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Post by Shymmex on Dec 24, 2015 22:01:05 GMT
Stephen Ogunlana Heriot-Watt University
Project management in a global context including: risk management, contract management, procurement strategy, time and cost management, performance management, etc. Organisational learning through simulation of construction processes (project based simulation and construction business simulation using system dynamics) Public private partnerships for infrastructure delivery Social and environmental impacts management (conflict management, stakeholder communication, environmentally sound construction, sustainability, etc.) People in organisations (Motivation, Productivity, Leadership, Human Resources Development, etc) Construction industry development
Biography Professor Ogunlana graduated in 1981 with an honours degree in Building from University of Ife, Nigeria. He also obtained a master degree in construction management from the same university in 1984. He was a partner in TOS Associates, a firm of project management consultants and a staff of the Department of Building, University of Ife between 1982 and 1986. He obtained a PhD in Construction Management at Loughborough University in 1989. He joined the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) as assistant professor in 1990. He was promoted to associate professor (1994) and full professor (2002) in the institute. Professor Ogunlana was the Chairperson for the academic senate in AIT between 2005 and 2007. He is currently the Chair of Construction Project Management at the School of the Built Environment, Heriot-Watt University. Professor Ogunlana has an international reputation for research in the application of system dynamics simulation to construction projects and organizations. He is the author of over 180 scholarly publications in top-tier journals and refereed conferences. He is also the editor of the book “Profitable partnering for construction procurement” published by Taylor and Francis and “Training for construction industry development” published by the CIB/AIT and co-editor of “Joint ventures in construction (Thomas Telford) and “Public-Private Partnership in Infrastructure Development – Case Studies from Asia and Europe”( Bauhaus Universitat Weimar). His research work has been funded by the Canadian International Development Agency, European Union, Thai National Housing Authority, UNOCAL, Japanese Government, etc. His works on leadership were awarded Emerald Literati Award for two consecutive years (2009 and 2010) for the most outstanding paper in the journal “Engineering Construction and Architectural Management”. Professor Ogunlana is the joint coordinator of CIB W107 Commission on Construction in Developing Economies and a member of the Editorial Board for over 10 internationally refereed academic journals including: Engineering Construction and Architectural Management, the International Journal of Financial Management of Property and Construction, International Journal of Energy Sector Management, International Journal of Construction Management, Journal of Engineering Development and Technology, Surveying and the Built Environment, Civil Engineering Dimensions, and Akruti Journal of Infrastructure. He has acted as external examiner for several top universities in the world.
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Post by Shymmex on Dec 24, 2015 22:01:54 GMT
Gbola Gbadamosi Bournemouth University Gbola brings international teaching and research experience in Organisational Behaviour and HRM. His background is diverse (from five countries and the UNDP), inclusive of collaborative research and consultancy work. He is interested in multi-methods research approach having used a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods in his works. He is an active reviewer for over a dozen scholarly journals and several academic conferences. As an educator, his academic research informs his pedagogic approach. He also has management consulting experience in Europe, Asia and Africa.
Parallel to his teaching duties, Gbola current research and supervision interest focusses on four streams: (1) Managing unethical work practices; (2) Employee health, wellbeing and work-life balance; (3) Employee engagement and commitment; and (4) Career aspirations and self-efficacy in higher education including students’ part-time work and employability.
Gbola has experience in research supervision at the PhD level and welcomes enquiries from keen and highly dedicated individuals on doctoral research supervision especially in the above areas.
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Post by Her Highness on Jan 5, 2016 7:11:46 GMT
Professor Paul Olomolaiye
University of West of England, Bristol Position: Pro Vice Chancellor & Executive Dean Department: Faculty of Environment and Technology Professor of Construction Engineering and Management and currently Pro Vice-Chancellor and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Environment and Technology here at UWE-Bristol. holds a PhD from Loughborough University in Civil Engineering and widely published with over 200 journal and conference publications and authorship of 2 major books on Construction Productivity and Stakeholder Management. passionate about the experiences of staff and students of my 6000 strong faculty which spans Architecture, Engineering, Computer Science and the Environment. I'll describe my faculty as a large 'academic space' for world-class education and research based on cross-subject collaborations and full engagement with the industries that we serve. I am happily married with 3 grown-up children and active in the community in various charitable activities and organisations. 
