The Alliance is committed to delivering innovative digital education programs through a Global Learning Network and enabling our collective research strengths to address globally significant issues of sustainable development through a Global Knowledge Network.
PLuS Alliance Fellows champion initiatives under the PLuS Alliance Strategic Priorities for 2018-2020, which include: access to quality education at scale; collaborative research with global impact; Engineering skills for the 21st Century; and a network of global influencers
The UNSW Fellows (2016-2018) are listed below. Appointments for 2019-2020 commence January 2019.

Dr Oliver Bown
Dr Oliver Bown
Technology and Innovation
Dr Oliver Bown is senior lecturer and co-director of the Interactive Media Lab at UNSW Art & Design. He is a researcher and maker working with creative technologies, with a diverse academic background spanning social anthropology, evolutionary and adaptive systems, music informatics and interaction design, with a parallel career in electronic music and digital art spanning over 15 years. He is interested in how artists, designers and musicians use advanced computing technologies to produce complex creative works. His current active research areas include media multiplicites, musical metacreation, the theories and methodologies of computational creativity, new interfaces for musical expression, and multi-agent models of social creativity. He is a member of the advisory board for the International Conference on Computational Creativity, and the organising committee for the Musical Metacreation series of workshops and concerts and is a program committee member for the conference NIME and GECCO (art track) amongst others.

Professor Alex Broom
Professor Alex Broom
Global Health
Professor Alex Broom is Professor of Sociology in the School of Social Sciences at UNSW Sydney. He specialises in the sociology of health and illness, with a current focus on issues related to: illness experiences; the therapeutic encounter; experiences of suffering, healing and survivorship; and, the moralities of care and caregiving. His work extends across a variety of cultural contexts, with current projects being based in Australia, Britain, India and Brazil. Over the course of the last decade, his international research contribution is distinguished by its interdisciplinary focus and emphasis on translational outcomes as produced through rigorous sociological enquiry. His research program, with its focus on end-user relevance, engagement and translation to practice, involves regular partnership with community groups, private industry and government-funded organisations, to facilitate knowledge synthesis and policy and practice change. He has published over 200 publications including 12 books, and is an investigator on over AU$8 million in competitive research grants. Recent books include 'Men's Health: Body, Identity and Social Context' (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009) and ‘Health, Culture and Religion in South Asia’ (Routledge, 2011), ‘Evidence-based healthcare in context’ (Ashgate, 2012), ‘Gender and Masculinities: Histories, Texts and Practices in India and Sri Lanka’ (Routledge, 2013) and ‘Dying: A Social Perspective on the End of Life’ (Ashgate/Routledge, 2015). He presently convenes the 'Health Stream' within UNSW Arts and Social Sciences’ Practical Justice Initiative.

Professor Tony Butler
Professor Tony Butler
Social Justice
Professor Butler is a leading expert on the health of offenders and has developed numerous policy-relevant projects in the justice health area. He is the program head of the Justice Health Research Program at the Kirby Institute and leads a team of twelve researchers including PhD and post-doctoral researchers. He is an NHMRC Principal; Research Fellow. He developed Australia’s only two national offender health data collection initiatives including the National Prison Entrants Bloodborne Virus Survey. He has led novel studies examining mental illness among prisoners, the role of head injury in offending, an RCT of a pharmacotherapy-based trial for impulsive-violent offenders, and text mining police domestic violence event narratives. He leads the NHMRC-funded Australian Centre for Offender Health Research. More recently he has developed two teaching initiative: ‘Public Health and Corrections’ aimed the nexus between health and criminology, and the popular ‘Inside the Criminal Mind’ course.

Dr Laura Crommelin
Dr Laura Crommelin
Social Justice
Dr Laura Crommelin a lecturer in the Faculty of Built Environment and a research fellow in the City Futures Research Centre at the University of New South Wales. Her research expertise covers urban planning and policy, housing policy, and urban redevelopment. She is the lead researcher on a recently completed study examining the impact of Airbnb in Australia's major cities, and is also a chief investigator on a new ARC Linkage Grant examining the extent of building defects in multi-unit housing in Sydney. Laura teaches urban development and land law in the Faculty of Built Environment's city planning program, and is currently developing a course on strategies to address urban social justice issues through digital mapping. In addition, she is the Chair of the UNSW Early Career Academic Network, and was previously a NSW Fulbright Scholar (2012-2013), spending 8 months at the University of Michigan.

Professor Evelyne de Leeuw
Professor Evelyne de Leeuw
Global Health
Professor de Leeuw is active in the Healthy Cities movement since 1986. Director of WHO Collaborating Centre for Research on Healthy Cities (1992-2001). She assists WHO regionally and globally in Healthy City evaluation, reporting, accountability. Known for her strong engagement with local health policies and politics and a welcome speaker at local community and global research events. She continues to be WHO European Research Director for Healthy Cities. Recent grant income (CIHR Canada, WHO) for $2M. Evelyne is Editor-in-Chief of the international peer-reviewed journal Health Promotion International and considered a leading global health promotion scholar, as evidenced by her appointments to high-level research panels (e.g., the Academy of Finland, and Science Ministries in Japan and Germany). Published several books (Healthy Cities - WHO and Springer; health promotion political science - OUP; consumer health democratisation - Edward Elgar) and over 120 peer-reviewed articles, plus several dozen book chapters.

