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Giulia Barbareschi's picture
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Giulia Barbareschi is a Research Fellow in Disability and Assistive Technology Innovation at the Keio School of Media Design in Yokohama and the Global Disability Innovation Hub in London. She received her PhD in 2018 from University College London. From 2018 to 2021 she was a research fellow at the UCL Interaction Centre. Her research interest center on the design, development and evaluation of new and existing technologies to empower people with disabilities living in different parts of the world.
Zoe Russell's picture
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I am a PhD researcher working on UNESCO Biosphere Reserves. Specifically, I am working with Wester Ross Biosphere, exploring how they are implementing sustainable development and promoting cultural heritage. I have a background in sociology and politics. I am particularly interested in the intersection of policy and practice.
Ann Morning's picture
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I am a sociologist at New York University who specializes in racial and ethnic classification and conceptualization. I am the author of The Nature of Race: How Scientists Teach and Think about Human Difference (University of California Press 2011) as well as the forthcoming An Ugly Word: Rethinking Race in Italy and the United States (Russell Sage Foundation 2022, co-authored with Marcello Maneri).
David Ainsworth's picture
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Business Editor at Devex
YOUSSEF AYOUB's picture
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Computer Science Teacher from Morocco, MIEEXPERT, Wakelet, Flipgrid Merge EDU, Book Creator, Mote, GoNoodle, DEN ambassador
Spiros Denaxas's picture
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Prof of Biomedical Informatics
Angela Muvumba Sellström's picture
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Angela Muvumba Sellström is a Senior Researcher with expertise on wartime sexual violence prevention; international interventions and mediation; gender, women, peace and security; and the UN Security Council and the role of non-permanent members.
Paul Piwek's picture
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I am a Senior Lecturer in Computing at the Open University. I have led the development of several digital skills-related online resources including the "Digital Thinking Tools" badged open course and the OpenLearn resource "Introduction to Computational Thinking". I'm leading a collaborative project (Open University, Cambridge, Sheffield and Toshiba) entitled "Opening Up Minds: engaging dialogue generated from argument maps" and have investigated the use of online argument mapping activities for the development of critical thinking skills. I am a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
Michael Seiferling's picture
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Mike is an assistant professor of public finance in the School of Public Policy at University College London (UCL) with research focused on the links between macroeconomics, finance, accounting, and political science. Specifically, these include taxation, budgeting, fiscal performance, public sector accounting and accountability, balance sheet analysis (financial linkages), and technological innovations in the public sector (cryptocurrency and democratic/collective choice mechanisms). For the past ten years, Mike has worked as an expert for several international organizations (currently a short term expert at the IMF, World Bank and UN) and private sector firms to improve financial literacy, debt management, fiscal transparency, and compliance with international standards in central banks, ministries of finance and commercial banks in over sixty countries worldwide. Previously, Mike worked as an economist at the International Monetary Fund (2011-2015) and completed his PhD from the London School of Economics in 2012.
Gabriella Conti's picture
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I am Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics and in the Social Research Institute at University College London; and Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) and at IZA Bonn. I am also Associate Editor at the Journal of Health Economics (the top journal in health economics), Trustee at the Foundation Years Information and Research, and scientific adviser of the Lancet Commission for Gender-Based Violence and Maltreatment of Young People. My research areas of interest are health economics, the economics of human development, and biology and economics. My research draws on both the biomedical and the social sciences with the aim of understanding the developmental origins of health inequalities, the role of child development as input in the production of lifecycle health and the behavioral and biological pathways through which early life shocks, investments and policies affect well-being throughout the lifecourse. I often use novel sources of data, such as biomarkers (ranging from fetal ultrasound scans to genetic markers), combined with linked administrative records and survey data. I have studied several interventions, such as the iconic Perry Preschool, Abecedarian and Nurse Family Partnership programs in the United States; and large-scale programmes such as Sure Start, the Family Nurse Partnership and Universal Health Visiting in England, and Seguro Popular in Mexico. Most of my work focuses on US and UK, however I have also worked on LMICs such as Colombia, India, Mexico and more recently Ecuador. I have published on this topic in top journals in different disciplines, such as Science, PNAS, Pediatrics, the Economic Journal, the Journal of Public Economics, the Journal of Econometrics and Lancet. My research has been supported among others by the NIH, H2020, ERC, Nuffield Foundation, Health Foundation, British Academy. My work has been mentioned among others in the New York Times, Financial Times, The Times, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, and discussed in the British Parliament. In 2019 I was awarded the Philip Leverhulme Prize in Economics (for my project on “Evaluating the Costs and Benefits of Universal Health Visiting in UK”), which “recognises the achievement of outstanding researchers whose work has already attracted international recognition and whose future career is exceptionally promising”; and the Nick Hales Award from the DOHaD society, for a “young and emerging investigator who has made an outstanding scientific contribution to the DOHaD field”. I am also the PI of a 5-year ERC Consolidator Award from the European Research Council (SH1 Economics Panel) for my project “The Developmental Origins of Health: Biology, Shocks, Investments, and Policies”. I rank among the top 3% Female Economists, Last 10 Years Publications, and the top 5% Economists, Last 10 Years Publications – only considering my publications in economics. I hold a PhD in Economics from the University of Essex. Prior to joining UCL, I was a Post-Doctoral Scholar (under the mentorship of Nobel Prize Winner James Heckman) and then an Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago. My research areas of interest are health economics, the economics of human development, and biology and economics. My research draws on both the biomedical and the social sciences with the aim of understanding the developmental origins of health inequalities, the role of child development as input in the production of lifecycle health and the behavioral and biological pathways through which early life shocks, investments and policies affect well-being throughout the lifecourse. I often use novel sources of data, such as biomarkers (ranging from fetal ultrasound scans to genetic markers), combined with linked administrative records and survey data. I have studied several interventions, such as the iconic Perry Preschool, Abecedarian and Nurse Family Partnership programs in the United States; and large-scale programmes such as Sure Start, the Family Nurse Partnership and Universal Health Visiting in England, and Seguro Popular in Mexico. Most of my work focuses on US and UK, however I have also worked on LMICs such as Colombia, India, Mexico and more recently Ecuador.

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