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Post by Her Highness on Jan 5, 2016 7:12:58 GMT
PROF. AKINTOLA AKINTOYE DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH AND INNOVATION College of Science and Technology University of Central Lancashire Professor Akintoye is research active within the area of built environment and sustainability and is a member of the Centre for Sustainable Development. FULL PROFILE QUALIFICATIONS Doctor of Philosophy, Construction Economics and Management, 1991 Master of Science Degree, Construction Management, 1986 Bachelor of Science(Hons) Degree in Quantity Surveying, Second Class-Upper, 1982 
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Post by Her Highness on Jan 5, 2016 7:13:47 GMT
Prof. Stephen Ogunlana
School of the Built Environment Heriot watt university, Edinburgh Research Project management in a global context including: risk management, contract management, procurement strategy, time and cost management, performance management, etc. Organisational learning through simulation of construction processes (project based simulation and construction business simulation using system dynamics) Public private partnerships for infrastructure delivery Social and environmental impacts management (conflict management, stakeholder communication, environmentally sound construction, sustainability, etc.) People in organisations (Motivation, Productivity, Leadership, Human Resources Development, etc) Construction industry development. 
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Post by IrekeOnibudo on Jan 5, 2016 11:13:52 GMT
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Post by IrekeOnibudo on Jan 5, 2016 11:22:50 GMT
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Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Jan 5, 2016 11:33:05 GMT
My Goodness! Yorubas are achievers!
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 14, 2016 14:35:06 GMT
Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí Areas of Interest
Sociology of Gender, Sociology of Knowledge, Sociology of Culture, Comparative Historical-Sociology, Feminist Theory, Transnational Feminisms, Social Theory, Social Inequalities in Local, Regional, and Global systems, African Studies, (Post) Colonial Studies and Modernities Bio
In her award-winning book The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses (University of Minnesota Press, 1997), Oyeronke Oyewumi makes the case that the narrative of gendered corporeality that dominates the Western interpretation of the social world is a cultural discourse and cannot be assumed uncritically for other cultures. She concludes that gender is not only socially constructed but is also historical. Furthermore, she points out that the current deployment of gender as a universal and timeless social category cannot be divorced from either the dominance of Euro/American cultures in the global system or the ideology of biological determinism which underpins Western systems of knowledge. Born in Nigeria and educated at the University of Ibadan and the University of California at Berkeley, Oyewumi has been widely recognized for her work. The monograph Invention won the 1998 Distinguished Book Award in the Gender and Sex Section of the American Sociological Association and was a finalist for the Herskovitts Prize of the African Studies Association in the same year. She has garnered a number of research fellowships, including Rockefeller Fellowships, a Presidential fellowship, and a Ford Foundation grant. Oyewumi's most recent research support was a Rockefeller Humanities Fellowship on Human Security (2003/2004), managed by National Council for Research on Women. (NCRW). Source
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 14, 2016 14:47:42 GMT
Sarah Ladipo Manyika Sarah Ladipo Manyika (born 7 March 1968) is an Anglo-Nigerian writer. Early lifeSarah was born and raised in Nigeria. She has also lived in Kenya, France, and England. Her father is Nigerian and her mother is British. Sarah inherited her maiden name (Ladipo) from her father who was born in Ibadan (South West Nigeria) in the late 1930s. Sarah's father met and married her mother in the UK in the late 1960s. She spent much of her childhood in Lagos and the city of Jos in Plateau State. As a young teenager, Sarah lived for two years in Nairobi, Kenya, before her family moved to the UK. CareerShe studied at the Universities of Birmingham (UK), Bordeaux (France), and Berkeley (California). She was married in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 1994 and now divides her time between San Francisco (where she teaches literature at San Francisco State University), London and Harare. Her writing includes published essays, academic papers, book reviews and short stories. Sarah's first novel, In Dependence, was published by Legend Press in 2008. Her short story "Mr Wonder" appeared in the 2008 collection Women Writing Zimbabwe.[6] Sarah's novel In Dependence was chosen by the UK's largest bookstore chain as its featured book for Black History Month. In 2009, In Dependence, was published by Cassava Republic, a literary press based in Abuja, Nigeria, with a stable of authors that includes Teju Cole and Helon Habila.