Associate Professor Vinayak Dixit
Associate Professor Vinayak Dixit
Technology and Innovation
Associate Professor Vinayak Dixit is the Director of the Research Centre for Integrated Transport Innovation (rCITI), Director Travel Choice Simulation Laboratory (TRACSLab) at the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering at UNSW Sydney, as well as an Academic Director at Insurance Australia Group (IAG). His research focuses on studying risk in the transportation infrastructure system as it relates to automated vehicles, highway safety, travel time uncertainty, as well as natural and man-made disasters and he is well-published in these areas. His work with individual level data has led him to deeply explore questions around data ethics, integrity and ownership. His education activities involve the development of the Master of Engineering Science – Transport, as well as education opportunities and micro-credentials for industry and overseas partners. His projects have been funded by the Australian Research Council, United States National Science Foundation, as well as transportation agencies across the world including Australia, U.S., Indonesia, India and U.A.E.

Associate Professor Nicholas Ekins-Daukes
Associate Professor Nicholas Ekins-Daukes
Sustainability
Associate Professor Ekins-Daukes joined UNSW through the Strategic Hires & Retention Pathways (SHARP) scheme and is based at the School of Photovoltaic & Renewable Energy Engineering where he conducts research into high efficiency schemes for solar power conversion. From 2008-17, Ned worked in the Physics department at Imperial College London and prior to that at the School of Physics at the University of Sydney. From 2003-06 he was a JSPS research fellow at the Toyota Technological Institute, Japan. Ned holds a PhD and MSc from Imperial College and MSci in Physics & Electronics from the University of St Andrews.

Ms Selena Griffith
Ms Selena Griffith
Technology and Innovation
Ms Selena Griffith - Senior Lecturer Design Thinking, Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Centre for Social Impact, Business School, UNSW Sydney. Selena, an education focused academic, has been working in tertiary education and active design practice for more than 20 years, applying Design Thinking to many commercial and institutional contexts in the faculties of Built Environment, Art and Design, Engineering and most recently, Business at UNSW Sydney. Prior to her academic career, she had a successful, international, career in Design Management working for a number of international brands. In her current role, Selena is leading research determining best practice for Work Integrated Learning experiences to students, leading innovation in designing and delivering online, blended and intensive learning experiences for the Centre for Social Impact and engaged in active teaching practice.

Professor Cameron Holley
Professor Cameron Holley
Sustainability
Professor Cameron Holley is the Co-Director of Postgraduate Studies at UNSW Law, Chair of the Environmental Law Research Cluster at UNSW Law and a member of the leadership teams of the Connected Waters Initiative Research Centre and the Global Water Institute, UNSW. His research is in the areas of environmental law and water governance. Within these fields, he has examined issues of compliance and enforcement, environmental security, resilience, democratic participation, adaptive management and collaborative governance. An empirical researcher, Cameron works closely with international government and non-government organisations on research projects. His current agenda is centred on water law and energy governance (under an ARC Discovery) and identifying best practices in the regulation of water scarcity by comparing laws in Europe, USA and Australia. In 2014, he was awarded the IUCN Academy of Environmental Law Scholarship Award for my contribution to environmental law scholarship.

Associate Professor Matthew Kearnes
Associate Professor Matthew Kearnes
Technology and Innovation
Associate Professor Kearnes is an ARC Future Fellow in Environmental Humanities, UNSW. He is a CI in the ARC CoE in Convergent Bio-Nano Science and Technology, leading research focused on the societal dimensions of nanomedicine. Situated between the fields of Science and Technology Studies (STS), human geography and environmental humanities, his research focuses on the social and political dimensions of technological and environmental change. His co-edited volume Remaking Participation: Science, Environment and Emergent Publics (Routledge, 2016) was awarded the 2018 Amsterdamska Prize by the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST). He serves on the editorial board of Science, Technology and Society (Sage) and is an associate editor of Science as Culture (Taylor & Francis). He is co-convenor of the 2018 conference of the Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S), and has held visiting positions at School of Geography, Oxford University (2015) and the Department of Sociology, Lancaster University (2011).

Dr Kristopher Kilian
Dr Kristopher Kilian
Technology and Innovation
Dr Kris Kilian received B.S. and M.S. degrees in Chemistry from the University of Washington in 1999 and 2003 respectively. He worked for Merck Research Labs in the Methods Development group from 2000-2004 before travelling to Sydney, Australia to do his PhD with Justin Gooding at the University of New South Wales. In 2007, Kris joined the laboratory of Milan Mrksich at the University of Chicago as a NIH postdoctoral fellow to investigate new methods for directing the differentiation of stem cells. He was Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering (2011-2017) and Associate Professor of Bioengineering (2017-2018) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign before returning to UNSW in 2018 as a Scientia Fellow between the School of Chemistry and the School of Materials Science and Engineering. Kris is renowned internationally for his expertise in the design and development of model extracellular matrices for stem cell engineering and fundamental studies in cell biology.

Professor Richard Kingsford
Professor Richard Kingsford
Sustainability
Professor Kingsford is Director of the Centre for Ecosystem Science at UNSW Sydney. Good management of river systems is dependent on good information of the ecological responses and a long history of monitoring the breeding of waterbirds in the Macquarie Marshes is producing dividends. The Macquarie Marshes is now established as the most important site in Australia for the breeding of colonial waterbirds (herons, egrets and ibis). The project monitors the impacts of changing water regimes on the breeding and abundance of waterbirds in the Macquarie Marshes. In October of each year Professor Kingsford conducts an aerial survey to estimate the abundance of waterbirds in eastern Australia. This project is one of the largest surveys of fauna in the world.

Dr Ang Liu
Dr Ang Liu
Technology and Innovation
Dr Ang Liu is a senior lecturer at the UNSW Faculty of Engineering and the inaugural Director of the NAE Grand Challenges Scholars Program. His research focuses on engineering design and engineering education, where he has published over 50 journal and conference papers. Dr Liu teaches design thinking to students and design practitioners and was the first Program Manager of the Viterbi iPodia Education program at the University of Southern California. At UNSW he also serves on the Engineering Faculty Board, Engineering Education Innovation Committee, Education Quality Assurance Committee and Humanitarial Engineering Committee. He is closely involved with many professional organisations such as the American Society of Mechanical Engineeers (ASME), the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) and after being a Research Affiliate of CIRP (International Academy of Production Engineering) he is currently a nominee for one of the 150 Associate Memberships. Dr Liu is also the General Chair of the 13th Internaitonal Conference on Axiomatic Design in October 2019.

