Find your prospective supervisor, research project or research group, collaborator or expert by searching APSB Researcher Profiles. Use keywords to view their research interests, publications and areas of expertise.
The Find a Researcher database contains listings of University of Utah faculty and graduate students who are research topic experts and potential research collaborators. You may search for people by entering names, research keywords, departments, international experience keywords and equipment. For a more complete view of international research and activities.
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Dr Catherine Abou-Nemeh
Associate Professor of History Studies
Catherine Abou-Nemeh is Lecturer in Early Modern History. Prior to joining Victoria University of Wellington in 2013, Catherine taught in the Department of History at Princeton University. She has also held visiting research fellowships at the École Normale Supérieure, Paris (2008–2009); the Scaliger Institute, Leiden University (2009); and the Edward Worth Library in Dublin (2011). In 2012, She was Dibner Research Fellow in the History of Science and Technology at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. In 2016 she was a Visiting Scholar in the History Department at Harvard University. She has presented her research at universities around the world, including at Princeton, Harvard, Caltech, Johns Hopkins, Cambridge, Oxford, Sydney, Queensland and Auckland. She is completing a book manuscript on the Dutch natural philosopher and lens-maker Nicolas Hartsoeker (1656-1725).
Daniele Abreu e Lima
Professor of the Chinese-Japanese-Korean Language Teaching Research Office
I am an architect and urban planner with a double master degree (Arch. Urb.) from the University of Sao Paulo (USP), there I started my academic career which began with a boost from winning the very prestigious ‘Opera Prima’ (IX Paviflex Award) award for best architecture graduate work in Brazil in 1996. I assumed my first position as Senior Lecturer in 2001 still in Brazil. For the first ten years of my graduation I worked both in practice and in academia. In 2005, following Einstein’s Formula for Happiness (“a calm and modest life”), I moved to NZ and was able to fully dedicate myself to an academic life, working first for The Auckland University then, VUW. My practice work in Brazil centered not only in a architecture office. I worked for five years coordinating cultural grants to artists and museums working closely with major Brazilian museums. I have maintained an active interest in cultural engagement and in NZ I have worked volunteering in a number of Latin American matters such as the AiLaSA (Ass. Iberian &Latin American Studies of Australasia), the NZ Latin American Film Festival and at the Brazilian Embassy of Wellington. Modern Architecture has been the central focus of my research interest since my first publication in 1997. My particular theme around this rather colossal topic of MA, relates to de adaptation of modernism to the climate and culture of a given country. I developed my Master’s thesis around this topic and I am currently developing my PhD thesis round it. When I arrived in NZ, I participated in founding the national DoCoMoMo (Documentation and Conservation of Modern Movement), an international association that has national chapters in more than sixty countries worldwide. Apart from architecture, another passion of mine has been cinema. The first area led me to my professional career, the second led to numerous contributions professional and artistic as art director and producer of a number of awarded shorts. In NZ I have participated on and off in many such endeavors and produced a number films for the 48 Hours film fest and documentaries concerning architecture in NZ. Current research projects I am currently working on research a project that investigates modern architecture in peripheral countries focused on the Brazilian and the New Zealand house. My second project has been exploring cinema and visions of architecture in movies and animes.
Dr Ryan Admiraal
Senior Professor of Data Institute
Professor Gordon Anderson
Professor Faculty of Law
Gillian Ansell
Professor of Art Institute
Dr Kamal Badar
Postdoctoral Research FellowSchool of Management
Gillian Ansell
Associate ProfessorSchool of Music
Associate Professor Susan Ballard
Senior Lecturer in Software EngineeringSchool of Engineering and Computer Science
Associate Professor Jonathan Barrett
Visiting Professor, School of Business Administration
Christina Barton
Executive Vice President and Professor of Art Institute
Samuel Becher
Time Lecturer of Faculty Reserve Center
Dr Binbin Liu
Time Lecturer of Faculty Reserve Center
Dr Carolyn Boulton
Distinguished Professor of the School of Business Administration
Dr Limin Chen
Senior LecturerSchool of Languages and Cultures
Dr. John Davies
Executive Dean of the School of Business Administration and a member of the Academic Committee.
John Davies joined the Department of Business Administration at Victoria University of Wellington in 1995, following prior work at the Welsh Regional Management Centre (now the University of South Wales); in local government; and as an operational researcher in the cable industry. He retired from his Victoria Business School/Faculty of Commerce roles of Associate Dean (International & Executive Education), and Director of Academic Programmes Accreditation, in 2017, having also served a five-year term as Chairman of the Management Group in the 1990s, and as Head of Victoria University of Wellington Management School (VMS) from 2005 to 2009.
In 2020, he began to serve as the Executive Dean of the School of Business Administration and a member of the Academic Committee.
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