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Currently contracted with UNESCO in a team to conduct a feasibility study for a Global Observatory for Sport, Physical Education and Physical Activity, funded by the Swiss Government. the team has divided responsibilities. My personal remit includes global physical education and more detailed information gathering from Europe.
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Felice Simonelli is a Senior Research Fellow and Head of Policy Evaluation at CEPS. He is also an Associate Researcher at the Research Centre in Industrial Organization and Finance of LUISS “Guido Carli” University (Rome).
Expert in better regulation, analysis of public policies and business competitiveness with over ten years of professional experience, Felice provided research and advisory services to various public institutions, trade associations, and private companies. He completed many research projects in the field of impact assessment, policy evaluation and competitiveness analysis for EU institutions.
With regard to impact assessments, he was part, inter alia, of the CEPS team conducting a study on a possible furniture product initiative for DG ENTR, a study on the structures of excise duty on alcohol and alcoholic beverages and a study on the general arrangements for excise duty for DG TAXUD, and a study on the EIB external lending mandate for DG ECFIN. He also managed a study on the reform of the EU InfoSoc Directive for the European Parliament. With regard to evaluation, he was the manager of the study on aggressive tax planning for DG TAXUD, the interim evaluation of ISA2 programme for DG DIGT, the mid-term evaluation of the Hercule III Programme for OLAF, and the implementation assessment of the InfoSoc Directive for the European Parliament. With regard to business competitiveness, he took part and managed several edition of the study on energy prices and costs in energy intensive industries for DG GROW, the Cumulative Cost Assessment of the EU aluminium, ceramics, glass and steel industries for DG GROW/ENTR and the study on the competitiveness of the renewable energy sector for DG ENER. He also took part in many other policy evaluation assignments for DG GROW, DG FISMA, DG TAXUD, DG ECFIN, EASME and the European Parliament.
He has extensive experience in data collection and analysis across EU countries, including conducting interviews and surveys and planning stakeholder consultations on behalf of the European Commission. He was part of the team conducting open public consultations in several large better regulation studies.
Felice was a Visiting Ph.D. Student at The Buchmann Faculty of Law (Tel Aviv University) and a Visiting Researcher at Berkeley Law (University of California) and published several papers on refereed journals. He holds a Ph.D. in Law and Economics from LUISS University, an LL.M. cum laude in Law and Economics from Erasmus University of Rotterdam and from Ghent University, a M.Sc. cum laude in Law and Economics and a Bachelor cum laude in Economics and Business from LUISS.
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Dr Dawn Walsh is an Assistant Professor in the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin. She is currently the lead researcher on an Irish Research Council funded project which examines the role of independent commissions, such as electoral and human rights commissions, in peace processes. This project includes the creation of a dataset of such commissions from over six hundred intra-state peace agreements.
She previously held an Irish Research Council-Marie Curie Career Development fellowship which funded her to carry out research on Northern Ireland, Iraq, Bosnia, North Macedonia, and Moldova while based at the University of Birmingham and Dublin City University. While at the University of Birmingham Dr Walsh was one of the contributors to the new Political Agreements in Intra-state Conflicts dataset.
She received her PhD from Dublin City University in 2014. Her work has been published in academic journals including Regional and Federal Studies, Ethnopolitics and Irish Political Studies. She is the author of two books - ‘Territorial Self-Government as a Conflict Management Tool’ (Palgrave, 2018) and ‘Independent Commissions and Contentious Issues in Post-Good Friday Agreement Northern Ireland’ (Palgrave, 2017).
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I am an Associate Professor in Criminology at the University of Kent and the Chair of the British Society of Criminology's Women, Crime and Criminal Justice Network. My areas of research are: homophobic hate crime; misogyny/gender hate crime; domestic violence (victimisation and prevention policies); sexual violence (particularly campus-based sexual violence); global gender-based violence; and victim policy. I am a Trustee for a Domestic Violence and Abuse charity, and have worked with a range of criminal justice organisations linked to my research areas. Most recently, I worked with the UK Office for Students on Tackling Sexual Misconduct in Higher Education.
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Abdullah Al Bahrani is the Director of the Center for Economic Education and an Associate Professor of Economics at Northern Kentucky University (NKU). His Ph.D. is in Economics, specifically in the area of market design and consumer behavior. Abdullah’s research is in financial market, financial education, and the impact of financial behaviors on economic outcomes. As director of the Center for Economic Education he works closely with policymakers to help develop data driven policies. His most recent work is with the Treasurer of the State of Kentucky helping develop policies that will increase financial capabilities and financial understanding.
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I am an energy economist and work as a lecturer in University College Dublin and as a lead in the energy economics team in the UCD Energy Institute. My research involves analysis of energy policy - energy efficiency, renewable electricity, electricity markets and pricing - and climate change policy.