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London Business School

Joao F. Cocco

João F. Cocco is a financial economist with research interests in household finance, including mortgages and pensions. João’s research has appeared in top finance and economics journals. His recent research focuses on how best to structure mortgages to improve macroeconomic stability. João is a founding member of the CEPR Network on Household Finance.

NHS

Melanie Cockroft

Melanie Cockroft is a doctor in the National Health Service, specialising in anaesthetics and intensive care medicine.

University of Glasgow

Samuel K. Cohn, Jr

Samuel Cohn is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Glasgow, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and an honorary fellow of IASH. Over the past 20 years he has specialised in the history of popular unrest in late medieval and early modern Europe and in the history of disease and medicine. He has published books on labour history, popular insurrection, women in the Renaissance, religious piety, violence, ritual, and medical history and epidemics from the Plague of Athens to

Queen's University Belfast

Theodor Cojoianu

Dr Cojoianu’s research is at the intersection between data science, finance and sustainable development and informs timely insights towards the achievement of sustainable development outcomes. His work has led him to be invited as a Member of the European Commission’s Platform on Sustainable Finance. Dr Cojoianu also serves as: an Academic-in-Residence in Sustainable Nation Ireland and Agent Green, on the advisory board of the EU Energy Efficiency Mortgages Initiative, as a member of

Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

Paul Collier

Paul Collier is Professor of Economics and Public Policy Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, and a Director of the International Growth Centre, and the ESRC research network, Social Macroeconomics. His research covers the transformation from poverty to prosperity; state fragility; the implications of group psychology for development; migration and refugees; urbanization in poor countries and the crisis in modern capitalism, which is the subject of his most recent book, The

University of Virginia

Jonathan Colmer

Jonathan is an Assistant Professor at the University of Virginia’s Department of Economics and Director of the Environmental Inequality Lab. He combines data with insights from economic theory and environmental science to understand how economic activity and the natural environment influence one another.