Professor Stephen Loo
Professor Stephen Loo
Technology and Innovation
Professor Stephen Loo is Professor of Interdisciplinary Design and Art at UNSW Sydney. For more than 25 years, Stephen has researched, taught and practiced in the transdisciplinary nexus of art, architecture, design, philosophy, performance and science. He has published widely on biophilosophy, posthumanist ethics, ecological humanities and experimental digital thinking. Recent books include Deleuze and Architecture(2012) and Poetic Biopolitics (2016) and he is currently working on Speculative Ethologies (2018 with Dr Undine Sellbach). Stephen is a founding partner of award-winning design, architecture, interpretation and exhibition practice Mulloway Studio. He has a performance-philosophy based art practice and has shown internationally in Paris, Berlin, London, Sydney and Adelaide. Stephen has played a key role in national and international policy settings in architecture and design education as a past Chair of the National Education Committee, Australian Institute of Architects (AIA), and President of the Australian Deans of the Built Environment and Design (ADBED).

Professor Raina MacIntyre
Professor Raina MacIntyre
Global Health
Professor Raina MacIntyre (MBBS Hons 1, M App Epid, PhD, FRACP, FAFPHM) is Head, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, UNSW and Professor of Infectious Diseases Epidemiology. She leads a research program in control and prevention of infectious diseases, spanning epidemiology, biosecurity, risk analysis, personal protective equipment, vaccinology, mathematical modelling, public health and clinical trials. Her global health research includes collaborations in India, Vietnam and China. She has over 300 peer reviewed publications in peer reviewed journals. She has received many awards including the Sir Henry Wellcome Medal and Prize from the Association of Military Surgeons of the US in 2007 for her work on bioterrorism, the Public Health Association of Australia’s National Immunisation Award in 2014, and the 2003 Frank Fenner Award for Research in Infectious Diseases. She has sat on numerous national and international expert committees and editorial boards in her field, including the US IOM. She currently heads a NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence in Epidemic Response and UNSW Vaccine and Infections Research Lab (UNSW-VIRL). She is also a founding director of ARM, Australia’s only national epidemic response network. She is an adjunct professor at Arizona State University and in this role is the UNSW lead in collaborative research and teaching in public health security within the PLuS Alliance.

Professor Rob McLaughlin
Professor Rob McLaughlin
Social Justice
Rob McLaughlin is Professor of Military Security Law and Director of the Australian Centre for the Study of Armed Conflict and Society at UNSW Canberra. Prior to taking up this appointment he was on the faculty of the College of Law at the Australian National University, and from 2012-2014 he served as the inaugural Head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime’s Maritime Crime Program (for which he continues to regularly consult). Before becoming an academic, Rob served in the Royal Australian Navy for several decades as both a Seaman officer and a Legal officer. He served in surface units and submarines, and deployed to East Timor, Iraq, and on maritime border protection operations. As a lawyer, he served as Fleet Legal Officer, the Strategic Legal Adviser, Director of the Naval Legal Service, and Director of Operations and International Law in the Department of Defence. In a reserve capacity he continues to serve as an Assistant Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force. He holds degrees in history, law, and international relations, and earned his PhD at Cambridge. His research areas are law of the sea, maritime law enforcement, the law of armed conflict, and national security law.

Dr Lois Meyer
Dr Lois Meyer
Technology and Innovation
Dr Lois Meyer is the inaugural Director the Bachelor of International Public Health (BIPH). She is responsible for steering through the first PLuS Alliance degree to be developed, approved and offered by UNSW in partnership with Arizona State University (ASU) and drew upon her extensive background in curriculum design and accreditation in public health within Australia and internationally. As Senior Research Fellow in the School of Public Health and Community Medicine (SPHCM) for close to a decade she has taken a leadership role overseeing the strategic learning design and evaluation of the postgraduate programs in the School including innovations in online and evidence-informed pedagogy. Dr Meyer’s research focuses on students’ learning and career trajectories and professional formation. She represents UNSW on the national Council of Academic Public Health Institutions Australasia (CAPHIA) and is on a national project reviewing the use of CAPHIA competencies in higher education public health programs.

Professor Michelle Moulds
Professor Michelle Moulds
Global Health
Professor Michelle Moulds is a Professor and Director of the Master of Psychology (Clinical) program in the School of Psychology at UNSW Sydney. Her research program is to advance understanding of how rumination and memory disturbances maintain depression. She conducts basic science experiments in the laboratory with the long-term goal of translation to empirically supported, evidence-based interventions for depressive disorders. In 2010 she received a Young Tall Poppy Science Award from the Australian Institute of Policy and Science, and was also named the Young Tall Poppy of the Year for NSW. She was a finalist and first runner-up in the Scopus Young Researcher of the Year Award (Humanities and Social Sciences) in 2012 and in 2013 received the Early Career Award from the Stress and Anxiety Research Society and was made a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science.
Dr Padmanesan Narasimhan
Dr Padmanesan Narasimhan
Global Health
Dr Padmanesan Narsimhan is a medical doctor with a public health masters and research degree from UNSW Australia. He has a strong interest in utilizing digital health tools to strengthen health systems, especially among vulnerable and disadvantaged communities in rural and remote areas. Padma also leads research programs in Integrated management of diseases using mobile health in India and teaches rural and remote International health at UNSW. He also currently serve as the Assistant Director of the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centre for eHealth at UNSW.

