SPEAKER BIOS

Dr. Dania Francis
Bios - Group B James Mallinson Bios - Group B James Mallinson

Dr. Dania Francis

Dania V. Francis is Assistant Professor of Economics at UMass Boston. Her current research involves using experimental and quasi-experimental methods to identify structural causes of racial and socioeconomic academic achievement gaps. More broadly, Professor Francis’ research interests include examining racial and socioeconomic disparities in education, wealth accumulation, and labor markets. Dr. Francis received her doctorate from Duke University and also holds a master’s degree from Harvard University and a bachelor’s degree from Smith College. She is a board member of the National Economics Association and a National Academies of Education/Spencer Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow. Dr. Francis has been featured on CNBC International and TRT World and her work has been written about in several major publication outlets.

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Mr. Arturo Franco
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Mr. Arturo Franco

Arturo Franco is a development economist and strategy consultant. His career combines high-level positions in Fortune 500 corporations and global organizations, with public policy and international development experience.

Before joining Mastercard, Arturo was a senior advisor for McKinsey & Company’s global public and social policy practice and executive director of the Planning Council of the State of Nuevo Leon, where he also served as Undersecretary. Over the past years, Arturo has been Global Leadership Fellow for Latin America at the World Economic Forum, economics research fellow at Harvard University’s Center for International Development, nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and a member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Arturo holds economics degrees from Monterrey Tec in Mexico and Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, where he was also vice chair of the Alumni Board. His essays and books have been published by the Brookings Institution, the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, the Atlantic Council, and the Policy Network.

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Ms. Stephanie von Friedeburg
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Ms. Stephanie von Friedeburg

Stephanie von Friedeburg is IFC’s first Senior Vice President, Operations. She most recently stewarded the institution in the midst of the pandemic and led the implementation of IFC’s strategy to create projects, attract private investment, and support a resilient, inclusive recovery in emerging markets. She currently leads IFC’s investment operations and advisory services and manages IFC’s $60 billion debt and equity portfolio in more than 100 countries. Her priorities include increasing opportunities for women, scaling up investments to fight climate change, and promoting digital development. Her career spans three decades at the World Bank Group. She started at IFC, where she also served as the first Chief Operating Officer, and has spent more than two decades in investment operations. In addition to an MBA from the Wharton School, she holds a Master of Arts from the Lauder Institute at the University of Pennsylvania and an undergraduate degree from Georgetown University.

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Dr. Edward Glaeser
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Dr. Edward Glaeser

Edward Glaeser is the Fred and Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics and the Chairman of the Department of Economics at Harvard University, where he has taught microeconomic theory, and occasionally urban and public economics, since 1992. He has served as Director of the Taubman Center for State and Local Government, and Director of the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston. He has published dozens of papers on cities economic growth, law, and economics. In particular, his work has focused on the determinants of city growth and the role of cities as centers of idea transmission. He received his PhD from the University of Chicago in 1992. His books include Cities, Agglomeration, and Spatial Equilibrium (Oxford University Press, 2008), Rethinking Federal Housing Policy (American Enterprise Institute Press, 2008), Triumph of the City (Penguin Press, 2011), and Survival of the City: Mass Flourishing in an Age of Social Isolation (Penguin Press, forthcoming in Fall 2021).

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Dr. Amy Glasmeier
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Dr. Amy Glasmeier

Dr. Amy Glasmeier is a professor of Economic Geography and Regional Planning. She runs LRISA, the Lab on Regional Innovation and Spatial Analysis, in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT. Glasmeier is a founding editor of the Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society. Her research focuses economic opportunities for communities and individuals. She investigates the role of geographic access and the effect of locational accident, on human development. She is writing a book “Good Bye American Dream” that traces the ideology of opportunity that undergirds America’s relationship to the poor. Through analysis of census data, popular media, and personal narratives Professor Glasmeier is exploring the contradictions in this most sacred of constructs by demonstrating the ephemeral nature of economic opportunity encumbered by locational accident, institutional inertia and the unintended consequences of public policy. The work builds off of her long running Living Wage Calculator, which analyzes the minimum level of income required for individuals and families to pay for basic living expenses. Professor Glasmeier holds a professional Masters and PhD in Regional from UC Berkeley. A second field of expertise, Glasmeier investigates and teaches about the role of energy in human development. She is a co-PI on a four year NSF-CRISP project studying resilience and the case of catastrophic failures.

