Dr. Marie Price
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Dr. Marie Price

Dr. Price is a Professor of Geography and International Affairs at the George Washington University where she has taught since 1990. A Latin American and migration specialist, her studies have explored human migration, natural resource use, environmental conservation, and regional development. She is a non-resident fellow of the Migration Policy Institute, a non-partisan think tank that focuses on immigration issues based in Washington, DC. Her publications include the co-authored book Migrants’ Inclusion in Cities: Innovative Urban Policies and Practices (2013, United Nations) that was a collaborative project with staff from UNESCO and UN-Habitat, a co-edited book Migrants to the Metropolis: The Rise of Immigrant Gateway Cities (2008, Syracuse University Press), and the co-authored textbooks Diversity Amid Globalization: World Regions, Environment and Development, 5th edition (2011, Pearson) and Globalization and Diversity: Geography of a Changing World, 4th edition (2013, Pearson). She has also published some 40 refereed articles and book chapters.

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Dr. Bob Quinn
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Dr. Bob Quinn

Bob Quinn was raised on a 2,400 acre family operated wheat and cattle ranch South-East of Big Sandy, Montana which was started by his Grandpa Quinn in 1920. He earned a BS in botany in 1970 and a MS in plant pathology in 1971 from Montana State University in Bozeman. He received a PhD in plant biochemistry at the University of California at Davis, California in 1976 and returned home to run the family farm and ranch in 1978. In 1983 Bob started Montana Flour & Grains, Inc. (MFG) to sell high protein wheat from his farm to whole grain bakeries. In 1986 MFG introduced an ancient organic wheat using the brand name, Kamut (see kamut.com for a complete description of this project). In 2012 he started the Oil Barn which produces high-oleic organic safflower oil on his farm and in 2015, Big Sandy Organics (BSO) which produces Kracklin’ Kamut ancient wheat snacks. In 2001 he and two partners from Germany formed WindPark Solutions America which was responsible for the development of Montana’s first large scale wind farm of 90 turbines totaling 130 megawatts.

In 1988 Bob converted his entire farm to regenerative organic operation. He is 75 and has been married for 51 years. He and his wife, Ann, have four daughters, one son and 20 grandchildren. He is active in many organizations locally, nationally and internationally which promote organic agriculture and has received many awards from these groups.

He recently wrote “Grain by Grain” with his co-author, Liz Carlisle which summarizes his philosophy of the tie between agriculture, food and health and the importance of local production of fuel and fuel. He is now working to create a 700-acre regenerative organic research and education center in the middle of his farm.

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Dr. Wesley Reisser
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Dr. Wesley Reisser

Wesley J. Reisser is a member of the State Department’s civil service, where he has spent the past eleven years working mostly on Middle Eastern issues and the United Nations, including work on Israel-Palestinian negotiations, Syria, and Iran, as well as working on developing foreign policy to address the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people around the world. Dr. Reisser holds a Bachelors Degree, Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa, in International Affairs and History from The George Washington University, and a Masters Degree in Geography from the same institution that focuses on borders and peace settlements. In 2010, he completed a Ph.D. in Geography from UCLA with a dissertation on American border proposals and peacemaking efforts following World War I. Dr. Reisser teaches geography at the George Washington University, including courses on political geography and energy resources. He is a regular lecturer on Middle East Geography, Multilateral Diplomacy, and Middle East Peace at the State Department’s Foreign Service Institute. His first book, “The Black Book: Woodrow Wilson’s Secret Plan for Peace” was published in April, 2012. Besides his professional work, in 2011 Dr. Reisser founded an Eastern European dance group in Washington, DC called the Carpathia Folk Dance Ensemble, and is the 2007 National Geography Bowl Champion.

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Dr. Michael Rich
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Dr. Michael Rich

Michael Rich, MD, MPH, is a Senior Global Health Physician at Partners In Health with more than twenty years of experience in medical program design and implementation, confronting and responding to global health inequities. He is a founding member of Plants-Earth-Life (PEL), which works towards a world that eats more plant-based whole-food for better human and environmental health. Dr. Rich holds his medical degree from the University of Massachusetts Medical School and a Master’s in Public Health from Harvard School of Public Health. He presently is an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School and an Associate Clinician at the Division of Global Health Equity, Mass General Brigham, Boston MA, USA.

