The Latin American Association of Social Medicine and Collective Health condemns the attempted coup in progress in El Salvador

On Sunday, February 9 in the afternoon, the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, broke into the Congress building accompanied by members of the Armed Forces and the National Civil Police. They entered armed with assault rifles, with the explicit purpose of intimidating the Congress, forcing them to approve a loan for 109 million dollars, destined for unjustified and incongruous purchases from companies of doubtful reputation, under penalty if not approved of an insurrection of the people against him. This was nothing more than an excuse to overwhelm and facilitate the dissolution of the congress and to be able to govern according to his will concentrating all the power, that is to say, to propitiate an “Autocoup” with unimaginable results.

The abusive use and manipulation of the Armed Forces and the National Civil Police strongly impacted the population, reminding them of the recent past characterized by military dictatorships, repression and total absence of the most elementary democratic freedoms, which resulted in a 20-year civil war with a balance of more than 80,000 dead, about 10,000 missing and half a million more people injured and disabled.

Such a scene,  not seen since 1992 when the peace agreements were signed, evidenced the fragile democracy that El Salvador lives, governed today by a fascist president who breaks with the secular state carrying out theatrical productions in which he “speaks with God ” who transfers direct and precise orders to him.  Bukele governs from social networks, summarily dismisses his subordinates with twitters, tramples human rights and puts in charge of public institutions family, friends and trusted employees of his companies, who have in common the ignorance and lack of suitability of their functions. To this is added a high degree of servitude and flattery of his intimate circle and followers of his party, who irreflexively celebrate any occurrence or outburst of the messianic president, who does not admit criticism or dissent of any kind for his actions and dictates.

The entire institutional and popular political spectrum, plus national and international public opinion, condemned these arbitrary and abusive acts that include the breaking of the constitutional order and the rule of law, the contempt and usurpation of other powers of the State, marginalization of dialogue, disqualification of all the sectors that oppose their dictatorial actions (including important associations of constitutional experts and judges,  the exclusion of transparency and the choice of the opprobrious path of authoritarianism, corruption and arrogance.

ALAMES supports and joins the call of Salvadoran social organizations, while calling on the international community and its militancy, to defend democracy and social conquests and to reject the absurd and inadmissible presidential call to insurrection.

We congratulate the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice for the admission of citizen requests for unconstitutionality that seek to condemn the actions of the council of ministers and the armed interruption of the President into Congress.

The Salvadoran social movement and ALAMES support the search for dialogue and participatory solutions to the security problem and other urgent issues for the country, such as water, pensions, the destruction of the Health Reform and many more that require the dismantling of the model neoliberal, as well as the strengthening of institutionality and the rule of law.

 Representation of ALAMES-El Salvador, San Salvador February 12, 2020.

[ALAMES is a PHM affiliate]

Ecuador sees 10th day of anti-austerity protests

At least five people have been killed in unrest as demonstrators push for President Lenin Moreno to repeal a law that ended a 40-year-old fuel subsidy.

In Ecuador, there has been more fighting between police and indigenous communities as thousands joined the 10th day of anti-austerity protests.

Demonstrators want President Lenin Moreno to repeal a law that ended a 40-year-old fuel subsidy.

At least five people have been killed in the unrest.

 

Source

Turkish scientist gets 15-month sentence for publishing environmental study

A Turkish food engineer and human rights activist was sentenced yesterday to 15 months in jail after publishing the results of a study he and other scientists had done that linked toxic pollution to a high incidence of cancer in western Turkey.

Bülent Şık, former deputy director of the Food Safety and Agricultural Research Center at Akdeniz University, was convicted of disclosing classified information after he published the results as a four-part series in a Turkish newspaper in April 2018. “Bülent Şık fulfilled his duty as a citizen and a scientist and he used his right to freedom of expression,” his lawyer, Can Atalay, said in his closing statement before the sentence was handed down by a court in Istanbul.

The study was commissioned by Turkey’s Ministry of Health to see whether there was a connection between toxicity in soil, water, and food and the high incidence of cancer in western Turkey. Working for 5 years, Şık and a team of scientists discovered dangerous levels of pesticides, heavy metals, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in multiple food and water samples from several provinces in western Turkey. Water in several residential areas was also found to be unsafe for drinking because of lead, aluminum, chrome, and arsenic pollution.

In 2015, after the study was completed, Şık testified that he urged government officials to take action during a meeting to discuss the findings. After 3 years of inaction, Şık testified, he decided to publish his findings in Cumhuriyet, an Istanbul newspaper that has been a high-profile target in the government’s crackdown on media. (Bülent Şık is the brother of Ahmet Şık, an opposition member of Parliament and former investigative journalist at Cumhuriyet who was previously jailed for criticizing the government).

“What is quite striking in this case is that the Ministry of Health did not argue that what Bülent Şık published was not true,” says Milena Buyum, a senior campaigner on Turkey at Amnesty International in London. Instead, Buyum says, the government’s assertion that the information was confidential suggests there was a real danger to health.

Under Turkish law, Şık could have avoided jail and received a suspended sentence by expressing regret. But he declined to do so when asked by the judge.

“[H]iding data obtained from research prevents us from having sound discussions about the solutions,” Şık said in a statement to the court provided to Science by his lawyer. “In my articles, I aimed to inform the public about this public health study, which was kept secret, and prompt the public authorities who should solve the problems to take action.”

Şık, who lost his university position in 2016 after signing a petition calling for peace between Turkish forces and Kurdish militants in southeast Turkey, remains free pending an appeal. Scores of Turkish scientists have been fired from their jobs, prosecuted, or served time in jail in a crackdown on dissent that followed a failed coup attempt in 2016.

Source: ScienceMag

Corporate capture of global governance: The World Economic Forum (WEF)-UN partnership agreement is a dangerous threat to UN System

(English) Español abajo

Corporate capture of global governance: The World Economic Forum (WEF)-UN partnership agreement is a dangerous threat to UN System

The UN Secretary General and the World Economic Forum signed on June 13 a Strategic Partnership Agreement for the implementation of the 2030 agenda (SDG), this agreement means for us a formalization of the corporate capture of the UN and a path towards an increasingly privatized and less democratic global governance. Multistakeholder global governance is expanding internationally in the fields of health, education, food creating new  business opportunities for companies while minimizing the protection of  human rights. It is necessary to denounce this agreement and organize ourselves to end this extension of the privatization of democracy in the world.

We invite all organizations to join this initiative, sign here before September 20th.

In solidarity,

Sofia Monsalve (FIAN-International) and Gonzalo Berrón (TNI)

(Español) 

Captura corporativa de la gobernanza global: el acuerdo con el Foro Económico Mundial (WEF) es una peligrosa amenaza para el sistema ONU

Compas

La Secretaria General de la ONU y el Foro Económico Mundial firmaron el pasado 13 de junio un Acuerdo de Asociación Estratégica para la implementación de la agenda 2030 (ODS), este acuerdo significa para nosotros una formalización de la captura corporativa de la ONU y un camino hacia una gobernanza global cada vez más privatizada y menos democrática. Ejemplos de la gobernanza global “multistakeholder” se expanden en la gestión global de la Salud, la Educación, la alimentación y otros ofreciendo oportunidades de negocios a las empresas y cercenando los derechos humanos, es necesario denunciar este acuerdo y organizarnos para poner fin a esta extensión de la privatización de la democracia en el mundo.

