Short description:
Dr. Mathieu JP Poirier is York Research Chair in Global Health Equity (tier II), Assistant Professor of Social Epidemiology in York University’s School of Global Health, member of the WHO Collaborating Centre on the Global Governance of Antimicrobial Resistance, and Co-Director of the Global Strategy Lab.
Short description:
My research explores the interaction between global and domestic dynamics that affects the provision of quality education for all. Recently, I focus on understanding how social, political, economic, health, and environmental crises shape education policy initiatives, coordination, and negotiations among education policy actors, including international, national, subnational, and school actors. I use an interdisciplinary approach based on political science and sociology along with mixed methods.
Short description:
Director of the Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) of the Global Environment Facility (GEF). I've worked full-time on evaluation since 1999 with GEF and UNDP (where aI served as Evaluation Advisor and Deputy Director of IEO). In these functions I've managed and conducted numerous evaluations, focusing especially on environment-poverty interlinkages, which is my major interest. I spent the 1990s at UNU as Academic / Sr. Academic Programme Officer for environment and sustainable development. I've written extensively on issues related to environment, sustainable development, environmental hazards and evaluation. I've had visiting positions at Kyoto University, Rutgers University and the University of Montana. A native of Finland, I was educated at the University of Helsinki and Lund University, and I hold a PhD in Social and Economic Geography.
Short description:
I am currently associate professor of economics in the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, with a cross-appointment in the Department of Economics at the University of Toronto. My research in development and labor economics examines the role of incentives and social preferences on the decisions and performance of students, workers, and consumers. I have examined the effect of incentive pay on worker productivity; school feeding programs on student outcomes; defaults on charitable donations; and immigration on employment. In collaboration with theorists, I have also worked on the identification of peer effects in social interactions models. These papers have been published in the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economics and Statistics and the Journal of Development Economics. In addition to my research and teaching, I am interested in policy issues pertaining to the Indian economy, gender gaps, economic development, and charitable donations.
Short description:
A Surgeon with unique experience in Healthcare Digitalization, An natural communicator with trained interpersonal, team building, negotiation, presentations, convincing and analytical skills.Domain Leader (Partner) in the Healthcare Industry. (15 years)
Spectrum – Strategy (corporate/ portfolio, customer, distribution, private equity, organization, procurement), private equity/ corporate due diligence, performance improvement, business innovation, and startups evaluation. Advisory to multiple investors in the healthcare industry for them to gain market advantage by value creation.
+ My goal is to demonstrate how a large-scale data-driven approach will lead to smarter decision-making, more proactive care, and improved health outcomes and lower costs for patients and populations.
+ My focus is on healthcare data interoperability, involving traditional data sets (EHR, claims) along with newer ones (biosensors, patient-reported outcomes, social determinants of care “-omics”), and the maturation of a healthcare cloud-based platform that is secure, scalable, & intelligent.
+ My efforts is to connect the quantitative analytic dots to clinical endpoints hence creating values for all the stakeholders. I wish to bridge the inputs from IoT, wearables, data inputs (EHR) to the outputs in clinical decision support, TDABC, supply chain and quality efficiency with cost reduction thus bringing transparency and empowerment to the last mile.
Short description:
Asad Islam is currently the Director of the Centre for Development Economics and Substantiality (CDES), Professor at the Department of Economics at Monash University. He has extensive experience working in the field to implement academic and policy-relevant research including the economics of education and health, food security, energy, disaster and environment, technology adoption, gender, microfinance, social networks, and corruption. His research work spans several developing countries including Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, China, Cambodia, Uganda, and Tanzania. He has been a visiting fellow at universities such as Oxford, Cornell, and Chicago. He has previously worked at Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS) and University of Dhaka.
Asad has been published extensively in leading economics and public policy journals, and his work is supported by international grants, such as Australian Research council (ARC), UK Research Council (ESRC), DFID, AusAID (DFAT), International Growth Centre (IGC), European Commission, and World Bank.