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Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig
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Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig

Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig is a Senior Research Scientist at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and the co-located Columbia University Climate School’s Center for Climate Systems Research. Dr. Rosenzweig’s specific area of expertise is climate change and food systems. At NASA GISS, she heads the Climate Impacts Group whose mission is to investigate the interactions of climate (both variability and change) on systems and sectors important to human well-being. Dr. Rosenzweig is the co-founder and member of the Executive Committee of the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project (AgMIP), a globally integrated transdisciplinary study of climate change and the food system at regional, national and global scales, including the participation of over 1000 leading researchers from developed and developing nations. She has developed new methods of detection and attribution of observed changes in physical and biological systems to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and pioneered research on the impacts of and adaptation to climate change and climate variability. In 2019, Dr. Rosenzweig was Coordinating Lead Author of the Food Security Chapter for the IPCC Special Report on Climate Change and Land. She is the 2022 recipient of the World Food Prize, considered as the “Nobel Prize for Food and Agriculture.”

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Ms. Hanna Rush
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Ms. Hanna Rush

Hanna is a Geospatial Analyst at Dewberry. She is a graduate of the University of Washington, with research interests in sustainability, food security, and environmental equity. Hanna leverages her academic background with her geospatial skills at Dewberry through natural disaster response, as well as hazard mitigation planning. Her recent work has included leading discussions with regional food supply chain stakeholders to inform the creation of an ideal food supply information sharing framework.

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Mr. Daniel Russek
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Mr. Daniel Russek

Daniel Russek is CEO and founder of Atarraya, a company working to make shrimp the protein of the 21st century. Russek was trained as an economist but developed an early attachment to the Oaxacan coast in Mexico while in college. While handing out post-hurricane relief supplies, he was shocked at the poverty in that area. To help these rural populations to improve their income and living standards, Daniel launched his first company Maricultura Vigas in 2010, which uses sustainable technology to produce shrimp. Later on, he founded Atarraya in 2019 to revitalize the aquaculture industry. Atarraya uses biotechnology, software, and automation, to redefine the limits of what is possible in seafood production and distribution.

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Dr. Kathleen Schroeder
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Dr. Kathleen Schroeder

Kathleen Schroeder is a Professor of Geography at Appalachian State University in beautiful Boone, North Carolina. She has spent a good deal of time in Latin America and particularly in Bolivia where she has conducted research since her graduate student days. She teaches at both the undergraduate and graduate levels and has held a number of leadership positions on her campus, including serving as Department Chair. She conducts research on food, food systems, resilience, and on issues of gender. She actively participates in the local food movement in her region and saw how access to local foods played a critical role during the early days of the Covid-19 Pandemic.

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Dr. Kunwar Singh
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Dr. Kunwar Singh

Dr. Kunwar Singh is a Geospatial Scientist at the AidData research lab and an Affiliate Faculty in the Center for Geospatial Analysis at William & Mary. He has extensive experience in remote sensing data acquisition, processing, and analysis, including the application of light detection and ranging and drones to measure, map, and model landscape characteristics and resources. His research focuses on land and vegetation dynamics and their impacts on natural resources.

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Dr. Karen Seto
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Dr. Karen Seto

Karen Seto is the Frederick C. Hixon Professor of Geography and Urbanization Science at Yale University’s School of the Environment. A geographer, and an urban and land change scientist, she is one of the world's leading experts on contemporary urbanization and global environmental change. Her research includes the effects of urbanization on food systems, biodiversity, croplands, energy use and GHG emissions. She serves on numerous national and international scientific bodies. She currently co-chairs the U.S. National Academies Climate Security Roundtable and the U.S. National Academies Subcommittee on U.S.-China Scientific Engagement. She was a Coordinating Lead Author for the IPCC 6th (2022) and 5th (2014) Assessment Reports, where she co-led the chapter on urban mitigation of climate change. She is an elected member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering, and a Fellow with the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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Dr. Christopher Tucker
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Dr. Christopher Tucker

Dr. Christopher Tucker manages Yale House Ventures, a portfolio of social ventures and technology companies that span the worlds of energy, geospatial, sensor, cyber-security, open source, and social media technologies, across the domains of defense/intelligence, international affairs, civilian government, commercial industry, NGOs, and academe. He is also the Chairman and CEO of The MapStory Foundation and President of the foreign policy advocacy group, Friends of the Arc.