Invitamos a todas las organizaciones a sumarse a esta iniciativa, firme aquí link antes del próximo viernes 20 de septiembre.

Sofia Monsalve (FIAN-International) and Gonzalo Berrón (TNI)

On the situation of migrants in the Mediterranean area

A version in Spanish is available below

International Association of Health Policy/ Asociación Internacional de Políticas de Salud (IAHP)

On the situation of migrants in the Mediterranean area

  1. Health and life protection are fundamental human rights protected by the UN Declaration of Rights and by all international treaties.
  2. Likewise, international treaties protect the lives of people in danger in the seas, oblige the rescue and attention of the shipwrecked, and their landing in a safe harbor.
  3. On the other hand, international law establishes protection systems for people who make use of the right of asylum.
  4. All these rights are being systematically violated in the case of migrants who, in conditions of great danger to their health and life, cross the Mediterranean fleeing a country like Libya that suffers a continuous civil war and that violates the most elementary rights of people.
  5. It should not be forgotten that all the countries were formed by processes of migration throughout history and that, therefore, no country has an absolute right to any territory.
  6. The actions of the European Union are unworthy and continuously violate its own laws, leaving migrants at the mercy of luck and with serious risks for their health and life. Especially the Italian minister Salvini adopts xenophobic and practically fascist attitudes. We expect the Italian and/or European justice to take action concerning his acts.

For what is mentioned above, IAHP demands the EU countries to organize a system of rescue and reception of migrants who cross the Mediterranean, which will be coherent to the international solidarity. We call on the member states to act in order to prevent even more losses of lives. We ask citizens, especially health professionals, to make their voices heard in order to demand from the European states a firm commitment to health and life.

 

Internacional Association of Health Policy/ Asociación Internacional de Políticas de Salud (IAHP) ante la situación que se vive con los migrantes en el área del Mediterráneo

 Señalamos lo siguiente:

  1. La salud y la protección de la vida son derechos humanos fundamentales protegidos por la Declaración de Derechos de la ONU y por todos los tratados internacionales.
  2. Asimismo, los tratados internacionales protegen la vida de las personas en peligro en los mares y obligan al salvamento y atención a los náufragos y su desembarco en un puerto seguro.
  3. Por otro lado, la legalidad internacional establece sistemas de protección de las personas que hacen uso del derecho de asilo.
  4. Todos estos derechos están siendo sistemáticamente vulnerados en el caso de los migrantes que en condiciones de gran peligro para su salud y su vida atraviesan el Mediterráneo huyendo de un país como Libia que sufre una guerra civil continua y que vulnera los derechos más elementales de las personas.
  5. Conviene no olvidar que todos los países del mundo son el resultado de multitud de migraciones producidas a lo largo de la Historia y que por lo tanto ningún país tiene un derecho absoluto y sin limites a ningún territorio.
  6. En este caso la actuación de la Unión Europea resulta indigna y vulnera de manera continuada sus propias leyes, dejando a los migrantes a merced de la suerte y con graves riesgos para su salud y su vida. Especialmente lo es la de Italia y su ministro Salvini que adopta actitudes xenófobas y prácticamente fascista y al que esperamos que la justicia, italiana o de la UE, haga pagar sus responsabilidades.

Por todo ello desde la IAHP exigimos a los países de la UE que organicen un sistema ordenado de rescate y recepción de las personas migrantes que atraviesan el Mediterráneo que sea consecuente con la necesaria solidaridad internacional, y llamamos a los países miembros a actuar activamente para prevenir las perdidas de vidas y salud y a los ciudadanos y ciudadanas, muy especialmente a los/as profesionales de la salud, a hacer oír su voz para  exigir a las administraciones públicas un compromiso decidido con la salud y la vida.

The IAHP regrets the death of our colleague and comrade David Sanders

The unexpected death of our dear friend, colleague and comrade David Sanders is a terrible shock for the international movement struggling for health.

David was a leading international figure already in the 80’s when he published his first book “The Struggle for Health: Medicine and the Politics of Underdevelopment” which became soon the guiding light to public health and health policy for many – then young – scientists and activists all over the world. The International Association of Health Policy [IAHP] founded in the late 70’s by eminent academics and militants attracted his interest. Under diverse but parallel pathways David and IAHP met during the process of founding People’s Health Movement, IAHP being one of its founding organisations.   During all this period up to today David participated in several IAHP/ALAMES conferences sharing his academic wisdom and his dedication to change the world and inspiring all participants.

David Sanders will be missed in all possible respects. As a good and beloved friend with his warn humour, as the inspiring leader of all the international movement struggling for health, as the respected academic combining wisdom and militant activism.

On behalf of all IAHP members and activists we express our deep and sincere condolences to his family and close friends and we promise to continue his struggle for health, especially this difficult period, were the ideas of environmental destruction and slavery are dominating and serving the eager for profit making.

La IAHP lamenta la muerte de nuestro colega y compañero David Sanders

La muerte inesperada de nuestro querido amigo, colega y compañero David Sanders, es un terrible shock para el movimiento internacional que lucha por la salud.

David ya era una figura, un líder internacional en los años 80 cuando publicó su primer libro “La lucha por la salud: la medicina y las políticas del subdesarrollo“, que pronto se convirtió en la luz guía, para muchos jóvenes, profesionales, científicos y activistas, en el campo de la salud pública y las políticas de salud.

La Asociación Internacional de Políticas de Salud [IAHP] fundada a fines de los años 70 por académicos y militantes eminentes,atrajo su interés. Bajo caminos diversos pero paralelos, David e IAHP se reunieron durante el proceso de fundación del Movimiento de Salud de las Personas, siendo la IAHP una de sus organizaciones fundadoras. Durante todo este período hasta hoy, David participó en varias conferencias de IAHP / ALAMES compartiendo su sabiduría académica y su dedicación para cambiar el mundo e inspirando a todos los participantes.

Se echará de menos a David Sanders en todos los aspectos posibles. Como un buen y querido amigo, con su capacidad de humor, como líder inspirador de todo el movimiento internacional de lucha por la salud, como académico respetado que combinaba la sabiduría y el activismo militante.

En nombre de todos los miembros y activistas de IAHP, expresamos nuestras sinceras condolencias a su familia y a sus amigos y compañeros y compañeras cercanas y prometemos continuar su lucha por la salud, especialmente en este período difícil, donde las ideas de destrucción ambiental y esclavitud, dominan y sirven a los ambiciosos de obtener ganancias.

Prison Sentencing of Turkish Doctors for Calling War a “Public Health Problem” is an Egregious Miscarriage of Justice

NEW YORK – Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) strongly condemned the sentencing today of the leaders of the Turkish Medical Association (TMA) and called for the court’s judgment to be overturned and the charges to be dismissed.

“This gratuitous court decision is a new low in the attacks on doctors and the practice of health care, which have now become commonplace in Turkey,” said Donna McKay,executive director of PHR. “The sentencing of doctors who have bravely spoken out on the impact of war on the wellbeing of innocent civilians is an affront to both freedom of speech and the critical role medical professionals play in highlighting situations that pose risks to public health and the delivery of health care. War has extraordinary health consequences. This unwarranted sentence is clearly intended to silence and intimidate the TMA and any medical professionals in Turkey who dare to speak out.”

