Anita has worked nationally and internationally on issues including women鈥檚 human rights, economic globalization,听and climate justice. She previously served as Chief of the UN Non-Governmental Liaison Service in New York听and on the Executive Committee of the South-based feminist network, Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era听(DAWN). She currently directs Regions Refocus and co-chairs the Gender and Trade Coalition.
Ariel Salleh, Honorary Associate Professor, University of Sydney
Ariel Salleh is an Honorary Associate Professor in Political Economy, University of Sydney; Visiting Professor in Culture, Philosophy & Environment, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa; and former Senior Fellow in Post-Growth Societies, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany. She taught in Social Ecology at the University of Western Sydney for a number of years; and has lectured widely, including NYU; ICS, Manila; York University, Toronto, and Lund. A longtime activist, she co-founded the Movement Against Uranium Mining; The Greens (reg. party); served on the Federal Government's Gene Technology Ethics Committee; and was a governor of the International Sociological Association Research Committee for Environment & Society. She writes in the field of political ecology, extending the remit of political economy by focusing on the role of reproductive or meta-industrial labour in sustaining relations between humans and nature. She has three books -听Ecofeminism as Politics; the anthology听Eco-Sufficiency and Global Justice;听Pluriverse: A Post-Development Dictionary听edited with Kothari et al. and some 200 chapters and articles.
Avril de Torres, Center for Energy, Ecology and Development, Philippines
Avril De Torres is the Research, Policy, and Law Program Head of the Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development, a Philippine think-do institution conducting policy research and advocacy and partnering with communities in advancing transformative energy, ecological justice, and people-centered development. She is also handling environmental cases in her public interest environmental law firm and acting as a consultant for the听House of Representatives Committee on Metro Manila Development. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree, major in Political Science, and minor in English Literature in 2012, and her Juris Doctor degree in 2016 from the Ateneo de Manila University.
Bengi Akbulut, Assistant Professor, Concordia University
Bengi is an Assistant Professor in Geography, Planning and Environment at Concordia University. Her work focuses broadly on the political economy of development, including issues of political ecology, agrarian and environmental change, state-society relationships, social and environmental movements, and gender and household work. Her joint and independent work has appeared in the听Cambridge Journal of Economics and Development and Change among others.
Bernadette Resurrecci贸n, Associate Professor, Queen鈥檚 University, Kingston, Ontario
Bernadette is Associate Professor and Queen鈥檚 National Scholar at Queen鈥檚 University, Canada. She has 20 years of experience doing research, teaching and advising on gender, environment, and natural resource management. In this broad field, her research covers core gender and social equity issues in upland agriculture, water governance in riparian contexts, mobile livelihoods and rural-urban linkages, disaster risk and climate change in the developing regions of Southeast Asia. Her work also critically examines how development practice and proposed policy interventions can meaningfully address complex and grounded realities through the lens of feminist political ecology.听She was formerly a Senior Research Fellow at the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)听补苍诲听an Associate Professor at the School of Environment, Resources & Development of the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT).
Dunja Krause, Research Officer, United Nations Research Institute for Social Development
Dunja Krause听is a Research Officer and leads UNRISD鈥檚 work on climate justice with a focus on just transition to low-carbon development and transformative adaptation to climate change in coastal cities. She coordinates the Just Transition Research Collaborative and recently co-edited the volume 鈥淛ust Transitions: Social Justice in the Shift Towards a Low-Carbon World鈥 (Pluto Press, with Edouard Morena and Dimitris Stevis). A geographer by training, she has previously worked at the United Nations University Institute for Environment and Human Security (2009-2014), focusing on vulnerability assessments to natural hazards, the development of a global risk index, and the evaluation of climate change adaptation options in the Vietnamese Mekong Delta. Dunja previously held a shorter post (2008-2009) with the United Nations Environment Programme in Vienna, working on the interlinkages between environment and security and transboundary environmental cooperation as a means of conflict prevention.
Eileen Baldry, Deputy Vice-Chancellor Equity Diversity and Inclusion, UNSW Sydney.
Professor Eileen Baldry is听Deputy Vice-Chancellor Equity, Diversity and Inclusion and Professor of Criminology at UNSW Sydney. Professor Baldry鈥檚 teaching, research and publications focus on social justice and include mental health and cognitive disability in the criminal justice system; criminalised women, Aboriginal women and youth; education, training and employment for prisoners and ex-prisoners; homelessness and transition from prison; Indigenous justice; community development and social housing; and disability services. Professor Baldry has been and is a Chief Investigator on Australian Research Council (ARC), NH&MRC, AHURI and other major grants over the past 25 years, including Indigenous Australians with Mental Health Disorders and Cognitive Disabilities in the Criminal Justice System (IAMHDCD) Project. She has been involved in a voluntary capacity with a number of development and justice community organisations and is currently a Director on the Board of the Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC) and Deputy Chair of the Disability Council NSW.