Dr. Tucker was previously Senior VP for the Americas/National Programs at ERDAS and President/CEO of IONIC, a leader in interoperable web-mapping, location based services, imagery management and distributed geoprocessing. He has served on a variety of Boards such as the US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation, the Open Geospatial Consortium, Open Plans, OpenGeo, the Secretary of Interior’s National Geospatial Advisory Committee, and the Defense Science Board Intelligence Task Force, the DNI’s Intelligence Community Strategic Studies Group, and serves as an Independent Advisor to the Director of the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA). Dr. Tucker served on the National Academy of Science’s Committee on NGA’s GEOINT Research Priorities.

Dr. Tucker was Chief Strategic Officer of In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital fund. He was responsible for managing the technical portfolio, issues of organizational design, and relations with the intelligence community, industry and media.

As Special Advisor to the Executive Vice Provost of Columbia University, Dr. Tucker was responsible for a range of issues having to do with strategic institutional development, portfolio management, federal science and technology policy, and the organization of interdisciplinary research. At Columbia, he co-founded the Center for Science, Policy, and Outcomes and has taught courses at the Columbia School of International and Public Affairs. Dr. Tucker earned his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. at Columbia University in the City of New York.

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Dr. Jill Tiefenthaler
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Dr. Jill Tiefenthaler

As chief executive officer at the National Geographic Society, Dr. Jill Tiefenthaler oversees the development and implementation of the Society’s mission-driven work and programmatic agenda. She leads our global community of Explorers: scientists, innovators, educators, and storytellers—in our mission to illuminate and protect the wonder of our world. Jill sits on the Society’s Board of Trustees and the board of National Geographic Partners.

Before joining the National Geographic Society, Jill spent nine years as the president of Colorado College. During this time, she helped set a new direction for the school, executed the most ambitious fundraising campaign in the college’s history, and developed and implemented a comprehensive strategic plan that expanded and cultivated an engaged and globally connected academic community. She developed a Campus Master Plan, executed an alliance to make the world-class Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center part of the college, and led the college’s efforts to achieve carbon neutrality. She also drove significant increases in diversity among the faculty and student body and led the campus community in an external review of racism at the college that resulted in an Antiracism Implementation Plan.

Before leading Colorado College, Jill was provost of Wake Forest University, where she redesigned the admissions process to include an SAT-optional policy, integrated the university’s undergraduate and graduate business schools, established the Institute for Public Engagement and The Humanities Institute, and implemented “Living Our Values,” a plan to strengthen residential life and campus vibrancy.

Jill began her academic career at Colgate University, where she was a full professor of economics before holding various administrative roles, including consultant to the president; associate dean of the faculty; founding director of the Upstate Institute; and chair of the department of economics.

Originally from Iowa, Jill grew up on a farm and worked for her family’s popcorn business before attending Saint Mary’s College in Notre Dame, IN. She received her M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from Duke University.

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VADM Frank Whitworth
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VADM Frank Whitworth

Vice Admiral Frank Whitworth is the eighth Director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. He leads and directs NGA under the authorities of the Secretary of Defense and Director of National Intelligence. He became NGA’s director on June 3, 2022.

Whitworth is a 1989 graduate of Duke University Durham, North Carolina, with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science. He holds a Master of Arts in National Security Studies from Georgetown University, Washington, District of Columbia, as well as a diploma from the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island.

Whitworth’s command tours included commander, Joint Intelligence Center Central; commanding officer, Navy Element of U.S. Central Command; and commanding officer, Kennedy Irregular Warfare Center.

Whitworth’s operational tours included director of Intelligence for The Joint Staff, U.S. Africa Command, Joint Special Operations Command and Naval Special Warfare Development Group; director of Intelligence and deputy director of Maritime Operations Center for Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, U.S. Fifth Fleet; director of Intelligence for a Special Operations Task Force in Afghanistan during three deployments supporting Operation Enduring Freedom; and special assistant for Political-Military Affairs at U.S. Sixth Fleet during Operation Allied Force.