The decision was delivered by the 32nd High Criminal Court in Ankara in response to the declaration by the Central Council Members of the TMA that “war is a public health problem” in a statement delivered on January 24, 2018. Subsequently, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan made a speech calling the TMA “terrorist lovers” and disparaging its anti-war stance. On January 26, 2018, three members of the TMA were arrested without charge.

After pro-government unions called for charges against the TMA, the head prosecutor in Ankara filed a criminal complaint against the organization. In addition, another lawsuit was filed against the TMA’s leaders demanding that they be dismissed from their positions on the grounds that they acted beyond the scope of the organization’s mission.

After last year’s arrests, PHR, a longtime partner of the TMA, called for the immediate release of the TMA members and said the harassment was a blatant attempt to intimidate a credible civil society group. The TMA is an internationally respected organization, and is the Turkish affiliate of the World Medical Association.

“We have worked for years with the TMA, the largest association of doctors in Turkey, and value them as professional partners in promoting public health and human rights,” said Vincent Iacopino, MD, PhD, senior medical advisor for PHR. “Efforts to intimidate and silence Turkish doctors are outrageous and unacceptable, especially when backed by the Turkish government. We call on Turkish authorities to overturn this egregious decision and halt the intimidation campaign against doctors – in the streets, in the media, and in the courts. The Turkish government has a responsibility to ensure the protection of internationally recognized freedoms and rights, as ratified by Turkey.”

Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) is a New York-based advocacy organization that uses science and medicine to prevent mass atrocities and severe human rights violations. Learn more here.

Paper: Why is public health care better?

Viva Salud, a Belgian ngo, just finished a new paper on the threats of privatizations in the health sector.

In their new paper “Why is public health care better” you’ll learn:

  • why privatisation causes bigger inequality in access to health care
  • why privatisation is often more expensive on a long term
  • why privatisation is not more efficient
  • why privatisation doesn’t mean better quality
  • why privatisation means less government control
  • why privatisation means less availability of health care workers and worse working conditions
  • what kind of health care system we would like to promote
  • examples of successful social movements campaigns

The paper can be downloaded for free: 

English: http://en.vivasalud.be/news/paper-why-public-health-care-better

French: http://fr.vivasalud.be/news/dossier%C2%A0-pourquoi-les-soins-de-sant%C3%A9-publics-sont-meilleurs

Dutch: http://nl.vivasalud.be/news/paper-waarom-publieke-gezondheidszorg-beter

The paper deconstructs 6 often heard misconceptions about the supposed benefits of bringing the market into health care. Based on research and case studies from all over our planet, we learn why privatizations don’t lead to more efficiency, quality, health care workers nor equality.

The paper also shows hopeful examples of victories by social movements, and talks about the alternatives that we can demand.

Open Letter in Support of Prof. Füsun Üstel and All Other Academics in Turkey Facing Imprisonment for Advocating Peace

As members of academic communities around the world, we strongly condemn the sentencing of Professor Füsun Üstel of Galatasaray University in İstanbul to 15 months in prison. Prof. Füsun Üstel was charged with “propagandizing for a terrorist organization” (Article No. 7/2 of Turkey’s Anti-Terror Law No. 3713), because she, together with over two thousand other academics in Turkey, signed the Academics for Peace statement “We will not be a party to this crime,” which criticized military actions in the Kurdish regions of the country.[1] Prof. Füsun Üstel was sentenced last year, but rather than accept the decision and have her sentence suspended, she appealed and the sentence was upheld by the İstanbul Regional Appeals Court on March 3, 2019.

Of the 1387 hearings for signatories to the Academics for Peace statement to date, the cases of 141 academics have been decided. 102 of these academics were sentenced to 15 months; 15 academics to 27 months; 14 academics to 22 months; 5 academics to 18 months; and 5 academics to 25 months or more in prison.[2,3] Of these decisions, 37 were appealed and Prof. Füsun Üstel’s is the first among them to be decided, thus serving as a dangerous precedent. 124 other signatories are currently awaiting their first hearings.[4]

We call upon the Turkish government to immediately suspend the trials of all signatories to the Academics for Peace statement “We will not be a party to this crime.”

We call upon the authorities to immediately exonerate Professor Füsun Üstel and the other 140 academics sentenced to prison for petitioning their government.

We express our solidarity with the academics and students who are targeted by the regime in Turkey for exercising their freedom of speech and academic freedom and we call upon academics around the world to use all available means to support them[5], including freezing academic collaborations with complicit higher education institutions and universities that deliberately target academic freedom.[6,7]

*Authored by members of the Research Institute on Turkey and Academic Solidarity Network and posted for signatures on March 11, 2019. Intended recipients include the Permanent Representative of Turkey to the United Nations and Turkish Consulate General in New York, as well as Turkey’s Minister of Justice, Higher Education Council President, Minister of National Education, Prime Minister, and President.

Institution and Group Endorsements:
Research Institute on Turkey
Academic Solidarity Network
Forum Transregionale Studien
Article 19
Global Freedom of Expression, Columbia University
Academics for Peace – North America

[Scroll all the way down to add your signature. Your signature will not appear immediately, but the list will be periodically updated. Please share this letter with others as soon as possible]

*To be informed about future solidarity actions, contact solidarityacademics@gmail.com

[1] http://bianet.org/english/human-rights/170978-academics-we-will-not-be-a-party-to-this-crime
[2] https://bianet.org/english/freedom-of-expression/206037-court-of-appeal-upholds-first-prison-sentence-of-an-academic-for-peace
[3] Hearing statistics for Academics for Peace: goo.gl/b6NdZP
[3] https://bianet.org/english/freedom-of-expression/206037-court-of-appeal-upholds-first-prison-sentence-of-an-academic-for-peace
[4] For more information about the Academics for Peace trials, see https://afp.hypotheses.org/
[5] For a list of concrete ways academics can take action, see https://blog.apaonline.org/2016/08/04/seven-ways-you-can-support-academics-in-turkey/
[6] For information about freezing academic collaborations, see https://academicboycottofturkey.wordpress.com
[7] For a list of complicit institutions, see https://academicboycottofturkey.wordpress.com/complicit-universities/

SIGNATURES (The names of students in Turkey have been redacted for their safety)

Nobel Laureates
*Roald Hoffmann, Professor Emeritus, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1981
*Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Emeritus Professor at the Collège de France, Paris, France, Nobel Prize in Physics, 1997
*Torsten Wiesel, President Emeritus, Rockefeller University, New York, USA, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1981