Associate Professor Justine Nolan
Associate Professor Justine Nolan
Social Justice
Justine Nolan is an Associate Professor and Associate Dean (Academic) in the Faculty of Law at UNSW Sydney. She is a Visiting Professorial Scholar at NYU. Her research focuses on business and human rights and she is one of the world’s leading scholars in the field. She teaches across a variety of courses including international human rights and business and human rights. She developed the Law Faculty’s first online course in 2017. She is on several NGO advisory boards and has acted as an expert advisory member for Australian government advisory bodies including most recently in 2017. Prior to her appointment at UNSW in 2004 she was the Director of the Business and Human Rights Program at Human Rights First in the US. She is an editor of the Australian Journal of Human Rights and the Business and Human Rights Journal.

Dr Carol Oliver
Dr Carol Oliver
Technology and Innovation
Dr Oliver is Deputy Director of the Australian Centre for Astrobiology at the University of New South Wales. She is an Education Focussed continuing academic responsible for transforming a third level face-to-face course in astrobiology into technology-enhanced fully online mode. She is developing two more online courses – one in astrobiology and the other in science communication. She led three Australian government education and outreach grants totalling $5.5m between 2010 and 2015. Her research background is in science communication and she publishes in the education/science communication areas, with a focus on astrobiology and innovation in technology-enhanced online education. She developed Virtual Field Trips in astrobiology with NASA, MIT and ASU and an interactive VFT with UNSW’s iCinema team. She has also developed in adaptive e-learning with Smart Sparrow. She has industry-related experience in science communication - the first third of her career was as a print, radio and television journalist.

Professor Chris Pettit
Professor Chris Pettit
Sustainability
Professor Pettit is the inaugural Chair of Urban Science (2015) at UNSW Sydney, being previously at the University Melbourne (20011-2015). The State Government of Victoria, (2004-2011) and RMIT University (2002-2004). He is responsible for the Digital Cities course at UNSW. He previously developed the Urban Informatics course at the University of Melbourne and was the lead author on the ESRI online virtual campus course in GIS and Planning which attracted more than 3,000 students between 2000 and 2010. His educational background has been focused specifically on the fields of spatial planning and GIS at the undergraduate and postgraduate level. His Ph.D. examined the using of GIS and mapping technologies for undertaking scenario planning at the land parcel level across municipalities. Professor Pettit is closely involved with a number of professional organisations. He is a member of the Surveying and Spatial Sciences Institute (SSSI) and the Planning Institute of Australia (PIA).

Professor Prem Ramburuth
Professor Prem Ramburuth
Sustainability
Professor Ramburuth teaches and researches in Cross-Cultural Management and Emerging Economies and publishes widely in these areas. Her leadership positions include Immediate Past President of the Academic Board, Associate Dean Education and Undergraduate Programs, Head of School (Management), and Director, Business School Education Development Centre. She is on the editorial board of the Academy of Management Learning and Education (A*), Journal for Multicultural Education, International Journal of Emerging Markets and Chinese Management Studies. She is Academic Lead Africa in the Institute for Global Development, and oversees projects in Transformative Academic Development (which she delivers), Health and Medical Education, Peace and Conflict, and Student Exchange at Gulu University, Uganda. She is collaborating with the Ugandan Ministry of Education to deliver Academic Development and Leadership programs at universities across Uganda, and aims to offer the programs at universities in Rwanda, Kenya, Malawi, Ethiopia, South Africa, via online and blended learning modes of delivery.

Dr Holly Seale
Dr Holly Seale
Global Health
Dr Holly Seale is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Public Health and Community Medicine, at the University of New South Wales. She is the Program Director for the Masters of Infectious Disease Intelligence (PLuS Alliance Program) and is responsible for convening three masters courses including an Internship Program, Current Challenges in Infectious Disease (PLuS Alliance course) and Infection Prevention and Control in the Healthcare Setting. She is a social scientist who focuses on improving engagement and acceptance with a range of infectious disease prevention strategies such as immunization and hand hygiene. Within this program, she examines the socio-cultural aspects that influence engagement and acceptance and formulates interventions to improve compliance. She works closely with a range of professional organizations including the Australasian College for Infection Prevention and Control (ACIPC), hospitals and domestic and international health departments.

Dr Elena Sitnikova
Dr Elena Sitnikova
Technology and Innovation
Dr Elena Sitnikova is an academic and researcher, and Program Coordinator for the Master of Cyber Security program at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Canberra, at the Australian Defence Academy. This Master program is the fastest growing postgraduate program at UNSW Canberra with student numbers increasing from 60 to 350 between 2015 and 2018. In 2018, two courses that Elena coordinates, Cyber Governance and Information Assurance became the first PLuS Alliance offerings from UNSW Canberra to Arizona State University. Elena leads a Critical Infrastructure Protection research group and publishes widely in the area of intrusion detection (IDS) for SCADA control systems cyber security and industrial IoT. Elena is also involved in education research and publishes in the area of engineering and ICT education. Elena is an award winning academic, holding a national Australian Office for Learning and Teaching (OLT) Team Citation award for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning.

Dr Veronica Tello
Dr Veronica Tello
Social Justice
I am a Chilean-Australian historian of art based in Sydney. I am currently Lecturer, Art Theory, at UNSW Art & Design, and Research Associate at Rhodes University (Arts of Global Souths Research Group). From 2015-18 I was Vice-Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Research Fellow at UNSW, and Visiting Fellow at the CUNY Graduate Centre, working with MFA students. I am the author of over 85 publications, including the book Counter-Memorial Aesthetics: Refugee Histories and the Politics of Contemporary Artn(Bloomsbury, 2016). I am currently developing a second monograph, focused on transnational collaborations between Chilean artists living in exile and under the Pinochet regime during the 1970s & 80s. In 2017 I initiated a parallel project, Future Souths, collaborating with leading diasporic and indigenous thinkers on the aesthetics and politics of the former third world or 'global souths', the results of which are currently being developed into an edited book for the highly respected Sternberg Press (Berlin, futuresouths.org).