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Mr. Dean Wise
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Mr. Dean Wise

Dean Wise joined BNSF as vice president, Network Strategy, in February 2010. BNSF Railway, a Berkshire Hathaway company, is one of North America’s leading freight transportation companies operating on 32,500 route miles of track in 28 states and three Canadian provinces, integral to the global supply chains of mining, utility, agricultural, industrial, and consumer products industries. Dean was previously President and managing partner at Norbridge, Inc., a management a consulting firm focusing on the freight transport and logistics industry. Prior to joining Norbridge, he was vice president of Mercer Management Consulting, now Oliver Wyman. Dean’s prior experience also includes management positions at Temple Barker & Sloane, Inc., Conrail and Southern Pacific Transportation Company. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Geography from Colgate University and a Master’s degree from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University.

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Dr. Antoinette WinklerPrins
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Dr. Antoinette WinklerPrins

Dr. WinklerPrins is a geographer currently serving as the Deputy Division Director for the Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences Division of the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate at the (US) National Science Foundation. She is also an Adjunct Professor in the Environmental Sciences and Policy Program in the Johns Hopkins University Krieger School of Arts and Sciences Advanced Academic Programs where she teaches a course on sustainable food systems. She was on the faculty of the Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at Michigan State University for 13 years. Originally from the Netherlands, Dr. WinklerPrins has lived and worked in numerous places around the world. A people-environment geographer, her research focus has focused on agricultural livelihoods and soils, environmental knowledge, and urban agriculture, especially in tropical locations. She has published in a wide variety of outlets, most recently she edited the book (with Kent Mathewson) Forest, Field, and Fallow: Selections by W.M. Denevan and published an article entitled “Reframing Pre-European Amazonia through an Anthropocene Lens” with Brazilian ecologist Carolina Levis in the special issue on the Anthropocene of the Annals of the American Association of Geographers Vol. 111(3): 858-868.

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Mrs. Nona Yehia
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Mrs. Nona Yehia

An accomplished architect by training, Nona built Vertical Harvest from the ground up as North America’s first vertical hydroponic greenhouse. She also pioneered the company to focus on inclusive, customized employment for people with physical and/or intellectual disabilities alongside her co-founder Caroline Croft-Estay. She conceived the company based on her experiences growing up with a brother with developmental disabilities, love of fresh and local food, obsession with great design and long-standing community involvement. Since then CNN has named her a Champion for Change and in 2021 Vertical Harvest was included in Fast Company’s World Changing Ideas in both their Food and Social Justice categories. Under her stewardship, and with the closing of Series A, the company has embarked on its ambitious plans to scale to 10 new cities over the next 5 years and advance its mission to use food as a medium for positive change.

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Ms. Janine Yoong
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Ms. Janine Yoong

Janine believes in making more accurate, more relevant, and more engaging maps to build a better shared understanding of the world. Most recently, she led the location-based Augmented Reality program at Snapchat, where she connected new AR technology and 3D maps to local communities and venues. Prior to Snapchat, Janine was the Chief Operating Officer at Mapillary, a street-level imagery platform acquired by Facebook in June 2020. At Mapillary, Janine worked with mapping and navigation platforms, government agencies, GIS providers, NGOs, and location-based apps to get the most out of street-level imagery. Before Mapillary, Janine worked on strategic partnerships at Google and Yahoo, then scaled two startups toward successful exits.

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Mr. Andrew Zolli
Catherine McKenna Catherine McKenna

Mr. Andrew Zolli

Andrew oversees Global Impact Initiatives at Planet, working to ensure that the company’s data, products and services achieve their highest humanitarian, sustainable development and scientific potential. He works closely with all parts of the company and with the United Nations, NGOs, philanthropies, conservation organizations, and disaster response entities to incubate and deliver new forms of social and environmental impact. Andrew is also the author of the bestselling book Resilience: Why Things Bounce Back. He received a BA in Cognitive and Computer Science at Vassar College, and did graduate studies in foresight at the University of

Houston.

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