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 14, 2016 15:04:20 GMT
Ayo Ayoola-Amale Ayo Ayoola-Amale (born 21 May 1970) is an African poet, peace builder, lawyer, educator and spoken-word performance artist whose voice is celebrated for its peace, harmony, humanity, political, surrealistic and dynamic innovations in lyricism and visceral sound. Early lifeAyo Ayoola-Amale was born Adebisi Ayo Adekeye in Jos, Nigeria, on 21 May 1970. Her father has an LLB from the University of London and was a career State Security Officer who served Nigeria selflessly as the National Security Adviser, Security Adviser to the Vice President and Director of State Security Service. He has been honoured with several awards, including Intelligence awards from the United States. He is currently the CEO of a security outfit and chairman of other companies; her mother a Princess was a businesswoman. At the age of ten, she moved to Northern Nigeria as a result of her father's official posting, where she grew up in exclusive government reserved area of Kano. Young Ayo loved books and she read voraciously and widely. She was a pupil of St Louis Secondary School, Bompai, Kano. She studied law at Obafemi Awolowo University, and was called to the bar in 1993. She later attended the University of Lagos, where she earned her first LLM degree. She took the surname Amale when she got married. CareerAyo has several local and International certificates in Creative writing and has attended various local, nNational and international workshops and seminars on creative writing and presentation. She was a Senior Lecturer at Ghana Technology University College, Accra. She was a Senior Lecturer and Head of Department of Law, Faculty of Law, Kings University College, Accra, Ghana. As a lawyerAyo has more than 15 years of Legal practice in reputable law firms and over 13 years as a Law lecturer, in Business Law, Commercial Law and Practice, Company Law, Intellectual Property Law, Principles of Law etc., in Nigeria and Ghana. She was the Head of the Commercial Law department of Bayo Ayorinde and Co., Legal Practitioners, Lagos. She was also a Partner at Ayo, Ajibulu and Co., Legal Practitioners and Notaries, Lagos. She is a Commercial and Business Law Consultant. She has presented papers at various local and international conferences on intellectual property law, Business Law & Commercial Law and practice, Peace Education, Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), etc. She was the Legal Advisor of the Ghana Association of Writers (GAW), Accra. As an educatorAyo has touched many lives as an Educator, advocate for positive change and humanitarian. She has put smiles on the downtrodden, the less privileged in the society. Through her Foundation, she has humanitarian projects known as The Sun Educational Project for Schools, The Light Project for charity and counselling and The Splendors Performance Poetry Team from the basic level to tTertiary level. These projects have greatly impacted on the lives of many children and youths in the society. WorkShe founded the Women International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Ghana Section, and is currently the President. Ayo is the co-founder and Director of West Africa Poetry Prize. For Global Harmony Association (GHA), she is GHA-Africa President, GHA Vice-President and GHA Ambassador of Harmony for Africa. She was also the Ex-CEO of Pearl-Allied Group of Company, Nigeria (1996–2008). She is the President of Women International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Ghana Section. She is the Muse of Poetic Harmony in Africa, the Universal Ambassador of Peace. She is the Ambassador of the Love Foundation, UK She was part of the Love begins with me interview series part 1 & 2. She serves on the Central Advisory Committee of the Existential Harmony & Interdisciplinary Research Project and World Conference 2015.[3] She is the National Secretary, Coalition of NGOs Associated with UN-DPI Ghana and the Legal Adviser for Ghana Federation of the Disabled, A voluntary service she renders for humanity. She is the Vice-President of Poets of the World (Africa). She is also a member of the National Peace Council (Universal Peace Federation International Ghana Chapter). Currently she serves as the Regional Representative (Accra, Ghana) for the World Mediation Organization. Literary workIn 2010, Ayo, founded Splendors of Dawn Poetry Foundation and along with Nigerian Poet and writer, Diego Odoh Okenyodo Co-founded the West Africa Poetry Prize (WAPP) in 2013, of which she is a Director. She was organiser of "100 thousand poets for change" Accra (2013). She was a guest poet at the Kistrech Poetry Festival in Kenya. Ayo Ayoola-Amale is the author of six volumes of