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Mr. Thomas Goff
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Mr. Thomas Goff

Thomas Goff is a partner at Mass Economics and a co-founder of data-Fab. Thom works with data-Fab staff to develop new approaches and tools for its extensive and robust data platform, which drives both data-Fab’s and Mass Economics’ research and consulting work. Thom’s work at Mass Economics blends demographic, economic, business, statistical, and spatial analysis to guide neighborhoods, cities and regions in their economic and land development strategies. In addition to developing industry-cluster strategies for comprehensive economic development plans in cities across the U.S., Thom’s recent areas of focus include tracking the (socio)economic impacts of COVID-19, working with partners on economic equity indicators and a data-dashboard, evaluating innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystems, identifying and assessing innovation districts, and the creation of urban industrial land and real estate development models and strategies at the scale of individual sites up to entire cities. Prior to Mass Economics, Thom was a Senior Analyst at the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City (ICIC) in Boston, where he was responsible for the internal management and execution of projects and the creation and management of a SQL database containing detailed industry data for thousands of urban areas nationwide.

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Dr. Tracy Hadden Loh
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Dr. Tracy Hadden Loh

Tracy Hadden Loh is a Fellow with the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Center for Transformative Placemaking at the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program. Dr. Loh is a graduate of DC public schools and holds a Ph.D. in city and regional planning from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In addition to her research interest in placemaking, Dr. Loh served two years representing Ward 1 on the Mount Rainier City Council in Prince George’s County, Md. She is currently a member of the board of directors of Greater Greater Washington. Dr. Loh’s research focuses on commercial real estate. She has recently written about the need for reform of the real estate sector, including who benefits from new development, and the governance challenges that enable the extreme and growing spatialization of inequality in U.S. metropolitan regions.

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Dr. Julia Haggerty
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Dr. Julia Haggerty

Julia Haggerty is Associate Professor of Geography in the Department of Earth Sciences at Montana State University, where she is also currently Interim Director of the Montana Institute on Ecosystems. Haggerty leads the Resources & Communities Research Group in studying the ways rural communities respond to shifting economic and policy trajectories, especially as they involve natural resources.

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Mr. William Herbert
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Mr. William Herbert

William A. Herbert is a Distinguished Lecturer at Hunter College, City University of New York and the Executive Director of the National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions. He is also a Faculty Associate at the Roosevelt House Institute for Public Policy at Hunter College, and is a Fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers.

Prior to joining Hunter College’s faculty, Mr. Herbert was Deputy Chair and Counsel to the New York State Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). Before his tenure at PERB, Mr. Herbert was Senior Counsel at CSEA Local 1000, AFSCME, AFL-CIO, a New York labor union.

His published works include seven law review articles concerning new technologies and workplace law, and he is co-author with Jerome Dobson of a recent chapter titled “Geoprivacy, Convenience, and the Pursuit of Anonymity in Digital Cities” in Wenzhong Shu, Michael Goodchild, Michael Batty, Mei-Po Kwan and Anshu Zhang (eds.), Urban Informatics (Springer 2021).

Mr. Herbert received his B.A. from the University at Buffalo and his J.D. from the Benjamin N Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University.

He resides in Delmar, New York, and New York City.

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Mr. Greg Hill
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Mr. Greg Hill

Greg Hill has enjoyed a twenty-six-year career in education.

He teaches High School AP Human Geography,World Regional Geography, and African-American Studies in Mesquite, Texas. Mr. Hill began his Social Studies teaching career as a World History teacher in Dallas Public Schools.

He is also currently a Graduate student of Geography at Marshall University focusing on Urban Geography.

He is the 2016 recipient of the Distinguished Educator Award: K-12 from the National Council for Geographic Education. He is also the 2020 recipient of the International Educator of the Year Award from the World Affairs Council of Dallas-Ft. Worth.

At Horn High, Greg sponsors the Global Young Leaders and coaches the Current Events Team.