1. Bruce Alberts, Chancellor’s Professor of Science and Education, University of California, San Francisco, USA
2. Axel Honneth, Jack C. Weinstein Professor for the Humanities, Department of Philosophy, Columbia University, USA
3. Seyla Benhabib, Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy, Yale University, USA
4. Étienne Balibar, Professeur émérite (philosophie), Université de Paris-Ouest, Anniversary Chair in Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University, London
5. Wendy Brown, Class of 1936 First Chair, Political Science, UC Berkeley, USA
6. Elazar Barkan, Professor of International and Public Affairs, Director Institute for the Study of Human Rights and SIPA Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy Concentration, Columbia University, NYC, USA
7. Joan W. Scott, Professor Emerita, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton NJ, USA
8. Sally Haslanger, Ford Professor of Philosophy and Women’s and Gender Studies, MIT, Boston, USA
9. Rahel Jaeggi, Professor of Philosophy, Humboldt Universität & Center for Humanities and Social Change, Berlin, Germany
10. Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Program of Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley, USA
11. David L. Phillips, Director of Peace building & Rights, ISHR, Columbia University, New York, USA
12. Eric Nestler, MD, PhD, Nash Family Professor of Neuroscience, Director, The Friedman Brain Institute, Dean for Academic and Scientific Affairs, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, USA
13. Prof.em. Elisabeth Rachlew, Physics Dept, Royal Inst. Techn., Stockholm, Sweden
14. Didier Fassin, James D. Professor, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, USA
15. Dr. Georges Khalil, Academic Coordinator, Forum Transregionale Studien, Germany
16. Nancy Fraser, Professor of Philosophy and Politics, New School for Social Research, USA
17. Timur Kuran, Professor of Economics and Political Science, and Gorter Family Professor of Islamic Studies, Duke University
18. Peter Niesen, Professor of Political Theory, University of Hamburg
19. Bernard E. Harcourt, Sulzbacher Professor of Law and Political Science, Columbia University, USA/Directeur d’études, EHESS, France
20. Timothy Mitchell, Professor, Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies, Columbia University, USA
21. Robin Celikates, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam/Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, USA
22. Jessica Winegar, Professor of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Chicago, USA
23. Dr. Eva von Redecker, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
24. Anthony O’Brien, English Department (ret.), Queens College, City University of New York, New York, USA
25. Anita Mehta, Leverhulme Visiting Professor, Oxford, United Kingdom
26. Professor Teresa Heffernan, Department of English, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, NS, CAN
27. Ben Brucato, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Justice Studies, Rhode Island College, Providence, RI, USA
28. Corey McCall, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Elmira College, Elmira, NY
29. Dr. Evangelos Ntontis, Lecturer in Psychology, School of Psychology, Politics, and Sociology, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK
30. Michael Rothberg, 1939 Society Chair in Holocaust Studies, UCLA, USA
31. Immanuel Ness, Political Science, Brooklyn College, City University of new York, New York, USA
32. Jean E. Howard, George Delacorte Professor in the Humanities, Columbia University, NYC, USA
33. Deniz Cenk Demir, Ph.D. Student. The University of Akron, Ohio, USA
34. Habibe Senturk, PhD student, University of Göttingen
35. Ward Keeler, Professor of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
36. Evan Moskowitz, doctoral student, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, United States
37. Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu, PhD student European University Institute, Florence
38. Lena Hande Plassmann, BA student, University of Düsseldorf
39. Sruti Bala, Associate Professor Theatre Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
40. Darin Barney, Grierson Chair in Communication Studies, McGill University
41. Eric Schliesser, Professor, University of Amsterdam
42. Daniel Loick, Fellow, Center for humanities and social change, Berlin, Germany
43. Suad Sakalli Gumus, Faculty, Saint Mary of the Woods College, Terre Haute, IN, USA
44. Robin S. Dillon, William Wilson Selfridge Professor of Philosophy, Lehigh University, Bethlehem PA USA
45. Gary Shapiro, Professor of Philosophy, University of Richmond, USA
46. Çağla E. Aykaç, Dr., Geneva University, Switzerland
47. Mehmet Kucukozer, Associate Professor of Sociology, Dutchess Community College, Poughkeepsie, USA
48. Dr. Martin E. Rosenberg, The New Centre For Research and Practice, USA
49. Anna Kende, Associate Professor, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
50. Chris Fox PhD, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Newman University, Wichita, KS, USA
51. Yolande Jansen, Associate Prof. of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam and Free University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
52. Dr. Bülent Somay, University of Oslo, Visiting Researcher, Norway
53. Gary L. Herstein, PhD, Independent Scholar, National Coalition of Independent Scholars, Johnston City, IL, USA
54. Eloe Kingma, Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA) at the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
55. Dirk Moses, Professor of Modern History, University of Sydney, Australia
56. Prof. Dr. Christian Neuhäuser, University of Dortmund, Germany
57. Ohannes Kılıçdağı, PhD , Harvard University, Visiting Scholar, Cambridge, USA
58. Hanh Vu, Graduate Student, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, LA, USA
59. Axel Mueller, Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
60. Ulrike Kiessling, MA, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
61. Dr Nikos Bozatzis, Assistant Professor in Social Psychology, Psychology Section, University of Ioannina, Greece
62. Dr Claire Launchbury, University of Leeds, UK
63. Secil Binboga, Doctoral Student, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
64. Dr. Rineke van Daalen, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
65. Anna Goppel, Associate Professor of Practical Philosophy, University of Bern
66. Kathy Kiloh, Assistant Professor, OCAD University, Toronto, Canada
67. Sarah Bracke, Professor, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
68. Anne Bannink, Associate Professor of Linguistics, English Dept, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
69. Nerissa Russell, Professor, Cornell University, USA
70. Nandini Deo, Associate Prof, Lehigh University, USA
71. Yahya Madra, Associate Professor of Economics, Drew University, Madison NJ, USA
72. Saygun Gokariksel, Assistant Professor, Istanbul, Turkey
73. Anastasia Thamnopoulou, Master Student, University of Bonn, Germany
74. Pinar Dinc, Dr., Lund University, Lund, Sweden
75. Dr Patricia Gerakopoulou, NKUA, Athens, Greece
76. Rasha Qass Yousef, Berlin
77. Stathis Papastathopoulos, Assistant Professor, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece
78. Balázs Váradi PhD, research associate, ELTE University, Budapest, Hungary
79. Felix Diaz, Associate Professor of Psychology, American University in Bulgaria, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria
80. Chris Monroe, Senior Lecturer, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
81. Hilal Unal, Graduate Student, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver
82. Ian Parker, Emeritus Professor of Management, University of Leicester, UK
83. Maria Nikolakaki, Associate Professor, University of Peloponnese, Greece
84. Lupicinio Íñiguez-Rueda, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain
85. Stef Craps, Professor of English Literature, Ghent University, Belgium
86. Burcu Ozdemir, Graduate Student, City University of New York, USA
87. David Mead, Professor of UK Human Rights Law, UNiversity of East Anglia, UK
88. Atagün Mert Kejanlıoğlu, Doctoral Student, McGill University, Montréal, QC, Canada
89. Ayça Çubukçu, Associate Professor in Human Rights, London School of Economics and Political Science
90. Sercan Cinar, PhD Candidate, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary
91. Nalan Erbil, PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
92. Patrizia Nanz, Professor of Transformative Sustainability Studies, University of Potsdam and Scientific Director of the IASS
