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<p>LOUISE: I am the Synthetic Biology Research Centre’s (SBRC-Nottingham) Outreach and Communications officer and have been working in this position for the past 4 years. My role in the SBRC involves organising and facilitating outreach and public engagement activities as well as all marketing and communications for the Centre. This is the 2nd year in a row that I have been part of iGEM. I am the Human Practices and Outreach Adviser for this year’s team and I am also responsible for the iGEM team’s project management and administration.<p> | <p>LOUISE: I am the Synthetic Biology Research Centre’s (SBRC-Nottingham) Outreach and Communications officer and have been working in this position for the past 4 years. My role in the SBRC involves organising and facilitating outreach and public engagement activities as well as all marketing and communications for the Centre. This is the 2nd year in a row that I have been part of iGEM. I am the Human Practices and Outreach Adviser for this year’s team and I am also responsible for the iGEM team’s project management and administration.<p> | ||
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+ | <p>CARMEN: I am an interdisciplinary social science researcher with a particular interest in exploring multi-species relations in the context of governing emerging biotechnology applications. I recently returned to the School of Life Sciences as social science lead on research within the Synthetic Biology Research Centre (SBRC) exploring how a Responsible Research and Innovation framework can be embedded within the work of the Centre. Previously I held a Research Fellow post at the SBRC from June 2015 to June 2017, before taking up a 10-month project at University of Oxford, contributing to the Good Germs Bad Germs project and the Oxford Interdisciplinary Microbiome Project (IMP).<p> | ||
<p>CRAIG : I studied Biology at Imperial College London before completing my PhD at the BBSRC/EPSRC Synthetic Biology Centre, Nottingham. My work focussed on the development of transposon mutagenesis strategies in the acetogenic bacterial species Clostridium autoethanogenum, and on the development of highly-robust gene transfer protocols for the same organism. My current work involves the implementation of Transposon-Directed Insertion Site Sequencing (TraDIS) in a variety of Gram-positive species of industrial interest.<p> | <p>CRAIG : I studied Biology at Imperial College London before completing my PhD at the BBSRC/EPSRC Synthetic Biology Centre, Nottingham. My work focussed on the development of transposon mutagenesis strategies in the acetogenic bacterial species Clostridium autoethanogenum, and on the development of highly-robust gene transfer protocols for the same organism. My current work involves the implementation of Transposon-Directed Insertion Site Sequencing (TraDIS) in a variety of Gram-positive species of industrial interest.<p> |
Revision as of 21:39, 16 October 2018