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Dr. David Hughes
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Dr. David Hughes

David Hughes earned in PhD in Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley in 1999. Before and during graduate school, he worked on development and conservation projects for NGOs in Zimbabwe, the World Bank, and the government of Mozambique. Since joining the faculty at Rutgers-the State University of New Jersey, Hughes has grappled with the ways in which people exploit each other while exploiting nature, ecosystems, and, indeed, the entire biosphere. He has written two ethnographies of settler colonialism and land reform in Southern Africa: From Enslavement to Environmentalism (University of Washington Press, 2007) and Whiteness in Zimbabwe (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). Then, Hughes turned his attention energy and the climate crisis in other parts of the world. In Trinidad and Tobago, he carried out ethnography on petroleum geologists, publishing Energy without Conscience (Duke University Press, 2017). Now, he studies renewables and the possibilities for energy democracy. His book on wind power in Spain – Who Owns the Wind? – just came out with Verso Press. As a scholar-activist, Hughes has served as president and chief negotiator of the AAUP-AFT, the faculty labor union. He is currently the union’s climate justice chair and a member of the Climate Justice Task Force of the American Federation of Teachers.

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Dr. Natasha Iskander
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Dr. Natasha Iskander

Natasha N. Iskander, Associate Professor of Urban Planning and Public Service, conducts research on the relationship between migration and economic development. She looks at the ways that immigration and the movement of people across borders can provide the basis for the creation of new knowledge and of new pathways for political change. She has published widely on these questions, looking specifically at immigration, skill, economic development, and worker rights.

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Dr. Anoop Jain
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Dr. Anoop Jain

Anoop Jain is currently a postdoctoral research fellow in the Global Health & Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. His research focuses on elucidating the social determinants of maternal and child health in India. Anoop is also the founding director of Sanitation and Health Rights in India (SHRI), an organization the improves access to sanitation in rural and last mile communities throughout India.

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Ms. Gloria Jeff
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Ms. Gloria Jeff

Gloria J. Jeff, AICP is an experienced transportation executive, professional and urban planner. She is co - chair of the TRB Committee on Transportation Equity. She is currently serving as MnDOT Metro District’s Livability Director. She previously served as the Project Director – Rethinking I – 94. She has also served as: Acting Administrator, Deputy Administrator, and Associate Administrator for Policy - Federal Highway Administration; Department Director, Deputy Director for Planning and Division Administrator - Michigan Department of Transportation; General Manager Los Angeles Department of Transportation; and Vice President, District Transportation Planning Manager – Parsons Brinkerhoff. Gloria has represented and lead United States Government delegations in international settings, on transportation issues in the Asian Pacific region and the Permanent International Association of Road Congresses. Ms. Jeff holds a BSE and MSE in Civil Engineering and a Master of Urban Planning from the University of Michigan. She also has an honorary doctorate from Bennett College. She is a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners, American Planning Association, and the Conference of Minority Transportation Officials. Ms. Jeff is co-chair of the TRB Committee on Transportation and Equity. She is an active member of the Transportation Research Board committees on Transportation History, Public Involvement, Community Impacts, and Gender Transportation Issues.

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Mr. Clinton Johnson
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Mr. Clinton Johnson

Clinton leads Esri’s efforts to help users apply GIS as a framework for Racial Equity & Social Justice and leads the NorthStar of GIS, a community organization advancing racial justice, equity, and belonging for Black people in GIS.

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Dr. Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo
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Dr. Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo

Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo is Professor of Geography at State University of New York at Cortland, and a 2018-19 Carnegie African Diaspora Fellow. She is a recipient of the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Scholarship, and the American Association of Geographers Distinguished Teaching Honors. She has been part of the AP Human Geography leadership team and serves on the editorial boards of African Geographical Review, Journal of Geography, The Geography Teacher and WAGADU: Journal of Transnational Women's and Gender Studies. She has authored numerous refereed journal articles and book chapters, co-edited four books on issues of social justice and African studies and is co-editor of Global Perspectives on Gender and Space (Routledge). Ibipo earned her bachelor's degree in Education from the University of Ibadan in Nigeria, master's degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and PhD in Geography from Clark University. Apart from her extensively cited research on employment accessibility constraints for women of color in US cities, her chapter on Gender and Development in the widely read Geography of Africa textbook is one of her most influential contributions.