93. Latif Tas, Dr., SOAS University of London, UK
94. Anthony Barthelemy, Associate Professor of English, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA
95. Andres Moles, PhD, Associate Professor, Central European University
96. Luz M. Martínez, profesora de Psicología Social, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain
97. Suvir Kaul, A M Rosenthal Professor, University of Pennsylvania
98. Hakki Tas, Research Fellow, German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg, Germany
99. Vasuki Nesiah, Assoc. Prof. of Practice, NYU
100. Sidney Luckett, Dr., University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
101. Professor Zohreh T. Sullivan, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, USA
102. Claudette Lauzon, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada
103. Patrick Bray, Ohio State University, Columbus USA
104. Mazen Masri, Senior Lecturer in Law, City University of London
105. Umut Özsu, Assistant Professor, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
106. Boyd van Dijk, Lecturer, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
107. Dr Nara Ganbat, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
108. Prof. John Waters, New York University, NYC, USA
109. Stephen Reicher, Wardlaw Professor of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, Scotland
110. Kamuran Akın, PhD Candidate, Humboldt University, Academic for Peace in Turkey
111. Audrey Bryan, School of Human Development, Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland.
112. Michael Fakhri, Associate Professor, University of Oregon School of Law, Eugene, USA
113. Michael Quayl, PhD, University of Limerick, Ireland
114. Adam Brown, Associate Professor of Psychology, New School for Social Research, NYC, USA
115. Markus Gunneflo, Senior Lecturer in Law, Lund University, Sweden
116. Sefa Ozalp, Lead Data Science Researcher, Cardiff University Hate Lab, Cardiff, UK
117. Mİne Gencel Bek, University of Siegen, Germany
118. Dies van der Linde, PhD Candidate, Royal Holloway, UK
119. Nil Mutluer, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany
120. Angela Naimou, Associate Professor, Clemson University, USA
121. Tolga Tören, University of Kassel, Germany
122. Leona Binz, Program Assistant, Scholars at Risk, New York, USA
123. Sahan Karatasli, Assistant Professor, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
124. Sherene Seikaly, Associate Professor, UCSB
125. Cesare Casarino, Professor of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, University of Minnesota, U.S.A.
126. Gijs van Donselaar, Assistant Professor, Philosophy, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
127. Pinar Ustel, Doctoral Student, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
128. Adam Sabra, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
129. Ceylan Begüm Yıldız, PhD Candidate, Birkbeck College/ School of Law, London/ UK
130. Joshua Schreier, Professor of History, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, USA
131. Tea Sindbaek Andersen, Associate Professor, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
132. Maja Kutlaca, Postdoctoral student, University of Osnabrueck, Germany
133. Sirry Alang , Assistant Professor, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania USA
134. Stefano Giani, Subject librarian, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
135. Cagdas Acar, Adjunct lecturer, Istanbul Arel University-Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey
136. Concepcion Fernandez, Universidad Complutebse, Madrid, España
137. Didem Aydin, Language Educator, RMIT University, Melbourne
138. Dr. Latife Akyüz Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
139. Engin Sustam, Associate Prof. University Paris 8, Paris, France
140. Clare Crowston, Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
141. John Christman, Professor of Philosophy, Pennsylvania State U., USA
142. [Name Redacted] Graduate Student, Hacettepe University, Ankara-Turkey
143. Alice Baroni, Postdoctoral fellow, University of Padova, Padova, Italy
144. Eddo Evink, Professor of Philosophy, Open University, Heerlen, the Netherlands / University of Groningen, the Netherlands
145. Vanessa E. Thompson, Dr.des., Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
146. Giuseppe Acconcia, University of Padova
147. Dr Honni van Rijswijk, Faculty of Law, UTS, Australia
148. Brian Crim, John Mills Turner Distinguished Chair in the Humanities, University of Lynchburg
149. Mai Taha, Assistant Professor, American University in Cairo, Egypt
150. Mehmet Yavuz, Graduate Student, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary
151. Sonya Andermahr, Reader in English, University of Northampton, UK
152. Dr Elena Loizidou, Reader in Law and Political Theory, Birkbeck College, University of London, London, UK
153. Dr Paul Hutchings, Psychology Programme Director, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, UK
154. Machiel Keestra, Ass. Professor of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
155. Athanasios Marvakis, Professor, Aristotle University Thessaloniki, GR
156. Oliver Kossack, Doctoral Student, European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder), Germany
157. Quoc Dang, Graduate Student, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Louisiana, United States
158. Sandra Penić, Postdoctoral researcher, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
159. Ozan Altinok, PhD candidate, WWU Münster, Germany
160. Till Junge, Postdoctoral Researcher, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
161. Ümmet Ceren, Turkey
162. Fereshteh Ahmadi, professor in sociology, University of Gavle, Sweden
163. Corey Payne, Department of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, USA)
164. Caren Kaplan, Professor, American Studies, UC Davis, USA
165. Nadje Al-Ali, Brown University, NY, USA
166. Simten Cosar, Visiting Scholar, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
167. Winnifred Louis, Professor, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
168. Nurhak Polat, Dr., Bremen University, Germany
169. Yudit Namer, PhD, Bielefeld University, Germany
170. Ekrem Duzen, PhD, Bielefeld University, Germany
171. Enise Şeyda Kapusuz, PhD researcher, EUI-HEC, Florence, Italy
172. Sertan Saral, PhD candidate, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
173. Barbara Biglia, Associate Professor, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain
174. Yael Navaro, Reader in Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge, UK
175. Dr Noemi Levy-Aksu, LSE, UK
176. Chandni Desai, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
177. Eef Masson, Assistant Professor Media Studies, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
178. Şeref Kavak, Dr., Lecturer in International Relations, Institut d’études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), France
179. Maho Aikawa, Doctoral Student, Clark University, Worcester, MA, U.S.A
180. Ayşe Polat, Graduate Student, University of Cambridge, London, UK
181. Siddharth Soni, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
182. Övül Ö. Durmusoglu, Curator, Berlin, Germany
183. Halil Ibrahim Yenigun, Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
184. Cynthia Willett, Professor, Emory University, Atlanta, Ga, USA
185. Johanna Ray Vollhardt, Clark University, Worcester, MA, USA
186. Jesse Benn, PhD student/teaching assistant, UW-Madison, USA
187. Yvonne Groseil, PhD. New York, NY National Coalition of Independent Scholars
188. Bonnie Honig, professor, Brown University, Providence RI, USA
189. Hugh Miller, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, USA
190. H. Selda Aksoy- Psychological and Psychiatric Anthropology Master Degree and Shamanic Healer& Reiki Practitioner
191. Monica Moreno Figueroa, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK
192. Mary Louise Adams, Professor, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
193. Christopher Dole, Professor, Amherst College, Amherst, MA, USA
194. Mesadet Maria Sozmen, PhD student, University of California Santa Barbara, USA
195. Jeffrey Flynn, Associate Professor, Fordham University, New York, NY, USA
196. Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Professor, Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
197. Özge Savaş, PhD Candidate, University of Michigan, MI, USA
198. A. Naomi Paik, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA
199. Emily Gilbert, Canadian Studies and Geography, University of Toronto
200. C. E. Emmer, Professor of Philosophy, Emporia State University, KS, USA