Elizabeth Hill, Associate Professor, University of Sydney
Elizabeth is Associate Professor of political economy and co-convenor of the Australian Work and Family Policy Roundtable. She is a leading researcher on women, work and care in Australia and the Asian region and is interested in how economic institutions shape women鈥檚 paid work, unpaid care and the care workforce 鈥 especially as they evolve in response to the rapidly evolving dynamics of the global political economy. Elizabeth has collaborated with leading organisations including the International Labour Organisation and the Australian Human Rights Commission through her research. She is currently a Chief investigator on the Australian Women鈥檚 Working Future Project听 and ARC project Markets Migration and paid care work in Australia. Her research has been published in international academic journals including:听Journal of Industrial Relations, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Work, Employment and Society,听补苍诲听Journal of Sociology听and in public affairs journals such as听East Asia Forum,听The Diplomat听补苍诲听Asian Correspondent.
Hannah Bargawi, Senior Lecturer, University of London
Dr. Hannah Bargawi is a Senior Lecturer and co-Head of Department for Economics at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London where she convenes courses in Gender Economics and Development Economics. Dr. Bargawi鈥檚 research spans macroeconomic policies and employment as well as gender and labour market issues, including the links between paid and unpaid work. Her research is focused on East Africa and the Middle East as well as Europe - for example, together with a colleague she led an Employment Diagnostic Assessment for the International Labour Organisation and the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development in Uganda. She recently contributed a chapter on "How does Economics address Gender?" in a textbook entitled Recharting the History of Economic Thought, edited by Kevin Deane and Elisa Van Waeyenberge, published by Macmillan (2020). Before joining the Economics department, Dr. Bargawi was involved in research and consultancy projects for international agencies such as the Asian Development Bank, the International Labour Organisation and the United Nations Development Program.
Julie Nelson, Professor, University of Massachusetts-Boston
Julie A. Nelson is Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston and Senior Research Fellow at the Global Development and Environment Institute at Tufts University. Her research interests include ecological economics, ethics and economics, and feminist economics. She is the author of many publications including听Economics for Humans听(Univ. of Chicago Press, 2nd听ed. 2018) and 听articles in journals ranging from听Econometrica听and 听Ecological Economics听to听Economics and Philosophy听补苍诲听Hypatia: Journal of Feminist Philosophy.听She was a founding member of the International Association for Feminist Economics and听was the 2019 President of the Association for Social Economics.听
Kaira Zoe Canete, PhD candidate, University of NSW
Kaira Zoe Canete specialises in the intersection of gender, development and disasters. Currently, she is听a PhD Candidate at the School of Social Sciences of the University of New South Wales. Her doctoral dissertation examines disaster recovery and reconstruction in Tacloban City, Philippines from the standpoint of women. Using the lens of feminist political ecology, she examines women's everyday embodied and emotional relations and practices as a resource for reconceptualising resilience, centring a feminist ethic of care as a normative basis for disaster recovery. Kaira is also a faculty member of the College of Social Sciences at the University of the Philippines Cebu and was founding Executive Director of research NGO in the Philippines called A2D Project-Research Group for Alternatives to Development Inc (2010-2014).听
Kiah Smith, Research Fellow, University of Queensland
Dr Kiah Smith听is an ARC DECRA Research Fellow with the School of Social Science, The University of Queensland. Her research in Sociology focuses on sustainability transformations in local and global food systems, with publications on food security and food justice, climate resilience, ethical trade, sustainable livelihoods, gender, green economy, financialisation and the SDGs. She also has a keen interest in ecofeminism and the gendered dimensions of the right to food. Kiah previously worked with the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, has collaborated with NGOs in Australia and internationally, is a听Future Earth听Fellow, and sits on the editorial board of the International Journal of the Sociology of Agriculture and Food. She is currently the lead investigator on an Australian Research Council study on 'Fair Food Futures, Civil Society and the SDGs', and is the author of 鈥楨thical Trade, Gender and Sustainable Livelihoods鈥 (Earthscan, 2014).