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Mr. Maurice Jones
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Mr. Maurice Jones

Maurice A. Jones was appointed CEO of OneTen in March of 2021. OneTen is a coalition of leading chief executives and their companies who are coming together to upskill, hire and promote one million Black Americans over the next 10 years who do not yet have a four-year degree into family-sustaining jobs with opportunities for advancement. Prior to joining OneTen, Maurice was the President of the Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), one of the country's largest organizations supporting projects to revitalize communities and catalyze economic opportunity for residents.

During his time at LISC, Maurice led the company’s effort to expand its footprint into the southern part of the country. He grew the company’s annual investment from a billion dollars to over two billion dollars. He also increased the economic development investments of LISC throughout the country, including launching a subsidiary company dedicated to small business lending. During his tenure, LISC diversified its partnerships with multiple industries, including healthcare, technology, sports, retail and advanced manufacturing.

He previously served as Secretary of Commerce and Trade for the Commonwealth of Virginia where his primary job was to utilize Virginia’s assets to solidify its position as the preeminent place to live, work and conduct business.

Maurice also served as Deputy Secretary for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) from April 2012 through January 2014. As the second most senior official at HUD, Maurice managed the Department's day-to-day operations, the annual operating budget of $40 billion and the agency's 8,900 employees.

Before his appointment at HUD, Maurice was President of Pilot Media, the largest print and digital organization in Hampton Roads, Virginia. He joined Landmark Media Enterprises, owner of Pilot Media, in 2005, serving as Vice President of the Landmark Publishing Group. In 2006, he became the Vice President and General Manager of Pilot Media, and in 2008 he became President and Publisher of The Virginian-Pilot.

Maurice was also the Commissioner of the Virginia Department of Social Services and Deputy Chief of Staff to then-Virginia Governor Mark R. Warner. Other positions include: Special Assistant to the General Counsel at the U.S. Treasury Department, Legal Counsel to the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund and Director of the Fund during the Clinton Administration, Associate Attorney at Hunton & Williams in Richmond, Virginia, and Partner at Venture Philanthropy Partners.

Maurice received a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from Hampden-Sydney College and attended Oxford University in England on a Rhodes Scholarship, where he received a Master of Philosophy in International Relations. He later received a Juris Doctor from the University of Virginia

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Dr. Demetrice Jordan
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Dr. Demetrice Jordan

Demetrice “Dee” Jordan is a Dean’s Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She has a dual-doctorate in Geography and Environmental Science and Policy from Michigan State University. Dee’s research focuses on the ecological and environmental determinants of disease risk for vector-borne parasitic illnesses, infectious diseases, and Neglected Tropical Diseases of sub-Saharan Africa. Dee is a recipient of an NIH Loan Repayment Program (LRP) award for health disparities research from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease. She is a diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) consultant and has developed innovative programs and curricula to promote the principles of DEI in academic and non-profit settings. Dee is the Founder of the Advancing Geography Through Diversity Program (AGTDP) at Michigan State University, which seeks to address the underrepresentation of African American, Latinx American, and Native American in US geography doctoral programs. She developed the Celebrating Black Geographers anthology hosted online by the American Geographical Society.

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Mr. Noah Kazis
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Mr. Noah Kazis

Gavin Bridge is Professor of Economic Geography at Durham University and a Fellow of the Durham Energy Institute. His research addresses questions of property, access, and control associated with emergent geographies of resource production and consumption, including the political ecologies of resource scarcity and security. Recent work includes research on raw material production networks associated with old and new carbon economies; and a continuing interest in how the materiality of resources shapes their appropriation and capitalisation. He is the author of Oil (Polity, 2017) with P. Le Billon; co-editor of the Routledge Handbook of Political Ecology (2015) with T. Perreault and J. McCarthy; and co-author of Energy and Society: A Critical Perspective (Routledge, 2018) with S. Barr, S. Bouzarovski, M. Bradshaw, E. Brown, H. Bulkeley, and G. Walker.

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