201. Peter Steggals, Postdoctoral research fellow, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK
202. Dr. Richard Yanowitz, independent scholar, Hamden CT USA
203. Nihan Aksakallı Associated Professor Oral Pathology, Istanbul University Institute of Oncology
204. R. Perez Leon UNAM, Mexico
205. Wilson Valentín-Escobar, Associate Professor, Hampshire College, Amherst, MA, USA
206. Rakshi Rath, Assistant Professor, JSLH, India
207. Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M University, Houston, USA
208. Irina Ceric, Instructor, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Vancouver, Canada
209. Michael Großbach, Dr. rer. nat, Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien, Hannover, Germany
210. [Name redacted], PhD Student, Izmir, Turkey
211. Zachary Levenson, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, USA
212. Necati Ogur Yuzbasioglu New England Kurdish Association
213. Silvia Hirschi, BSc (Hons) student Social Psychology, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
214. Dr. Sherry L Bryant, Independent Scholar, National Coalition of Independent Scholars, Chicago, IL, USA
215. Thaddeus Metz, Distinguished Professor, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
216. Hilal Celikkaya, Graduate Student, TU Dresden, Dresden, Germany
217. Maria Bates, Professor, Pierce College, USA
218. Dr Anne Templeton, Lecturer in Social Psychology, University of Edinburgh, UK
219. Eirini Avramopoulou, Assistant Professor, Panteion University, Athens, Greece
220. Gerasimos Kakoliris, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Athens, Greece
221. Olav Eikeland, Professor, Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway.
222. Nihat Kotluk, PhD, Independent Researcher, Educational Sciences
223. Dr Helen Kara, Director, We Research It Ltd, and Fellow, Academy of Social Sciences, UK
224. Tiziano Latini – MiBAC Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali – Italy
225. Simeon Newman, PhD candidate, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA
226. Alireza Behtoui professor Stockholm University
227. Armanc Yildiz, PhD Candidate, Harvard University
228. Etienne Copeaux, historian, independant researcher, France
229. Erol Gelenbe, Imperial College London
230. Jennifer Marchant, Conservator of Antiquities, Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, UK
231. Dr. Joel Feliu, Professor Titular, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Catalonia.
232. Alisa Lebow, Reader in Film Studies, University of Sussex, UK
233. Tobias Smith, PhD student, UC Davis, Davis, CA
234. Umberto Albarella, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
235. Olga S. Hünler, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Bremen, Germany
236. Georgios Kesisoglou, Ph.d, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
237. Nicola Perugini, Lecturer in International Relations, Edinburgh, University of Edinburgh
238. Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes, Professor, University of Amsterdam, NL
239. Leshu Torchin, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, University of St Andrews, UK
240. Luke Robinson, Lecturer, University of Sussex
241. [Name redacted] PhD Candidate, Social Psychology, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey
242. Yoldas Sahan, Master Student, University of Bergen, Faculty of medicine in Global Health department
243. Darja Klingenberg, Dr. des, Institut for Sociology, Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany
244. Celine Cantat, Research Fellow, CEU, Budapest, Hungary
245. Emre Çetin Gürer, PhD Canditate, Villanova University, USA
246. Ayşe Öncü, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Sabancı University, Istanbul, Turkey
247. Erdem Evren, Post-doctoral Researcher, Leibniz-ZMO, Berlin, Germany
248. Elisabeth Rachlew, Prof. em., Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
249. Bengisu Yilmaz, PhD Candidate, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania
250. Catherine Haslam, Professor, School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Australia
251. Dr Renée Bleau, Independent Scholar, Glasgow, UK
252. Gerard Wiegers, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Amsterdam, NL
253. Keith Wilson, Dr., University of Oslo, Norway
254. Sevgi Dogan, Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy
255. Amanda Haste, PhD, National Coalition of Independent Scholars, Manosque, France.
256. Dr Mark McNally, Lecturer, University of the West of Scotland, UK
257. Philippa Carr, Lecturer in Psychology, Leeds Beckett University, UK
258. Miquel Domènech, Associate Professor of Social Psychology, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
259. Ute Kelly, Lecturer in Peace Studies, University of Bradford, UK
260. Solange Manche, PhD Student, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
261. José Enrique Ema, Lecturer in Social Psychology, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
262. Asli Zengin, Visiting Assistant Professor, Brown University, Providence, USA
263. Robb Eason, Senior Affiliated Faculty, Philosophy, Emerson College, Boston, MA, USA
264. Tuuli Ahlholm, DPhil candidate, Faculty of Classics, University of Oxford, UK
265. Sangeeta Ghosh. Assistant Professor, Institute for Studies in Industrial Development, New Delhi, India
266. Christopher Smith, Professor of Ancient History, University of St Andrews
267. Barbara Zając, PhD Candidate, Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland
268. Francesco Iacono, University of Bologna, Italy
269. Emily Pillinger, Lecturer, King’s College London, UK
270. Dorothy Dr. Dorothy J. Thompson, Girton College, Cambridge
271. Professor Barbara Goff, University of Reading, Reading, UK
272. Neville Morley, Professor, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
273. Marianna Nardi, PhD Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy
274. Glyn Muitjens, PhD candidate, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands
275. Pavel Nývlt, Postdoc, Institute of Philosphy, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic
276. Dallas Clod Sagoe, Graduate Student, Department of Philosophy and Classics, University of Ghana, Ghana
277. Mritiunjoy Mohanty, Professor, IIM Calcutta, Kolkata, india
278. Toon Bongers, PhD-Candidate, Ghent University, Belgium
279. Prof. Dr. Norbert Finzsch, History Department, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
280. Martin Hallmannsecker, DPhil student, University of Oxford, UK
281. Marion Meyer, Professor of Classical Archaeology, University of Vienna, Austria
282. Emilio Zucchetti, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK
283. Stefan Gosepath, Professor of Philosophy, Freie Universität Berlin
284. Elinor Cosgrave, PhD Candidate, University of Leeds, UK
285. Dr Gordon Campbell, Lecturer in Ancient Classics, Maynooth University, Ireland
286. Teresa Ramsby, Associate Professor of Classics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, United States
287. Dr. Leonardo Gregoratti. Durham University. Durham. UK
288. Kresimir Vukovic, Postdoctoral Fellow, Catholic University of Croatia, Zagreb, Croatia
289. Mu-Jeong Kho, University College London (UCL), the University of London, London, the United Kingdom
290. Dr Susanna Phillippo, Senior Lecturer in Classics, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
291. Julio López-Gallardo, Regtired Professor, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
292. Paolo Felice Sacchi, Doctoral Student, Latin Literature, Ghent University, Belgium
293. Marco Perale, University Teacher, University of Liverpool, U.K.
294. Dr. Hartmut Krech, Independent Scholar, Bremen, Germany
295. Nancy Bentley, Professor, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
296. Jakob Wisse, Professor of Latin, Newcastle University, UK
297. David Woods, Senior Lecturer in Classics, University College Cork, Ireland
298. Livio Rossetti, formerly Professor of Philosophy at the Univ. of Perugia, Perugia, Italy
299. R. W. Burgess, Department of Classics and Religious Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada
300. Susie Ballentyne, Doctoral Researcher, University of Sussex, UK
301. Dr Georgios Tsagdis, Westminster University, UK
302. Linde, student, The Netherlands
303. Tim Whitmarsh, A. G. Leventis Professor of Greek Culture, University of Cambridge, UK
304. Juan Coderch, University of St Andrews, UK
305. Ettore Cingano, Professor of Classics, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia
306. Francesco Celia, Postdoctoral research fellow, Center for the Study of Christianity, HUJI, Jerusalem, IL