Professor Carla Treloar
Professor Carla Treloar
Social Justice
Professor Carla Treloar is the Director of the Centre for Social Research in Health at UNSW Sydney. She has training in Social and Health Psychology and has almost 20 years of experience in public health, health services and translational research. She is one of the leading international experts in social research in hepatitis C prevention, care and treatment and a leading social scientist working in the field of hepatitis C prevention, care and treatment. She has published extensively on the decisions about hepatitis C treatment and barriers/facilitators of engaging in care including collaborative projects evaluating a number of hepatitis C treatment/care models. She has extensive involvement with policy makers and community groups around issues of access to HCV care and treatment and the participation of people who inject drugs. Carla is the Chair of PLuS Alliance Fellows at UNSW.

Associate Professor Kylie Valentine
Associate Professor Kylie Valentine
Social Justice
Associate Professor kylie valentine is Research Director of the Social Policy Research Centre and Centre for Social Research in Health in the faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, UNSW. She conducts policy relevant research on human services design and delivery with a particular focus on families and children. She is a qualitative researcher and her interests include the application of methods and concepts from the sociology of knowledge to new areas and concerns, with a specific focus on social disadvantage and exclusion. Current and recent projects include the evaluation of the NSW Integrated Domestic and Family Violence Service, a study of best practice in early intervention violence prevention for women and children with disability, a review of Australian Safe at Home projects, and a qualitative study of housing pathways after domestic and family violence.

Professor S Travis Waller
Professor S Travis Waller
Technology and Innovation
Professor Steven “Travis” Waller is the Advisian Chair of Transport Innovation, Deputy Dean (Research) of Engineering and the Executive Director for the Research Centre for Integrated Transport Innovation (rCITI) at UNSW. Prior to joining UNSW, he was on faculty at the University of Texas at Austin where he was the founding director for an U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) Industry/University Cooperative Research Center on Transportation and Electricity Convergence (focusing on electric vehicles). Past awards and recognition include the NSF CAREER award, MIT's Technology Review list of top 100 innovators in science and engineering worldwide, TRB's Fred Burggraf award, Hojjat Adeli award for innovations in computing and giving the C.C. Mei Distinguished Lecture at MIT. In the past 18 years, Prof. Waller has secured over $23m in total research funding. He has published more than 300 peer reviewed papers, supervised 22 completed PhD students and conducted over 60 funded research projects for 30 distinct sponsors worldwide.

Dr Simone Zarpelon Leao
Dr Simone Zarpelon Leao
Sustainability
Dr Simone Zarpelon Leao is a Research Fellow in Urban Modelling and Simulation at the City Futures Research Centre, University of New South Wales. Interested in the interdependencies between built environment, society and technology, she works on developing knowledge and methodologies to assist urban planning to generate/regenerate urban areas with awareness of contemporary challenges. Her research explores forms of using data and applying analytics in the domain of smart cities to promote sustainable and equitable development and improve quality of urban life. In education at UNSW, she assisted in the design of the new and innovative Master Degree in City Analytics and is responsible for the new courses ‘Programmable Cities’ and ‘Geocomputation’. Previously, she has developed research and academic teaching in South America, Africa, Asia and Europe. She has authored and co-authored more than 50 publications in high impact journals, books and conference proceedings.

Professor Lyria Bennett Moses
Professor Lyria Bennett Moses
Technology and Innovation
Professor Bennett Moses is from the Faculty of Law. Her research explores issues around the relationship between technology and law, including the types of legal issues that arise as technology changes, how these issues are addressed in Australia and other jurisdictions, the application of standard legal categories such as property in new socio-technical contexts, the use of technologically-specific and sui generis legal rules, and the problems of treating “technology” as an object of regulation. She works extensively around the use of Big Data and data analytics used for law enforcement and national security purposes. Lyria is involved with IEEE (an international engineering professional association) and currently serves as Chair of the Australia Chapter of the IEEE Society on the Social Implications of Technology.

Professor Eileen Baldry
Professor Eileen Baldry
Social Justice
Professor Eileen Baldry is Deputy Vice-Chancellor Inclusion and Diversity UNSW Sydney. She has pioneered multidisciplinary research and teaching in social justice and equity across social policy, criminology, disability studies, housing and homelessness, Indigenous studies and international, social and community development. In particular, Eileen’s teaching, research and publications focus on social justice matters including mental health and cognitive disability in the criminal justice system; education, training and employment for prisoners and ex-prisoners; homelessness and transition from prison; Indigenous social work; community development and social housing; and disability services. Professor Baldry was awarded NSW Justice Medal for improving access to justice for vulnerable people. She was shortlisted in the category of Innovation in the 2016 Australian Financial Review's 100 Women of Influence.

Professor Jill Bennett
Professor Jill Bennett
Technology and Innovation
Jill Bennett is Professor and Director of the National Institute for Experimental Arts (NIEA) at UNSW Art & Design. Her research and practice focuses on interdisciplinary arts-led approaches to the study of human experience. She leads the Memory Lab at NIEA, and is currently investigating (with a team of cognitive neuropsychologists and artists) the use of immersive visualisation technologies to assist memory retrieval. Her most recent projects have focused on memory loss and amnesia, building on earlier pioneering work on art and traumatic memory. Through her books (such as Empathic Vision, 2005 and Practical Aesthetics, 2012) and a series of exhibitions/public projects, she has investigated the way that art engenders productive forms of empathy and social connection. She now works on “engagement science”—designing multidisciplinary research projects, which interface with the public in innovative ways. She is currently developing a major festival of arts and mental health, focused on the theme of Anxiety.