poems and a play and has performed her poetry with music at national and international events. She has presented her work and ideas at universities, conferences, and festivals locally, nationally and internationally. Some of her literary works include Broken Dreams (2011), a play, Life Script, a collection of poems with some published online. She is a Member of the Poets of the World, International Pen, Mbassem Women Writers Forum and FIDA. In May 2013, Ayo and Splendors Performance Poetry Team were participants at the Yari Yari Ntoaso – Continuing the Dialogue, International Conference in Accra, Ghana. She is the CEO of Heritage & On the Pathway Series- Every Child's fables, Poems, Nursery Rhymes and Plays. She has performed, recited her poems at local, national, and international platforms, events/functions and festivals.
AwardsUniversal Ambassador for Peace (Award from Universal Peace Federation International) 2013 – Awarded the Honourable Global Mediator (World Mediation Organization) Berlin, Germany, in recognition of her selfless service to humanity and her commitment to peace
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 14, 2016 15:41:45 GMT
Omowale Akintunde Dr. Omowale Akintunde is renown as a public intellectual, academician, and Emmy-Award winning filmmaker. The critically acclaimed writer/producer/director is a graduate of the conservatory program in filmmaking at the New York Film Academy. His first feature film, "An Inaugural Ride to Freedom," won the 2010 Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for Best Documentary-Cultural. His very first short film, "Mama 'n 'Em" (2008) was accepted into the prestigious Hollywood Black Filmmakers Festival and his narrative feature film debut, "Wigger," premiered in April of 2010 to an overflow crowd and rave reviews. Leo Adam Biga, film reviewer for The Reader described the film as, "Dramatic, smart, funny, raw, and real," then went on to say that Omaha "has now produced two of cinema's best works on the subject of race as Wigger join's 1967's "A Time for Burning.'" Dr. Akintunde is an Associate Professor in the Department of Black Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and is well published in the areas of education, race, and diversity. He received the Bachelor of Science and Master of Music Education degrees from Alabama State University and the Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction and African American Studies from the University of Missouri. His other research interests include Hip-Hop culture, gender studies, and epistemology. In demand as a lecturer worldwide, his national television appearances include the "Crier Report" with Catherine Crier on the Fox News Network and the "Morning News" on MSNBC. His written publications include "Multiculturalism and the Teacher Education Experience: Essays on Race, Class, and Culture" and a children's book " The Adventures of Darrell the invincible Man."
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 15, 2016 14:37:34 GMT
Babatunde Lawal
 Babatunde Lawal holds a Ph.D. in Art History from Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. Before joining the VCU faculty in 1992, he taught at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), Ile-Ife, Nigeria. He specializes in African, African American and African Diaspora art with a personal research focus on the ancient and contemporary arts of Nigeria, particularly the visual culture of the Yoruba and its influences in the Americas. He has conducted fieldwork in Africa, the Caribbean, United States and Brazil. He has published widely. His teaching and publications explore a variety of interdisciplinary methods, paying close attention to formal, stylistic, iconographic and contextual analyses as well as the dynamics of change. He is currently completing a book on African American art. He has been on the editorial boards of leading journals such as The Art Bulletin (1997-2003), CAA.Reviews (2000-2003), Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide (since 2002), Critical Interventions (since 2007) and Journal of Nigerian Studies (since 2010). He has also served as visiting professor at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire (1991/92; 1996-2001 summer terms), Columbia University, New York (spring 2003 semester), Harvard University, Massachusetts (spring 2006 semester), Williams College, Massachusetts (spring 2008 semester) and Universidade do Estado da Bahia, Salvador-Brazil (July 2009, July 2010, July 2011 and July 2013), among others. In 1999, he was awarded the VCUarts Faculty Prize for Excellence in Teaching, Research and Service. He has received fellowships from the Hazen Foundation, the Kress Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution.