307. Linda Rocchi, PhD candidate, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
308. Prof Stephen R.L. Clark, university of Liverpool, United Kingdom
309. Sarah Béthume, PhD student and teaching assistant, UC Louvain, Belgium
310. Sophie Chavarria, PhD Candidate, University of Kent, UK
311. Christopher Lillington-Martin, MSt. (Oxon), Coventry University PhD Researcher, Oxford, UK
312. Dr. Bijon Sinha, Open University, UK
313. Paola Ceccarelli, lecturer in classical Greek history, University College London, London, UK
314. R. Usherwood, Assistant Professor, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
315. Mete Atature, Professor, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK
316. Aram Sinnreich, Chair, Communication Studies, American University, USA
317. Laurien Zurhake, PhD student, LMU, Munich, Germany
318. Adam Kemezis, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
319. Janet Roitman, Professor, The New School, New York, USA
320. Sara Kendall, Senior Lecturer, Law, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
321. Dr. Sky Croeser, Curtin University, Australia
322. Martina Astrid Rodda, PhD student, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
323. Claudia Liebelt, Assistent Professor in Social Anthropology, University of Bayreuth
324. A.Sarri, Research Associate, University of Manchester
325. Travis Holloway, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, SUNY Farmingdale, USA
326. Bartlomiej Bednarek, PhD, Faculty of History, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
327. Gabriel Rockhill, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Villanova University, Villanova PA, USA
328. Susanne Fuchs, Hanse-Wissenschaftskolleg, Delmenhorst, Germany
329. Francesco Mori, PhD student, University of Roma Tre, Roma, Italy
330. Alexandre Abreu, Assistant Professor, ISEG – Lisbon School of Economics and Management, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
331. Andra Juganaru, Aristotle University in Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece
332. Samantha King, Head, Department of Gender Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
333. Marta Chrostowska-Walenta, Polish Institute of Advanced Studies PIASt
334. Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult Manfred Max-Neef, Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Chile
335. Przemyslaw Urbanczyk, Prof., Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
336. Dr Russell Foster, King’s College London, UK
337. Janna Houwen, Assistant Professor, Leiden University, The Netherlands
338. Dr. Karen Gregory, Lecturer, University of Edinburgh, UK
339. Merve Erkal, Graduate Student/ SUNY Albany, NY, USA
340. Antonio Stramaglia, Professor of Latin, University of Bari, Italy
341. Dr. Jeroen Wijnendaele, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Ghent University
342. Dr. Syrithe Pugh, University of Aberdeen, UK
343. Mary Acevedo, Independent Scholar, National Coalition of Independent Scholars, & Director of Religious Education, St. Lucie, Florida, USA
344. Alessa Johns, Professor of English, UC Davis, Davis, CA USA
345. Anca Oroveanu, New Europe College-Institute for Advanced Study, Bucharest, Romania
346. Dr Nicholas Banner, Postgraduate fellow, Trinity College, Dublin
347. Dr Thomas Chambers, Oxford Brookes University, UK
348. Neil Foxlee, Former Senior Research Fellow, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
349. Professor Christy Constantakopoulou, Professor of Classics and Ancient History, BIkrbeck College, University of London, UK
350. Mr. Chris Lloyd, Senior Lecturer in Law, Oxford Brookes University, UK.
351. Dr Andrea Bardin, Oxford Brookes University, UK
352. Hakan Sandal, PhD candidate, University of Cambridge, UK
353. Sarah Slator, PhD student, Oxford Brookes University, UK
354. Waqas Mirza, Mr, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
355. Manon Brouillet, Fellow, Center for Hellenic Studies, Harvard, USA
356. Dr Susannah Wright, Senior Lecturer in Education Studies, Oxford Brookes University, UK
357. Adnan CELIK, PhD, EHESS, France
358. Dr Christa Gray, Lecturer in Classics, University of Reading, UK
359. Dr Lisa Irene Hau, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
360. Dr Valentina Sandu-Dediu, Musicologist, Rector of the New Europe College Bucharest, Romania
361. Setenay Dilek Fidler, University of Westminster, UK
362. Christoph Witt, MA, Freie Universität Berlin, Friedrich-Schlegel-Graduiertenschule, Germany
363. A. Deniz Senol, Graduate Student, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK
364. Konstantinos Karathanasis, PhD Candidate, Washington University in St. Louis, USA
365. Dilsa Deniz, Anthropologist, University of Connecticut, Connecticut, USA
366. Dr Caroline Gonda, St Catharine’s College, Cambridge, UK
367. Evan Axel Andersson, Graduate Student, UCSB, Goleta, USA
368. Dr. Selin Cagatay, Postdoctoral fellow in gender studies, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
369. Lena Moore, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge Centre for Gender Studies, Cambridge, UK
370. Julia Doyle, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
371. Dr. Nicole Wolf, Senior Lecturer, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
372. Kerry Mackereth, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge, UK
373. Roger J. A. Wilson, Professor Emeritus of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
374. Juliana Demartini Brito, PhD student, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
375. Erdem Üngür, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.
376. Gaye Onurer, PhD candidate, Sociology, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
377. Ozlem Goner, Assistant Professor, College of Staten Island, CUNY, New York, USA
378. Emmanuel Alloa, Philosophy, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
379. Ekin Kurtic, PhD Candidate, Social Anthropology and Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University
380. Hannah Brandenburg, University of Cologne, Germany
381. Sofia Reed, student, St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN, USA
382. Cynthia Levine-Rasky, Associate Professor, Queen’s University, Kingston ON, Canada
383. Morad Roohi, PhD Student, Queens University, Kingston, Canada
384. Didem Salgam, PhD Candidate, Gender Studies, Central European University, Budapest,Hungary
385. Elizabeth Yarrow, PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge, UK
386. Todd Swanson, Boulder, Colorado, USA
387. Mischa Gabowitsch, Senior Researcher, Einstein Forum, Potsdam, Germany
388. Seden Akman, Ryerson University, Canada
389. Barrett Emerick, Associate Professor, St. Mary’s College of Maryland, USA
390. Prerna Subramanian, Doctoral Candidate, Cultural Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
391. Catherine Gousseff, Director of Research, CNRS, France & fellow at the Institute of Advanced Studies (PIAST-PAN), Poland
392. Jana Everett, Professor Emerita, Political Science, CU Denver, Denver, CO, USA
393. Kathleen McAfee, Professor, International Relations, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, USA
394. Mikhal Dekel, Professor, CCNY (CUNY), New York, NY
395. Nurettin Erkan, Artist, Madison WI, USA
396. Canan Sahin, PhD Candidate, Queen’s University, Canada
397. Dr. Mesut Coşkun, Dersim
398. Jeffrey Skoller, Assoc. Professor, UC Berkeley
399. Yael Zeira, Croft Assistant Professor of Political Science and International Studies, University of Mississippi
400. Dr. S.J. Northwood, Charterhouse, UK
401. Arthur Keaveney, Emeritus, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
402. Lucy Dwight, University of Colorado Denver, USA
403. John Serrati, Professor, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
404. Robert D. Metcalf, Professor of Philosophy, University of Colorado, Denver, United States
405. Fergus Neville, Lecturer, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland/UK
406. Ergün Özgür, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, ZMO, Berlin
407. David Murakami Wood, Canada Research Chair in Surveillance Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
408. Burcu Seyben, Visiting Scholar at Bennington College
409. Adam Price, Professor, University of Aberdeen, UK
410. Sharmila Parmanand, PhD Student and Gates Scholar, University of Cambridge, UK
411. Martine Rondeau, PhD Candidate, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
412. Dawn Skorczewski, Professor of English, Brandeis University Waltham MA USA
413. Robert Parker, Wykeham Professor of Ancient History emeritus, University of Oxford
