmacy research capability, and the SA Pharmacy Award for Excellence in Research and Building Collaborative Partnerships.

  More

Less

Jacinta L. Johnson

Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, University of South Australia
Dr. Jacinta Johnson is a credentialled Advanced Practice pharmacist with over 10 years of experience in hospital pharmacy. She currently practices across two settings as Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice at the University of South Australia, and as Senior Pharmacist, supporting development of research capacity and culture within the SA Pharmacy, the statewide public hospital pharmacy service. In addition, Jacinta is also a National Board Director of the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia (SHPA), and Chairs the SHPA Residency Advisory Group, the body responsible for guiding development and implementation Foundation and Advanced Training Residencies throughout Australia.

Dr Johnson holds a PhD in Pharmacology from the University Adelaide and has a strong track record of conducting applied research to meet needs identified by the health sector. Her research broadly explores topics related to medicines safety and the role of the pharmacist in this field. Additionally, she has a passion for practitioner development and collaborative health care. Her clinical expertise relates to drugs and the brain, with a focus on the fields of pain management, headache and migraine, Parkinson’s disease and addiction medicine.

Dr Johnsons influence and expertise have been recognised through several awards within the pharmacy profession. In 2018, she was named the Australian Early Career Pharmacist of the Year by the peak body for pharmacists, the Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA), and in 2019 she was named the National Emerging Leader of the Year by the Society of Hospital Pharmacists Australia (SHPA). These followed two state awards, the SA/NT PSA Early Career Pharmacist of the Year and the SHPA ‘PL Jeffs’ Early Career Pharmacist award. In 2022, Dr Johnson and her team received the SHPA SA/NT Team Innovation Award for their work supporting hospital pharmacy research capability, and the SA Pharmacy Award for Excellence in Research and Building Collaborative Partnerships.

  More

Less

Jack Cooper

Doctoral researcher in Palaeobiology, Swansea University
I am a doctoral researcher at Swansea University studying the functional diversity of sharks through time. This involves examining ecological changes of sharks across the last 66 million years using fossil teeth.

I receive sponsorship from the Fisheries Society of the British Isles and am a member of the Pimiento Research Group, which aims to assess extinction mechanisms of marine megafauna such as sharks through time. The ultimate goal of the team is to use this information to inform ongoing conservation efforts.

Additionally, I engage in outreach of shark palaeobiology through a variety of ways. My outreach, as well as previous work I have published, primarily focuses on the iconic megalodon sharks, its biology and ecology, and what the extinction of this apex predator could tell us about the effects of future shark losses.

  More

Less

Jack Creeggan

Master's Student in Geography, Planning, and Environment, Concordia University
Dual minored in zoology and philosophy during my Bachelor's. Currently working on a Master's in primatology/ecology.

  More

Less

Jack Hoggarth

Chair, Anishinaabeg Knowledge and Assistant Professor at Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies, Trent University
Jack Hoggarth is a ceremonial leader, a member of the Midewiwin, and an academic. He currently holds the position of Chair of Anishinaabeg Knowledge and Assistant Professor within the Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies at Trent University.

Jack's communities are Curve Lake First Nation, Kawartha Nishnawbe First Nation, Teetlit Zheh (Fort McPherson, NT), and Old Crow First Nation (YT). He is of Anishinaabeg and Gwich'in (Dinjii Zhuh) descent, in which he holds his membership with the Tetlit Gwich'in Band in Fort McPherson, Northwest Territories. Jack is currently the spokesperson of the Marten Clan for Kawartha Nishnawbe First Nation.

  More

Less

Jack Hughes

PhD Candidate in Behavioural Science, Durham University
Jack completed his masters in 2020 as a member of the inaugural behavioural science MSc at Durham University with a dissertation focusing on meat consumption habits and producing interventions that can bring the UKs meat consumption in line with the goals outlined by the Committee on Climate Change and IPCC.