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 15, 2016 14:48:23 GMT
Dele Jegede Dele Jegede (stylized as dele jegede) is a Nigerian-American painter, art historian, cartoonist, curator, art critic, art administrator, and teacher. Jegede is a Senior Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, (1995). He taught at Spelman College, Atlanta as Visiting Fulbright Scholar (1987-1988), when he curated the exhibition, Art By Metamorphosis. He was Professor and Chair of the Department of Art (2005-2010) and Professor of Art (since 2010) at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Jegede is recipient of the Distinguished Africanist Award of the University of Texas. Dele Jegede was born in 1945 in Ikere-Ekiti, Ekiti State, Nigeria and earned his first degree in Fine Arts from the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria, in 1973. From 1979 to 1983, he studied art history under Roy Sieber at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, where he received his MA and PhD degrees. His doctoral dissertation, Trends in Contemporary Nigerian Art (Indiana University, 1983), was the first ever to focus solely on contemporary Nigerian art. Jegede began his professional career in Nigeria as a cartoonist and painter. A contemporary of Josy Ajiboye, another cartoonist who focused mainly on social genre, Jegede used his cartoons to comment on the excesses of the privileged and draw attention to social and political issues in general. Aderonke Adesanya, art historian and scholar of contemporary art of Africa, considers Jegede's cartoons as "copious sketches of the skeleton of nation...." From 1974 to 1977, he was art editor at the Daily Times of Nigeria, Nigeria's most influential daily. Jegede continued to publish weekly cartoons in the Sunday Times, a sister publication of the Daily Times well into the late 1970s when he left for graduate studies at Indiana University. A short while after his return to Nigeria in 1983, he resumed his weekly comic strip, Kole Omole, which featured a precocious 5-year-old boy, through whom Jegede took subtle jabs at the military regime. In 1977, he joined the faculty of the Center for Cultural Studies of the University of Lagos and organized cultural activities in conjunction with the Second World and Black Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC 77). Among his colleagues at the Center for Cultural Studies of the University of Lagos were Bode Osanyin, a strong follower of Bertolt Brecht and advocate of total theater. There were also Joy Nwosu, Akin Euba, and Lazarus Ekwueme, foremost Nigerians in the field of music. He began his career at the University of Lagos as a Junior Research Fellow in 1977 and left in 1992 as Director of the Center for Cultural Studies. He was active not only as a scholar, but also as a painter, with a style that deviated from the dominant social genre. He introduced satire into his paintings and focused on themes of social and political import, as in his 1991 exhibition on Lagos, the cultural and financial capital of Nigeria. In 1989, he was elected as president of the Society of Nigerian Artists (SNA), succeeding Solomon Wangboje, who was the first Nigerian to hold the doctorate degree in art education. During Jegede's three years as president, Jegede secured a legal charter for the SNA, democratized the structure by creating state chapters, curated a major exhibition, "Images of the Nigerian Nation," with an accompanying catalog of the same title, and led the campaign for the establishment of the National Gallery of Art. In 1993, Jegede accepted a job offer from Indiana State University, Terre Haute and relocated there with his family. He has developed and taught courses in studio art and art history. Jegede is widely acknowledged as one of a corps of African scholars who have continued to shape the direction of the field through their innovative scholarly research and curatorial pursuits. His strong critique of Jean Pigozzi's collection, which is described as the world's largest collection of contemporary African art has drawn a sharp criticism from Thomas McEvilley, who believes that Jegede's criticism lacks credibility because he has spent too much time away from Africa. In turn, Elizabeth Harney contends that McEvilley's position is an essentialist view of who should speak for whom
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Post by Shymmex on Jan 15, 2016 15:35:54 GMT
