Expert and fellow directory

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Sanjay Ruparelia's picture
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I hold the inaugural Jarislowsky Democracy Chair at Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada. My research examines the politics of democracy, inequality and development in India vis-a-vis its comparators in the global South.
Lisa Schwartz's picture
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Arnold L Johnson Chair in Health Care Ethics, professor, ethics scholar, co-lead of Humanitarian Health Ethics
Jodie Adams Kirshner's picture
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Research professor at New York University focused on issues of economic mobility. Formerly bankruptcy law professor at University of Cambridge. Author of books including Broke: Hardship and Resilience in a City of Broken Promises.
Laura Valadez-Martinez's picture
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Lecturer in Social Policy, Loughborough University. Areas of experience: living standards, child wellbeing, poverty and inequality. PhD in Social Policy (Oxford).
Isabelle Engeli's picture
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I am Professor of Public Policy at the University of Exeter. My current research focuses on gendering policy attention and action and making gender equality implementation inclusive. I convene, together with Amy Mazur, the International Research Network on Gender Equality Policy in Practice, which investigates the politics of implementing gender equality across policy sectors in Europe and North America. I am Editor-in-Chief of the ECPR flagship journal European Journal of Political Research and Founding Editor of the European Journal of Politics and Gender. Last but not least, I believe in service. I served as Convener of the European Conference of Politics and Gender from 2011 to 2019, as Convener of the ECPR Standing Group in Gender and Politics from 2011 to 2019 and Founding Chair of the Council for European Studies Research Network in Gender and Sexuality Studies. I currently serve as Vice-President of the International Public Policy Association and on the Advisory Board of the European Politics and Society Section of APSA.
Issa Alshabibi's picture
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PhD holder on entrepreneurship education policy from Cardiff University in the UK. I work as a researcher in the research Council in Oman
W. Andrew Rothenberg's picture
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W. Andrew "Drew" Rothenberg is a child clinical psychologist and Research Scientist at the Duke University Center for Child and Family Policy. His research is focused on the development of adaptive and maladaptive parenting practices and family processes across ontogeny, culture and generations. Utilizing a developmental psychopathology framework, he examines how parenting practices, family dynamics, and evidence-based mental health interventions affect normal and abnormal child development. His program of research has three aims. First, he explores how maladaptive family processes can be passed from one generation to the next. Second, he identifies strategies to prevent the intergenerational transmission of these processes in different culture contexts. Third, he implements these preventative interventions in medically underserved communities that need them the most.
Timo Henckel's picture
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Timo Henckel is a Senior Lecturer of Economics and a Research Fellow in the Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis. He is also Chair of the Reserve Bank of Australia Shadow Board, a group that aims to foster a lively and informed debate about Australian monetary policy and about macroeconomics more generally. Timo’s research spans the fields of behavioural economics, monetary economics, international macroeconomics, experimental economics, inequality, complexity and heterogeneity. He has theoretically, empirically and experimentally studied the determinants of bounded rationality and the effects of such behaviour on inflation and macroeconomic policy. His work has appeared in leading journals including Economics Letters, Oxford Economic Papers and Journal of Macroeconomics. He has also provided media commentary and written numerous policy briefs for various stakeholders including on: infrastructure policy for the Brookings Institution in Washington D.C.; financial crises for the Sydney Institute; and, asset price bubbles for The Conversation.
Elizabeth Grant's picture
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Professor Elizabeth Grant's expertise is research and design consultancy in the field of Indigenous architecture and placemaking, housing and community infrastructure design, institutional environments ( in particular the design of criminal justice and education environments) and design for people with physical and/or psychosocial disability and reform for Indigenous peoples. Grant is a Churchill Fellow, has published four books and over 70 papers and serves as a peer reviewer and referee for more than 10 international journals. She is the lead editor of the International Handbook of Contemporary Indigenous Architecture (Springer 2018). Professor Grant is an elected member of Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS), a member of the International Association for People-Environment Studies (IAPS), the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), the Architectural Humanities Research Association (AHRA), the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAISA), the Australian New Zealand Society of Criminology (ANZSOC), the Australia and New Zealand Chapter of the Association of Critical Heritage Studies and a member of the expert panel of the International Corrections and Prisons Association (ICPA) research group. Grant has extensive track record–and international pre-eminence–across the field of Indigenous architecture and placemaking. She has been the chief investigator on numerous research projects. She has also led over 20 research consultancies related to responsive and humane design for Indigenous peoples. Grant has an extensive record of working with national and international Government, research, industry, community and in particular, Aboriginal community and organisations.
Julia Leininger's picture
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Julia chairs the research deaprtment „Transformations of Political Order: Governance, Values and Peace“ at the German Development Institute/Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) in Bonn, where she co-cordinates DIE's Africa research and policy advice. Her work focuses on political transformation, the conditions and consequences of social cohesion and international cooperation for an integrated implementation of the SDGs. Based on this research, she adds value to future scenarios for a transformation to sustainability. Her work is published in scientific journals, books and media outlets. Julia translates her academic research into policy advice and has engaged in impact measurement on the effectiveness of international democracy support and state-building. She teaches at the universities of Heidelberg and Duisburg-Essen.

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