Jacks is currently pursuing a PhD at Durham University extending their research on meat consumption by researching and developing food labels that can effectively reduce peoples likelihood to select a meat meal when making food choices.

Their research interests broadly span many areas of the environment, he leads projects on meat consumption, environmental activism, diversity in environmental movements, and public perceptions of rewilding and greenspace management. In addition to this Jack has done research on conspiracy theories, risk perceptions and behaviours during the COVID-19 pandemic.

  More

Less

Jack Lindsay

Associate Professor and Chair of Applied Disaster and Emergency Studies Department, Brandon University
Jack Lindsay is an Associate Professor in the Applied Disaster and Emergency Studies (ADES) department at Brandon University where he combines 30 years of research and applied experience in emergency management. Jack worked in New Zealand for six years, first as a hazard analyst in Wellington and then managing the Auckland City Council emergency management program. He returned to Canada, joining Manitoba Health as a disaster management specialist from 1999 to 2005. He began teaching part time at Brandon University in 2001, joined the ADES department full time in 2005 and received tenure in 2009. He received the degree of Master of City Planning from the University of Manitoba in 1993 with a research focus on urban planning and emergency management. Jack contributes to the disaster management profession through research publications and at numerous conferences as both an organizer and speaker. He has served as a member of the Canadian Standards Association Technical Committee on Emergency and Continuity Management and the American Red Cross Scientific Advisory Council. At BU he has served two terms on Senate and as ADES department chair from 2005 to 2010 and since July 2015. He is also a member and current chair of the Brandon Planning Commission.

  More

Less

Jack Newsinger

Associate Professor in Cultural Industries and Media, University of Nottingham
I have a BA in English Literature from the University of Sussex, and an MA and PhD from the University of Nottingham. Before joining the Department in 2017 I taught at the Department of Media, Communication and Sociology at the University of Leicester.

My research and teaching interests are in the cultural and creative industries with a focus on policy and cultural labour. I'm interested in how the development of the creative industries as a policy formation and sector of the economy impacts and shapes cultural practice and the working lives of creative practitioners, particularly around questions of inequality and diversity. My work is collaborative and interdisciplinary, drawing upon social science and humanities research traditions, and I have worked extensively with local and national organisations in the cultural sector.

  More

Less

Jack Pollard

Researcher in Health Economics, University of Oxford
Jack is a researcher at the Health Economics Research Centre (HERC). Jack’s current research involves a programme of work aimed at modelling the mental health outcomes and economic impact of elevated child anxiety, as part of a wider multidisciplinary NIHR-funded 5-year research programme – identifying Child Anxiety Through Schools (iCATS).

Prior to his current position, Jack worked as a health economist and analyst at RAND Europe on a variety of projects. His research included investigating the impact of poor indoor climate on child health and examining the associated economic burden, as well as investigating the economic burden of physical inactivity. He also worked on the outcome and economic evaluation of the national Liaison and Diversion scheme, and the economic modelling of the future cancer workforce in England.

Jack was awarded a studentship from the NIHR to study for an MSc in Economics and Health Economics at the University of Sheffield, where he graduated with distinction. His master’s dissertation examined the association between well-being and the existence of a partner who is problem drinker. He also holds an undergraduate degree in Economics from the University of Sheffield.

  More

Less

Jack Smylie

Research Analyst, Hate & Extremism Insights Aotearoa, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

  More

Less

Jack Stilgoe

Professor of Science and Technology Policy, UCL
Jack Stilgoe is a professor of science and technology policy at University College London. He is the author of 'Who's Driving Innovation?' (Palgrave).

He led the Driverless Futures project from 2018-2022, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council. This project was looking to anticipate the politics of self-driving cars.

He worked with EPSRC and ESRC to develop a framework for responsible innovation, which is now being used by the Research Councils.

Jack is also a fellow of the Alan Turing Institute.

He previously worked in science and technology policy at the Royal Society and the think tank Demos.

  More

Less

  101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110   
  • Market Data
Close

Welcome to EconoTimes

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