414. Maja Spanu, Junior Research Fellow, University of Cambridge
415. Emilien Fargues, Temporary Lecturer in Political Science, Lille 2 Université, France
416. Hakan Yüksel, Dr., Ankara & Turkey
417. Jules Allen, PhD candidate, University of Cambridge, UK
418. Melis Alp, Student, Université de Panthéon-Sorbonne, France
419. Gina Masequesmay, Professor, CSUN Asian American Studies, Northridge, CA, USA
420. Dimitris Dalakoglou, Professor Of Anthropology, Vrije University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
421. Elton Barker, Reader in Classical Studies, The Open University, UK
422. Başak Ertür, Lecturer, Birkbeck, University of London, UK
423. Dr. Hakan Altun, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
424. Erica Andrus, Senior Lecturer, University of Vermont, Burlington, US
425. Annetta Alexandridis, Associate Professor, History of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, USA
426. Dr. Esin Duzel, Independent Researcher, Finland
427. Maria Lopez, PhD Student, Classics, University of Bristol, UK
428. Habil.Dr. Victor Krasilshchikov, senior researcher of the Polish Institute of Advanced Studies, Warsaw
429. Sirma Bilge, Professor, Université de Montréal, Canada
430. Ayşen Uysal, Prof.Dr., CRESPPA-CSU, Paris, France
431. Ali Ugurlu, Doctoral Student, Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies, Columbia University, New York
432. Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz, Professor of Comparative Literature, Hamilton College, Clinton, USA
433. Aziz Choudry, Associate Professor, Integrated Studies in Education, McGill University, Canada
434. Leonie Disselkamp, Student, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
435. John Drury, Professor of Social Psychology, University of Sussex, UK
436. Inés Valdez, Assistant Professor, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States
437. Mads Lindholmer, University of St Andrews
438. West Gurley, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX USA
439. Michelle Hartman, Professor, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
440. Malek Abisaab, Professor of History, McGill University, Montreal Canada
441. Claudine Kahan, former assistant professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University
442. Özlem Has, PhD Student, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
443. Brandon Absher, Assistant Professor, D’Youville College, Buffalo, NY, USA
444. Deborah Lyons, Associate Professor of Classics, Miami University, Ohio USA
445. Véronique Zanetti, Prof. Universität Bielefeld, Deutschland
446. Safa Ben Saad, Adjunct Professor, Université de Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
447. Dr. Ümit Akcay, BSEL, Germany
448. Ella Panchot, Student, St.Olaf College, Richfield, USA
449. Maria Hadjipavlou , Academic and Activist, University of Cyprus, Nicosia
450. Nalini Mohabir, Assistant Professor, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
451. Mehmet Ugur, University of Greenwich, London, UK
452. Dr Senthorun Raj, Lecturer in Law, Keele University, UK
453. Céline Lafontaine, Professor, Université de Montréal, Canada
454. Estelle Carde, Professor, Université de Montréal, Canada
455. Jacques Hamel, professeur titulaire, Université de Montréal, Québec
456. Vasiliki Scurfield, Nottingham, UK, MA student, Lancaster
457. E. Ahmet Tonak, Visiting Professor, UMass Amherst, USA
458. Özgür Günes Öztürk, researcher, Cooperative Col·lectivaT
459. Ilker Aslantepe, PhD Student, New School for Social Research, USA
460. Ruken Isik, PhD Candidate, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA
461. Eylem Delikanli, Oral Historian, Columbia Uni, RIT
462. Caghan Kizil, Associate Professor, Helmholtz Group Leader, DZNE Dresden, Germany
463. Chad Kautzer, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA, USA
464. Yagmur Gökduman, PhD Student, University of Jean Jaurès, Toulouse, France
465. Z. Tül Akbal Süalp Kampüssüzler/ Academics with no Campus İstanbul Turkey
466. Osman Cen, Northwestern University, Chicago
467. Zehra F.K. Arat, Professor of Political Science, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA
468. Robert Y. Shapiro, Wallace S. Sayre Professor of Government and International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
469. Aydogan Kars, Lecturer, Monash University, Australia
470. Janroj Yilmaz Keles, Middlesex University, LOndon, UK
471. Çavlan Erengezgin, PhD candidate, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
472. Rossen Djagalov, Assistant Professor, New York University
473. Ozan Caglayan, PhD student, Le Mans Université, Le Mans & France
474. Tuna Altinel, Maître de Conférences, Université Lyon 1, Lyon France
475. Savaş Ergül, Dr, Trinity College, USA
476. Pascale Laborier, Professor, Political Science, Paris Nanterre University, France
477. Dr. Fayah Haussker, researcher and lecturer in the department of Classics, Tel Aviv University, Israel
478. Al Kagan, Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign, USA
479. Mikel Whitney, Castle Rock, CO USA
480. Paul McKechnie, Associate Professor, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
481. Andrei Marmor, Professor, Cornell University, NY USA
482. Raymond Duvall, Professor, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA
483. Aziz Rana, Professor of Law, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
484. Fiachra Mac Góráin (Dr), Associate Professor of Classics, University College London, London, England.
485. Andreas Huyssen, Villard Professor Emeritus of German and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, New York, USA
486. Buket Turkmen, Professeur des universités, Institute of Advanced Studies, Paris, France
487. M. Abbas Yongacoglu, Emeritus Professor, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
488. Federica Lazzerini, University of Oxford, UK
489. Patrícia André, PhD candidate, Nova law school, Lisbon, Portugal
490. Enzo Traverso, Professor, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
491. Joshua Foa Dienstag, Professor of Political Science and Law, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA
492. Cem Ozatalay, Visiting Scholar, The New School For Social Research, New York, USA
493. Alyson Cole, Professor of Political Science, Women & Gender Studies, and American Studies, Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA
494. Ece Oztan, Dr., Istanbul, Turkey
495. Samia Henni, Assistanr Professor, Cornell University, Ithaca NY, USA
496. Joe Lockard, Associate Professor, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA
497. Kenneth M. Roberts, Richard J. Schwartz Professor Government, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, U.S.A
498. Thomas O. Beebee, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Comparative Literature and German, Penn State University, USA
499. Chandler Davis, Professor of Mathematics, University of Toronto, Canada
500. Neveser Köker, Honors Faculty Fellow, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA
501. Dr G. Taietti University of Liverpool
502. Federico Aurora, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
503. Devran Koray Öcal, PhD candidate, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the USA
504. Matthew Evangelista, President White Professor of History and Political Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
505. Gina Romero, director, Redlad. Bogotá- Colombia
506. Hüseyin Emlik, Master Student, Universty of Agder, Norway
507. Natalie Zemon Davis, C.C., Professor of History, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
508. Sara De Martin, PhD student in Classics, King’s College, London, UK
509. Jaklin Kornfilt, Ph.D., Professor of Linguistics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, U.S.A.
510. Huseyin Tunc, Research Scholar, Institute for the Study of Human Rights, Columbia University, USA
511. Stephen O’Connor, Associate Professor, California State University, Fullerton, Fullerton, U.S.A.
512. Orhun Gündüz, PhD student, York University, Toronto, Canada
513. Eugene Ostashevsky, Clinical Professor of Liberal Studies, New York University, NYC, USA
514. Alexander Dickow, Associate Professor of French, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA
515. Richard Lachmann, University at Albany, State University of New York, NY, USA
516. Serhan Gul, Researcher, Université de Bordeaux, France
517. Aykut Argun, PhD Candidate, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
518. Chad Alan Goldberg, Professor of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA

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