Abiodun Williams Dr. Abiodun Williams (born 1961, Freetown, Sierra Leone) is the first President of The Hague Institute for Global Justice in The Hague, Netherlands and a noted academic in conflict prevention, peacekeeping, and conflict management. He was formerly a senior official at the United Nations. CareerFrom 2008 to 2012 he served at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) in Washington, D.C., first as Vice President of the Center for Conflict Analysis and Prevention, and later as Senior Vice President of the Center for Conflict Management leading its work in major conflict zones such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya, Tunisia, and Egypt. Prior to joining USIP, Williams served as Director of Strategic Planning for United Nations Secretaries-General Ban Ki-moon and Kofi Annan. From 1994 to 2000 he served in three peacekeeping operations in Macedonia, Haiti, and Bosnia-Herzegovina as Special Assistant to the Special Representative of the Secretary-General, and Political and Humanitarian Affairs Officer. Dr. Williams’ academic career has included appointments as Associate Dean of the Africa Center for Strategic Studies at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C., and faculty appointments at Georgetown, Rochester, and Tufts universities. He was the youngest faculty member of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown, where he co-taught courses on international relations with former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright who described him as “brilliant, talented and an inspiring leader.” His students at Georgetown included King Felipe VI and Kate Snow an American television journalist. In 1990 he was awarded the Constantine E. Maguire Medal for Outstanding Service to the School of Foreign Service, and in 1992, he won the School’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. He was awarded a Pew Faculty Fellowship in International Affairs in 1990. He is the recipient of Tufts University’s Jean Mayer Global Citizenship Award. In June 2015 he delivered the John W. Holmes Memorial Lecture on “Can the United Nations Guarantee Security and Justice?”In November 2014 he was invited by the Hans van Mierlo Stichting of the D66 political party in the Netherlands to deliver the Marchant Lecture. He led the development of The Hague Approach - Six Principles for Achieving Sustainable Peace in Post-Conflict Situations - which was presented to King Willem-Alexander and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on the occasion of the centenary of the Peace Palace in August 2013. He spoke on The Hague Approach at a TEDx at the University of St. Andrews in April 2014. Dr. Williams is an American member of the Netherlands Fulbright Commission, a Member of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Justice, and a Member of the Executive Board of the Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University. He is past chair of the Academic Council of the United Nations System (ACUNS).[4] He was a Member of the International Board of Directors of the United World Colleges, a Trustee of the Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific, and a Member of the Advisory Board of the Ralph Bunche Institute, City University of New York. He has published widely on conflict prevention, international peacekeeping, and multilateral negotiations. EducationDr. Williams was a student at Lester B. Pearson United World College in British Columbia, Canada, from where he received his International Baccalaureate Diploma. He earned an M.A. (Honors) in English Language and Literature from Edinburgh University, where he was an avid debater and won the Student Societies Debating Championship in 1980. He also earned a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy (M.A.L.D.) and a Ph.D. in International Relations from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy where he was the first Annual Commencement Class Speaker. Dr Abiodun Williams is the first President of the international think-tank the Hague Institute for Global Justice. He was previously Senior Vice President of the Center for Conflict Management at the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) in Washington DC (2011–12), leading work in conflict zones such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt. He served as Vice President of USIP’s Center for Conflict Analysis and Prevention from 2008 to 2011, working on conflict prevention in Iran. He was Director of Strategic Planning in the Executive Office of the US Secretary-General (2001–07), and served in peacekeeping operations in Macedonia, Haiti, and Bosnia-Herzegovina (1994–2000). He is the author or editor of three books on conflict prevention. He graduated in English from Edinburgh University, and has a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy and a PhD in International Relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Massachusetts. - See more at: www.chathamhouse.org/london-conference-2015/speakers/abiodun-williams#sthash.SiCmDGkQ.dpuf
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