Professor Lynne Bilston
Professor Lynne Bilston
Technology and Innovation
Lynne Bilston is a biomedical engineer whose research focuses on how mechanical forces are involved in physiological and pathophysiological processes in the body. Her research encompasses injury biomechanics, neural and other soft tissue biomechanics, and the development of novel imaging methods for making mechanical measurements in vivo. She has a PhD in bioengineering from the University of Pennsylvania and is a National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia senior research fellow. She is a Senior Principal Research Fellow at Neuroscience Research Australia, and is a conjoint Professor at the University of New South Wales.

Scientia Professor Richard Bryant
Scientia Professor Richard Bryant
Global Health
Professor Bryant is Director of the Traumatic Stress Clinic and Scientia Professor of Psychology at UNSW Sydney. His research has focused on identification of people at risk of mental health problems after trauma, early intervention strategies, treatment strategies for posttraumatic stress, and complicated grief. His research has resulted in many national and international awards. He was elected to Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia in 2005, and he also holds an ARC Professorial Fellowship. Professor Bryant also works on many major national and international projects, including developing the Australian NHMRC PTSD treatment guidelines, web treatments for US troops returning from Iraq, tsunami survivors in Thailand, developing counselling programs for disaster survivors in the USA after Hurricane Katrina, and web-based treatments for complicated grief patients in the USA.

Professor Michael Farrell
Professor Michael Farrell
Global Health
Professor Farrell is the Director of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC) at UNSW Sydney. His research is in the area of understanding the epidemiology of alcohol and drug use, mental disorders, and harms related to alcohol and drug use. He has contributed to the formulation of both UK and Australian national drug and alcohol policy as a researcher and advisor to Federal and state governments. He has been an expert advisor to the WHO, and as Scientific Advisory Committee Chair of the European Centre of Drugs and Drug Addiction. NDARC is now recognised as being amongst the top 5 international research centres on substance abuse.

Scientia Professor Katharina Gaus
Scientia Professor Katharina Gaus
Technology and Innovation
Scientia Professor Katharina Gaus is an NHMRC Senior Research Fellow at the University of New South Wales, Head of the EMBL Australia Node in Single Molecule Science and Deputy Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Advanced Molecular Imaging. She received her PhD from the University of Cambridge in 1999 and has led an independent research group since 2005. Her group investigates signal transduction processes in T lymphocytes with advanced fluorescence microscopy approaches. She has published more than 130 peer-reviewed publications including in Nature, Cell and Nature Immunology. She was awarded the Young Investigator Award from the Australia and New Zealand Society for Cell and Developmental Biology (2010), the Gottschalk Medal from the Australian Academy of Science (2012) and the New South Wales Science and Engineering Award for Excellence in Biological Sciences (2013).

Professor Justin Gooding
Professor Justin Gooding
Technology and Innovation
Professor Gooding is a founding co-director of the Australian Centre for NanoMedicine and an ARC Australian Laureate Fellow at the University of New South Wales. His research background has been focused specifically on surface chemistry with a particular emphasis on how to design molecular scale devices on surfaces. Much of this work has by motivated towards molecular devices that detect chemical or biological species to give sensors. In recent years this has led to sensors that detect many single molecules and many single cells. He is also the inaugural editor-in-chief ACS Sensors published by the American Chemical Society. He has published over 300 papers in electrochemistry, surface chemistry, cell biology, biosensors, nanomedicine and molecular electronics.

Professor Richard Holden
Professor Richard Holden
Technology and Innovation
Richard Holden is Professor of Economics at UNSW Business School and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow from 2013-2017. Prior to that he was on the faculty at the University of Chicago and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He received a PhD from Harvard University in 2006, where he was a Frank Knox Scholar. His research focuses on contract theory, law and economics, and political ec o nomy. He has written on topics including: political districting, the boundary of the firm, incentives in organizations, mechanism design, and voting rules.
Professor Holden has published in top general interest journals such as the American Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. He is currently editor of the Journal of Law and Economics, and is the founding director of the Herbert Smith Freehills Initiative on Law & Economics at UNSW.
He has been a Visiting Professor of Economics at the MIT Department of Economics and Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School.
His research has been featured in press articles in such outlets as: The New York Times, The Financial Times, the New Republic, and the Daily Kos.
Professor Holden appears regularly on PVO News Day on Sky News and writes for The Australian Financial Review. He also writes a weekly column analyzing global economic data called Vital Signs for The Conversation.

Professor Fleur Johns
Professor Fleur Johns
Social Justice
Professor Fleur Johns is a Professor in Law at UNSW Sydney and publishes widely in the areas of international law, socio-legal studies and legal theory. Currently, she is engaged in new work on the use of data analytics in humanitarian aid and development work. She has served as Articles Editor of the Leiden Journal of International Law. She was Co-Director of the Sydney Centre for International Law at the University of Sydney and also been Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Toronto, a Leverhulme Visiting Fellow at Birkbeck College (University of London) and she has been invited to be Shimizu Visiting Professor of Law at the LSE in London. Prior to commencing her academic career, she practised as a corporate lawyer with Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, in New York, specialising in international project finance.

Professor Louisa Jorm
Professor Louisa Jorm
Global Health
Professor Louisa Jorm is Foundation Director of the Centre for Big Data Research in Health at UNSW. She is an Australian and international leader in research using large-scale linked health data, including hospital inpatient, mortality, Medicare and cohort study data. She brings a unique combination of senior leadership experience both within and outside government and high-level technical expertise in epidemiologic methods, data linkage, biostatistics, use of large administrative data sets, methods for analysis of longitudinal and cohort study data and facilitating the policy and practice uptake of research. In the last 5 years she has published more than 60 scientific papers and been awarded more than AUD10 million in research funding. She has played a key role in building infrastructure and capacity for health ‘big data’ research in Australia, including the New South Wales (NSW) Centre for Health Record Linkage, the Secure Unified Research Environment (SURE) data laboratory, the UNSW E-Research Institutional Cloud Architecture (ERICA) and the NSW Biostatistical Officer Training Program. She is a high profile advocate for more and better use of routinely collected health data and has contributed to driving related policy changes in Australia, through numerous advisory roles to government.

