Short description:
Dr Tracey West is known for her research expertise in financial literacy and gender issues facing retirement savings policy and financial education, as evidenced by 18 published articles. Her research has analysed the gender differences in financial literacy measurement, the nexus of life events and financial literacy for resilience and wealth outcomes, and financial risk taking. She currently teaches Behavioural Finance and Wealth Management at Griffith University, Australia.
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Professor Oldrich Bures is the founding director of the Center for Security Studies and Professor of International Political Relations at Metropolitan University Prague. He was previously a senior lecturer at Palacky University, a Fulbright Fellow at the Joan. B. Kroc Institute, University of Notre Dame, and an External Research Fellow at the Centre for European Security, School of English, Sociology, Politics & Contemporary History, University of Salford, and a COFUND Marie Curie Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Hazzard, Risk and Resilience at Durham University, UK.
Short description:
Ed Wensing is an experienced planner, policy analyst and academic. Ed has worked in government, the private sector, non-government organisations, professional associations and has engaged in teaching and research in several universities around Australia. For over 25 years, Ed has had the privilege of working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and communities across Australia on the intersection between their rights and interests (however defined by them) and the Crown’s systems of land ownership and management, land use planning, and environmental management.
Short description:
I am currently an Assistant Policy Researcher at RAND Corporation as well as a PhD Fellow at the Pardee RAND Graduate School. I have a Bachelor of Engineering in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from the University of Nottingham, Malaysia Campus, Asia Pacific. I worked as an engineer for seven years in the oil and gas sector before switching to policy analysis. My areas of research expertise/interests include emerging technology, energy, ethics, and diversity, equity and inclusion.
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Zahra Siddique is an Associate Professor in Economics at the University of Bristol. She completed her PhD in Economics from Northwestern University and BSc Honors from the Lahore University of Management Sciences in Pakistan. Zahra's research interests are in micro-econometrics, labor economics and development economics. She has published in international academic journals such as the Journal of the American Statistical Association and the Journal of Labor Economics, among others.
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I am serving at the International Relations Division of the Ministry of Women, Family and Community Development Malaysia as Principle Assistant Secretary. I currently head the Multilateral Unit whereby we coordinate our Ministry representatives' attendance and involvement to UN meetings, conferences and programmes.
Short description:
Professor Lucas Walsh is Director of the Monash Centre for Youth Policy & Education Practice (CYPEP) within the Faculty of Education at Monash University. His
research explores the question: what do the contemporary political, economic, cultural, social and technological dimensions of young people's worlds like and how
can education, training and policy better support them to navigate their worlds? His research also examines how evidence can be used more effectively to improve
the life-outcomes of young people through education.
Short description:
Senior Researcher with Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society for 18 years. Writer in residence for Google PAIR. I write about the effect digital tech - especially AI and the Internet - may be having on how we think about ourselves and our world. Once-upon-a-time philosophy professor, long-time Harvard Berkman Klein Center affiliate.