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University of Sheffield

Aki Tsuchiya

Aki Tsuchiya is a professor of health economics at the University of Sheffield, with a joint appointment between the Department of Economics and the School of Health and Related Research. Her main research interests are in: (1) valuing health, and other aspects of wellbeing from a social perspective; (2) quantifying aversion to inequality in health and wellbeing; and (3) normative economics of health and beyond.

Harvard Kennedy School

Paul Tucker

Paul Tucker is a research fellow at the Harvard Kennedy school, the author of Unelected Power, the chair of the Systemic Risk Council, the President of NIESR, and a former central banker.

University of California, Merced

Ana Tur-Prats

Ana Tur-Prats is Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California, Merced. Her research spans topics in culture and institutions, gender economics, economic history and political economy. Some of her work examines the cultural norms that sustain intimate-partner violence and conflict-related sexual violence. Other recent work focuses on the formation and persistence of social capital, and on the long-term consequences of conflict on interpersonal trust and political behavior.

Queen's University Belfast

John Turner

John Turner is a Professor of Finance and Financial History at Queen’s University Belfast and director of the Queen’s University Centre for Economic History. He has been a Houblon-Norman Fellow at the Bank of England and an Alfred D. Chandler Fellow at Harvard Business School. He is currently the editor of the Economic History Review. John has published an award-winning book entitled Banking in Crisis. His forthcoming book is entitled Boom and Bust: A Global History of Financial

World Resources Institute

Stefanie Tye

Stefanie is a Research Associate in the Climate Resilience Practice (CRP) within WRI’s Center for Equitable Development. Stefanie co-develops technical guidance, information and tools to help national and subnational decision-makers plan for and implement climate adaptation and resilience.

University College London

Gabriel Ulyssea

Gabriel Ulyssea is an associate professor in the economics department at UCL and a Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. He is also a Research Fellow at IZA and a Research Affiliate at CEPR. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago and his main research interests include economic development and labor economics. His current, non-covid related work focuses on informality, the labor market effects of labor regulation and trade and the role of firms in