Professor Scott Kable
Professor Scott Kable
Technology and Innovation
Professor Scott Kable is the Head of Chemistry at the University of New South Wales. His research is focussed at understanding fundamental reaction mechanisms and reaction intermediates in the gas phase, with a particular emphasis on atmospheric processes. Professor Kable is also a passionate teacher and educator. He is a founding Director of the Advancing Science by Enhanced Laboratory Learning (ASELL) Project, which shares best practice and provides professional development in laboratory education to chemistry, physics and biology academics around the country. Prof Kable is on the Board of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute and has twice served on the Australian Research Council College of Experts.

Professor Simon Killcross
Professor Simon Killcross
Global Health
Professor Simon Killcross is Head of the School of Psychology at UNSW. He received a BA and PhD in Experimental Psychology from the University of Cambridge, before taking up a research fellowship at Magdalene College Cambridge. He was appointed a lecturer in Psychology at the University of York in 1996, and Senior Research Fellow at Cardiff University in 1999. He was appointed Professor and Deputy Head of the School of Psychology at Cardiff before moving to UNSW as Head of School in 2009. His research examines preclinical models of fronto-striatal function, as well as translational models of human mental disorders such as schizophrenia. He has published over 100 journal articles and book chapters, and has received research funding from major government granting agencies (e.g. ARC, NHRMC in Australia, BBSRC, MRC in the UK), international charities (e.g. NARSAD, Wellcome Trust) and industry partners (e.g. Lilly, Wyeth, MSD).

Professor Greg Leslie
Professor Greg Leslie
Sustainability
Professor Greg Leslie is a Professor in the School of Chemical Engineering at UNSW Sydney. He is the Director of the UNESCO Centre for Membrane Science and Technology and is engaged in research water and nutrient recycling by improving the performance of membranes used for desalination and recycling water and nutrients from municipal and industrial waste. In agriculture his development of a Reverse Osmosis Capable Drip Irrigation System, lets plants draw water through salt filters in irrigation pipes at their roots, using tiny amounts of energy naturally created by evaporation at their leaves.

Professor Nigel Lovell
Professor Nigel Lovell
Technology and Innovation
Professor Lovell obtained his Bachelor of Engineering (Hons) in 1984, and his PhD in Engineering (specialising in cardiac neurophysiology and biomedical engineering). Lovell’s research expertise can be categorised into 3research themes based around neural prosthetics, physiological modelling and telehealth. He has published 218 journal articles, 277 refereed conference proceedings, 6 books/proceedings, 22 book chapters and >150 abstracts. Lovell is a most prominent biomedical engineer on the world stage being a fellow of six learned academies/societies and having taken on major leadership roles in professional organisations related to biomedical engineering, particularly the Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

Professor Bronwen Morgan
Professor Bronwen Morgan
Sustainability
Bronwen Morgan is Professor of Law and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow. She is a socio-legal scholar with a longstanding interest in regulation and governance, changes in state formation and the increasing economisation of political discourse and practices. Her current research interests spring from a dual interest in the socio-political implications of ecological crisis on the one hand, and on the other hand, practices that mix elements of social activism and social enterprise. She is exploring the ways in which these practices engage with (socio)-legal and regulatory frameworks, particularly as they move along a trajectory of increasingly formalised activity. The empirical focus of her current research is on transport, energy, food and space (www.activismandenterprise.weebly.com), and previous work has focused on water and more broadly on the regulatory governance of essential services, especially in the Global South. She is also interested in the sharing economy, and the degree to which its trajectories may promote or undermine a social and ecologically sustainable economy. She is running a conference in August 2016 on these issues: Building the New Economy: Activism, Enterprise and Social Change.

Professor Kristy Muir
Professor Kristy Muir
Social Justice
Professor Kristy Muir is the Research Director of the Centre for Social Impact at UNSW Sydney. Her research and teaching programs work with dozens of government, not-for-profits, corporates and philanthropic organisations to help understand, measure and find innovative solutions to some of society’s most intractable, complex social problems and to achieve social justice. Professor Muir has obtained over $10 million in competitive research funding; published in the highest-ranking international academic journals and demonstrated exceptional leadership.

Professor Maurice Pagnucco
Professor Maurice Pagnucco
Technology and Innovation
Maurice Pagnucco is a Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, Deputy Dean (Education) of the Faculty of Engineering and Head of the School of Computer Science and Engineering at UNSW. He joined UNSW in 2001 as a Senior Lecturer and has held the position of Head of School since 2010 and Deputy Dean (Education) since 2015. He has also held appointments at the University of Toronto, Macquarie University and The University of Sydney.
He obtained his Bachelor of Science (Hons I) and PhD degrees in Computer Science from the University of Sydney. During his undergraduate studies he also spent a year at the Department of Computer Science of The University of Milan, Italy.
His research is focussed on Artificial Intelligence with particular emphasis on Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Cognitive Robotics, Belief Change and Reasoning About Actions.
Maurice was the programme director of the Decision Making theme in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Autonomous Systems and a co-director of the UNSW iCinema Centre for Interactive Cinema Research. His collaboration with the UNSW iCinema Centre for Interactive Cinema Research resulted in a world-first interactive cinema piece controlled using artificial intelligence techniques that premiered at the Sydney Film Festival in 2011.

