Dixon, Keith (Dr.)

Keith Dixon’s academic outputs have mainly concerned organisational change, social responsibility, governments, universities, hospitals, mining corporations and accountant education. He has been at his present workplace, the University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha since 2007. Keith’s academic and accounting career has included spells in several locations including the English Midlands, Port Moresby, Tarawa, Buckinghamshire and both main islands of New Zealand. He has worked for organisations as diverse as Wolverhampton, Cannock and Nottinghamshire Councils, the UK Government Department for International Development, the Institute of Public Administration of Papua New Guinea, Kiribati Institute of Technology, Kiribati Centre of the University of the South Pacific, and Massey, Keele and the Open Universities.

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Dixon, Piers (Dr.)

Piers Dixon is an Honorary Lecturer at Stirling University, UK, formerly a Deputy Head of the Survey and Recording at Historic Environment Scotland and an investigator at the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. His research interests include rural settlement, castles and landscape.

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Donnelly, Colleen E. (Prof.)

Colleen Donnelly is an associate professor at the University of Colorado at Denver. She received her Ph.D. From the University of Washington. She previously published Linguistics for Writers (SUNY UP) and has published articles primarily on medieval literature and medieval women, Biblical and gnostic influences on later literature, as well as Faulkner, Barthes, and Milton.

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Doorenbosch, Marieke (Dr.)

Marieke Doorenbosch was a PhD student within the research project “Ancestral Mounds” since August 1st 2008. Her research concentrated on the environmental study of barrows. In what sort of environment were barrow groups situated? It is known that many were built in clearings in the landscape (Casparie/Groenman-Van Waateringe 1980), but were those on pristine land, separated from the world of the living, or were they part of it?

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Döpper, Stephanie (Dr.)

Stephanie Döpper is Junior Professor for Digital Humanities for Ancient Near Eastern Studies at the University of Würzburg, Germany. She received her doctoral degree from the University of Tübingen in 2015, and conducted postdoctoral research at the Universities of Leiden and Frankfurt on the reuse of tombs in Eastern Arabia and on settlement systems in central Oman. Her research interests include digital archaeology, landscape archaeology, the archaeology of mobility, pottery studies, and mortuary practices. Since 2010 she has been conducting research in the Sultanate of Oman, excavating Bronze Age and Islamic sites in Bat, Al-Ayn, Al-Khashbah and other sites in Wilayat Al-Mudhaybi.

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Douglas, Bronwen (Prof. dr.)

Bronwen Douglas is honorary professor at the Australian National University in Canberra where she was fellow and senior fellow from 1997–2012. She was previously lecturer and senior lecturer at La Trobe University (Melbourne, Australia) from 1971–1996. A historian of science focussing on Oceania, her main research field is the interplay of global ideas of human difference, race, and geography in European encounters with particular Oceanian people, places, and agency.

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Drenth, Erik (Drs.)

Erik Drenth works as a specialist in prehistoric inorganic material culture (flint, hand-made pottery, metal and stone) at the Dutch archaeological research company BAAC. He has written numerous articles, including contributions to several handbooks on Dutch archaeology, such as ‘Nederland in de prehistorie’.

read more

Dixon, Keith (Dr.)

Keith Dixon’s academic outputs have mainly concerned organisational change, social responsibility, governments, universities, hospitals, mining corporations and accountant education. He has been at his present workplace, the University of Canterbury | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha since 2007. Keith’s academic and accounting career has included spells in several locations including the English Midlands, Port Moresby, Tarawa, Buckinghamshire and both main islands of New Zealand. He has worked for organisations as diverse as Wolverhampton, Cannock and Nottinghamshire Councils, the UK Government Department for International Development, the Institute of Public Administration of Papua New Guinea, Kiribati Institute of Technology, Kiribati Centre of the University of the South Pacific, and Massey, Keele and the Open Universities.

read more

Dixon, Piers (Dr.)

Piers Dixon is an Honorary Lecturer at Stirling University, UK, formerly a Deputy Head of the Survey and Recording at Historic Environment Scotland and an investigator at the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. His research interests include rural settlement, castles and landscape.

read more

Donnelly, Colleen E. (Prof.)

Colleen Donnelly is an associate professor at the University of Colorado at Denver. She received her Ph.D. From the University of Washington. She previously published Linguistics for Writers (SUNY UP) and has published articles primarily on medieval literature and medieval women, Biblical and gnostic influences on later literature, as well as Faulkner, Barthes, and Milton.

read more

Doorenbosch, Marieke (Dr.)

Marieke Doorenbosch was a PhD student within the research project “Ancestral Mounds” since August 1st 2008. Her research concentrated on the environmental study of barrows. In what sort of environment were barrow groups situated? It is known that many were built in clearings in the landscape (Casparie/Groenman-Van Waateringe 1980), but were those on pristine land, separated from the world of the living, or were they part of it?

read more

Döpper, Stephanie (Dr.)

Stephanie Döpper is Junior Professor for Digital Humanities for Ancient Near Eastern Studies at the University of Würzburg, Germany. She received her doctoral degree from the University of Tübingen in 2015, and conducted postdoctoral research at the Universities of Leiden and Frankfurt on the reuse of tombs in Eastern Arabia and on settlement systems in central Oman. Her research interests include digital archaeology, landscape archaeology, the archaeology of mobility, pottery studies, and mortuary practices. Since 2010 she has been conducting research in the Sultanate of Oman, excavating Bronze Age and Islamic sites in Bat, Al-Ayn, Al-Khashbah and other sites in Wilayat Al-Mudhaybi.

read more

Douglas, Bronwen (Prof. dr.)

Bronwen Douglas is honorary professor at the Australian National University in Canberra where she was fellow and senior fellow from 1997–2012. She was previously lecturer and senior lecturer at La Trobe University (Melbourne, Australia) from 1971–1996. A historian of science focussing on Oceania, her main research field is the interplay of global ideas of human difference, race, and geography in European encounters with particular Oceanian people, places, and agency.

read more

Drenth, Erik (Drs.)

Erik Drenth works as a specialist in prehistoric inorganic material culture (flint, hand-made pottery, metal and stone) at the Dutch archaeological research company BAAC. He has written numerous articles, including contributions to several handbooks on Dutch archaeology, such as ‘Nederland in de prehistorie’.

read more




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