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt, Professor, ANU
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt is a Professor at the Australian National University, Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, and has over thirty years of work experience on gendered challenges of livelihoods in developing countries. In particular, she has researched the length and breadth of social and ecological aspects of resources, water resource management, gender and livelihoods in both large, industrial, and informal, artisanal and small-scale mines and quarries, and feminization of agriculture in rural communities in India, Indonesia, Lao PDR, and Mongolia. Her work has been used by both international and grassroots level development organizations. Currently, Kuntala is researching the potential gender impacts of coal sector transition.
Laura Turquet, Policy Advisor, UN Women
Laura Turquet is a Policy Advisor and deputy Chief of Research and Data at UN Women. For the past decade, she has worked at UN Women leading major research and data initiatives that inform the organization鈥檚 advocacy objectives and empower civil society and governments to seek and implement change. She leads the organisation鈥檚 flagship report, Progress of the World鈥檚 Women, and has worked on three editions to date, on women鈥檚 access to justice (2011), economic and social rights (2015), and families in a changing world (2019). Laura is currently leading on the development of a Feminist Plan for Sustainability and Social Justice, to highlight transformative policies needed to create a fairer world in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. Laura is a co-founder of the UN Feminist Network and previously worked at Action Aid UK, the Institute of Development Studies and the Fawcett Society.
Radhika Balakrishnan, Professor, Center for Women's Global Leadership, Rutgers University
Radhika Balakrishnan is the faculty director at the Center for Women鈥檚 Global Leadership and professor in Women's and Gender and Sexuality Studies at Rutgers University. She has a Ph.D. in Economics from Rutgers University. She is a Commissioner for the Commission for Gender Equity for the City of New York, on the Global Advisory Council for the United Nations Population Fund and the current president of the International Association for Feminist Economics. Radhika is the co-author of听with James Heintz and Diane Elson. She is the co-editor with Diane Elson of听(Zed Books, 2011). Radhika鈥檚 work focuses on gender and development, gender and the global economy, human rights and economic and social rights. Her research and advocacy work has sought to change the lens through which macroeconomic policy is interpreted and critiqued by applying international human rights norms to assess macroeconomic policy.
Robyn James, Asia Pacific Gender Advisor, The Nature Conservancy
Robyn has been with the Nature Conservancy (TNC)听since 2010 and guides conservation work in the Pacific (especially in Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands) as well as addressing issues with mining and extractives. She also advises on equity and gender in conservation women鈥檚 empowerment work across the organisation and in Asia Pacific specifically. For example, she has worked with Solomon Islands Government to develop minerals policy and as well as improving the role of women in the most remote communities be better involved in decisions around their natural resources. She is currently working with PNG women on efforts to link sustainable management of mangroves to economic benefits at a larger scale through mechanisms such as the blue carbon economy.听Robyn is undertaking her PhD at University of Queensland School of Social Sciences on Women in Conservation.
Ruth Nyambura, African Ecofeminist Collective
Ruth Nyambura is a feminist political ecologist and activist from Kenya working on the intersections of gender, economy and ecological justice. Ruth is a founding member and the convener of the African Ecofeminists Collective and also works with several regional agrarian and climate justice movements to track and challenge the privatization of the agrarian commons. She describes her work and activism that uses a feminist political ecology lens to critically engage with the continent鈥檚 and global food systems, challenging neoliberal models of agrarian transformation and amplifying the revolutionary work of small-holder farmers of Africa鈥攖he majority of whom are women鈥攁s well as rural agrarian movements offering concrete anti-capitalist alternatives to the ecological, economic and democratic crisis facing the continent.
Sandra van Niekerk, Public Services International
Sandra van Niekerk is based in Cape Town, South Africa, and is currently working for the Public Services International (PSI) on climate change and the public sector in a number of different countries in Africa. She has a long history in the trade union movement in South Africa, working for many years as the National Education Officer for the South African Municpal Workers' Union (SAMWU).听
Sarah Gammage, Latin America Policy Director, The Nature Conservancy
Sarah Gammage is an environmental economist with more than 25 years of experience working on economic development in Latin America, Africa and Asia. She is the Director of Policy and Government Relations for The Nature Conservancy. She has a PhD in Environmental Economics from the Institute of Social Studies in The Hague and a Masters鈥 degree in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
She has听worked with and for a number of international and multilateral organizations including the International Institute for Environment and Development, Women麓s Edge, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, the International Labour Organisation, the International Center for Research on Women and UN Women. She has written academic and policy research articles on gender and trade, poverty, labor markets, migration and environment.