Professor Bill Randolph
Professor Bill Randolph
Sustainability
Professor Bill Randolph is Director of the City Futures Research Centre in the Faculty of Built Environment at the UNSW. He is also Deputy Director of the UNSW/UWS AHURI Research Centre and leads a research team specialising in housing policy, urban development and metropolitan planning policy issues. Bill has 30 years’ experience as a researcher on housing and urban policy issues in the academic, government, non-government and private sectors. He was Director of the Urban Frontiers Program at the University of Western Sydney for six years and Head of Research at the National Housing Federation in London (the national peak body for non-profit affordable housing landlords) for eight years. During this time he spent a period of sabbatical leave at the Australian National University researching housing affordability and community housing in Australia. Bill has also worked as a research fellow at the Open University and the UK Department of the Environment.

Professor Karin Sanders
Professor Karin Sanders
Technology and Innovation
Professor Karin Sanders (School of Management, UNSW Business School) is professor of Human Resources Management (HRM) and Organizational Behaviour at the UNSW Business School, and Head of School of Management. Her research focuses particularly on the impact of employees’ perceptions and understanding (attributions) of HRM on employees’ innovative behaviour and firms’ innovation. Her research has been published in such scholarly outlets as the Journal of Vocational Behavior, Organizational Studies, Academy of Management Learning and Education and HRM (all Financial Times list journals). Karin is a recently elected board member of the Executive Board of the HR Division (Academy of Management, the professional association for management and organization scholars) and is one of the leaders of HR Division’s International Ambassadors program.

Professor David Sanderson
Professor David Sanderson
Sustainability
Professor David Sanderson is the inaugural Judith Neilson Chair of Architecture and Design at UNSW. David has worked for 25 years in development and disaster risk reduction across the world, working mostly for aid agencies. David was trained in architecture and holds a PhD in urban livelihoods and vulnerability. David’s research has focused on urban livelihoods, shelter and disaster risk reduction. Between 1998 and 2006 he worked for CARE International UK as Head of Policy and was subsequently Regional Manager for Southern and West Africa. Before that he worked for four years at the Oxford Centre for Disaster Studies. From 2006-2014, he was Director of the Centre for Development and Emergency Practice (CENDEP) at Oxford Brookes University, which was followed by 18 months as Professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). IN 2013-14, David was Visiting Professor at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.

Scientia Professor Roger Simnett
Scientia Professor Roger Simnett
Sustainability
Professor Roger Simnett is Macquarie Group Foundation Scientia Professor of Accounting and Academic Director, Centre for Social Impact, at UNSW Australia Business School. His work has had a major influence on policy particularly on standard-setting, regulatory auditing and assurance boards. His research has significantly shaped international standard setting and regulation. Professor Simnett was the first academic appointed as a member of the International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board (IAASB) and he recently co-chaired the task force that developed the assurance standard on greenhouse gas emissions disclosures for the IAASB (now adopted in over 80 countries). He was a member of the International Integrated Reporting Council working group and technical task force during 2011-2014, to develop corporate reporting model beyond financial reporting.

Professor Chris Tinney
Professor Chris Tinney
Technology and Innovation
Professor Chris Tinney is founder and head of Exoplanetary Science at UNSW. His research is focused specifically on the use of high-precision technologies for the discovery and study of planets orbiting other stars, with his team being directly responsible for the discovery of over 50 exoplanets – most notably including the closest potentially habitable planet discovered orbiting the nearby star Wolf 1061 in 2015. Professor Tinney is closely involved with a number of professional organisations, chairing the Optical Telescopes Advisory Committee of Astronomy Australia Limited for over 5 years, and serving on the Giant Magellan Telescope Organizations Science Advisory Committee from 2009-2016. He is a past Director of the Australian Centre for Astrobiology based at UNSW, providing a broad and interdisciplinary context for his team’s research on the most likely platforms for life orbiting other stars.

Professor Nick Wailes
Professor Nick Wailes
Technology and Innovation
Professor Nick Wailes is Associate Dean (Digital and Innovation) at UNSW Business School and Academic Director of AGSM’s specialised online MBA, MBAX. Nick’s role is to the lead the digital transformation of the Business School. Prior to joining UNSW Nick was the MBA Director at the University of Sydney Business School. Nick research interests including international and comparative employment relations and the impact of new and emerging technologies on organisation. Nick regularly comments in the media on how digital is reshaping traditional business models and industries

Professor David Waite
Professor David Waite
Sustainability
Scientia Professor David Waite from the UNSW School of Civil and Environmental Engineering is leading a team working at the intersection of nanotechnology, materials science and environmental engineering, developing new composite materials made from silver nanoparticles anchored onto the low-cost silica from rice husk ash (RHA). When burned, the ash from rice husks has a high concentration of silica, which is thought to be an excellent supporting material for ultra-fine silver nanoparticles. These nanoparticles have become well-known for their anti-bacterial properties and applications in water treatment, but at the size where these particles are most effective (diameters less than 20 nm), they have a tendency to aggregate, which decreases their disinfecting potential. The rice husk ash prevents aggregation of the silver nanoparticles, the rice husk ash support slows down the release time of dissolved silver, enhancing the long-term anti-bacterial applications of the particles. The technology is ideal for supplying clean, affordable drinking water to remote communities or for providing purified water after a disaster or emergency.

Professor Heather Worth
Professor Heather Worth
Global Health
Professor Worth is the Head of the International HIV Research Group in the School of Public Health and Community Medicine, at UNSW Sydney. Professor Worth’s research has been primarily in the area of HIV social and behavioural research in Asia and the Pacific, with a focus on gender, sexuality and global HIV. Professor Worth’s research activities span many areas of Global Health including understanding HIV in China: the Social Aspects of the Epidemic Mobility; HIV risk across the Papua New Guinea/Indonesia border; and strengthening HIV social research capacity amongst HIV social research leaders in Papua New Guinea and Fiji.