Seemin Qayum, Acting Chief, Economic Empowerment and Policy Advisor, Sustainable Development, UN Women
Seemin Qayum is UN Women鈥檚 Acting Chief for Economic Empowerment and Policy Advisor on Sustainable Development. Her areas of interest within the broad domain of gender equality and sustainable development are the articulation of sustainable livelihoods, access to energy and resources, social and ecological resilience, and the continuum from unpaid care to decent work. She was a co-lead author of the first Global Gender and Environment Outlook, UNEP鈥檚 flagship assessment, co-author of UN Women鈥檚 Leveraging Co-Benefits between Gender Equality and Climate Action for Sustainable Development and co-coordinated the production of the World Survey on the Role of Women in Development: Gender Equality and Sustainable Development. Prior to joining UN Women, she was advisor and consultant in the fields of environment, development, gender, and culture for the United Nations Development Programme, Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Ford Foundation and Asia Society, among others. Her publications include The Bolivia Reader: History, Culture, Politics (co-edited, Duke University Press, 2018) and Cultures of Servitude: Modernity, Domesticity, and Class in India (with Raka Ray, Stanford University Press, 2009).
Shahra Razavi, Director of Social Protection, ILO
Shahra Razavi is the Director of the Social Protection Department at the International Labour Organization (since February 2020). Before joining the ILO she was Chief of the Research and Data Section at UN Women (2013-2020), and Senior Researcher at the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, UNRISD (1993-2013), working at the interface of gender, social policy, social protection and the care economy.
Sonia Maria Dias, WIEGO Waste Specialist
Dr Sonia Dias听is a sociologist with a PhD in Political Sciences.听 Active in the field of solid waste management since the mid 1980鈥檚, she has played a key role in helping to integrate the social aspects into the technical planning of waste collection and recycling in Brazil. She is Women in Informal Employment Globalizing and Organizing - WIEGO鈥檚 global waste expert. She leads the Gender and Waste Project with the Brazilian National Movement of Waste Pickers
Dimitris Stevis, Professor of World Politics at Colorado State University, USA
In broad terms my research and practice examines the political economy of labour and the environment, with particular attention to power and justice. I am currently coediting (with Nora R盲thzel and David Uzzell) the Handbook of Environmental Labor Studies (Palgrave Springer, 2021) and completing a book on the global history and politics of just transitions. I am continuing work on as a member of the and on the organizing committee of the . With respect to socioecological justice I co-convene the of the Earth System Governance Project and codirect the . I am also pursuing collaborative research on the , the labor politics of environmental organizations, global union organizations, systems of sustainable production and consumption and 鈥榟idden figures鈥 in global environmental politics.
Sarah Cook, Director, UNSW Institute for Global Development
Dr听Sarah Cook听is the Director of the Institute for Global Development at UNSW after听almost 10 years leading research institutes within the UN - as the Director of UNICEF鈥檚 Office of Research / Innocenti Research Centre, in Florence, Italy and from 2009-2015 as Director, United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) in Geneva. In these roles, she has led research on transformative social and economic policy, shaping debates in the UN on equity, sustainability and social justice, and engaging at the intersection of research, policy and programming. 听Her own research has focused primarily on China, following its social and economic transformations over more than 3 decades.听Sarah鈥檚听research interests听revolve around the relationship between economic and social policy in development contexts,听补苍诲听have included听research on听social policy听补苍诲听protection, labour markets and migration, and gender. From 1996-2009 Sarah was a Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex, and she also听spent 5 years as a Programme Officer with the Ford Foundation in Beijing. She received her PhD in Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.听
Somali Cerise, Research to Practice Associate, UNSW Institute for Global Development
Somali is a Research to Practice Associate at the Institute for Global Development at UNSW and the Lead for the Gender and Just Transitions project. She has a background in gender and development and human rights, previously working as a Research Specialist at UN Women and Gender Project Coordinator the OECD Development Centre. 听EAs a Research Specialist at UN Women, she led a global review of implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action and also developed the first global report monitoring the Sustainable Development Goals from a gender perspective. Prior to the OECD, Somali worked at the End Violence Against Women Coalition and the Australian Human Rights Commission. She is currently an Adjunct Associate Lecturer in the Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences at the University of Sydney, and a board member of ACON. She has a BA (UTS) and a Master of Science (Human Rights) (London School of Economics and Political Science).
Ushana Jayasuriya, Research Assistant, UNSW Institute for Global Development
Ushana is a Scientia PhD Candidate at University of New South Wales. Her research is in philosophy, exploring climate justice and just transitions. She focuses on how the transition to renewable energy could have positive outcomes for indigenous peoples and is hoping to engage with community to understand their priorities and conceptions of a just transition. Ushana is currently a research assistant on the UNSW Gender and Just Transitions project for the Institute for Global Development.