Danielle Willkens

Danielle Willkens
danielle.willkens@design.gatech.edu

She is an Associate Professor at Georgia Institute of Technology's School of Architecture and a practicing designer, researcher, and educator who is particularly interested in bringing architectural engagement to diverse audiences through interactive projects. Her experiences in practice and research include design/build projects, public installations, and on-site investigations as well as extensive archival work in several countries. As an avid photographer and illustrator, her work has been recognized in the American Institute of Architects National Photography Competition and she has contributed graphics to several exhibitions and publications. As an educator, she was recognized as one of two recipients of the 2017-2018 American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS)/ Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) New Faculty Teaching Award and a 2021 AIAS Educator Honor Award. 

Her research and practice experiences span design/build, early intervention design education, transatlantic studies, and historic site documentation and visualization. She was an inaugural Mellon History Teaching Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks in fall 2021 for the project "From Plantation to Protest: Visualizing Cultural Landscapes of Conflict in the American South," supporting research and development of the Race, Space, and Architecture in the United States seminar at Georgia Tech. 

Expanding experiences abroad to enrich both teaching and research agendas , she was the 2015 Society of Architectural Historians’ H. Allen Brooks Travelling Fellow. Between June 2016 and May 2017, she traveled to Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Cuba, and Japan to research the impact of tourism on cultural heritage sites; research blog posts can be found here. 

Currently, she is working with Auburn University Associate Professor Liu and an interdisciplinary team from the McWhorter School of Building Science, the Department of History, and the Media Production Group on “Walking in the Footsteps of History”, an experimental survey and modeling project to digitally reconstruct the area south of the Edmund Pettus Bridge during the 'Bloody Sunday' events of March 7, 1965. This project is working to record and represent the built environment through the use of 3D LiDAR scans, UAV photogrammetry, and digital modeling. The team was awarded a $50,000 grant 2019 National Park Service African American Civil Rights Grant Program to compile a Historic Structures Report on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama.

Willkens serves as a Georgia Tech Institute for People and Technology initiative lead for research activities related to just, resilient, and informed communities.

Associate Professor
BBISS Co-lead: Sustainable Tourism
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
People and Technology > Leadership
Sustainable Systems
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Design > School of Architecture
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Global Sustainable Development
  • Sustainability Education Research

Anjali Thomas

Anjali Thomas
anjalitb3@gatech.edu

Anjali Thomas is an Associate Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs and Director of the Nunn School Program in Global Development. Her research focuses on the political economy of development, and employs quantitative analyses of data derived from India and other developing country contexts. Her specific substantive interests include the politics of service provision, democratic institutions and the link between climate change and local level politics. Prior to joining the faculty at Georgia Tech, Anjali was a faculty member in the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. She obtained her Ph.D. from New York University in 2010.

Associate Professor
BBISS Co-lead: SEEDS (Southeast Exchange of Development Studies)
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Fellow
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Energy > Research Community
Sustainable Systems
Energy
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts > Sam Nunn School of International Affairs
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Global Sustainable Development

Yuanzhi Tang

Yuanzhi Tang
yuanzhi.tang@eas.gatech.edu

Yuanzhi Tang holds undergraduate degrees in Geology and Economics from Peking University, China. She earned a Ph.D. degree in Environmental Geochemistry at Stony Brook University and then continued working in the microbiology group of Prof. Colleen Hansel.

Tang joined the Georgia Tech faculty in 2013 as an assistant professor and is now an associate professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences.

Associate Co-Director for Interdisciplinary Research
Associate Professor
SEI Lead; BBISS Co-lead: Sustainable Resources
SEI Lead; BBISS Co-lead: Sustainable Resources
Phone
404-894-3814
Office
ES&T 1232
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Sustainable Systems > Staff
Energy > Fellow
Energy > Research Community
Sustainable Systems
Energy
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Sciences > School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Resource and Materials Use

Brigitte Stepanov

Brigitte Stepanov
bstepanov@gatech.edu

Dr. Brigitte Stepanov is a war researcher and Assistant Professor of Francophone Studies. She is the founder and director of the Energy Today Lab, an interdisciplinary research hub that reflects creatively and analytically on the energy - broadly defined from labor to thermodynamics - of our contemporary world. Her research interests focus on 20th- and 21st-century French, North African, and Sub-Saharan African literary and visual culture. Trained as a scholar of French and Francophone Studies and as a mathematician, she holds degrees from Queen’s University at Kingston in Canada and a PhD from Brown University. At Brown, she was a Fellow at the Cogut Institute for the Humanities and awarded an Archambault Award for Teaching Excellence.

Before coming to Georgia Tech, she was an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow with the Department of French and Arabic at Grinnell College, where she organized the Theories of Decolonization working group with the support of a grant from Grinnell’s Center for the Humanities. She has been a Silas Palmer Fellow at the Hoover Library and Archives at Stanford University, a Lecturer at the Université Lumière Lyon 2 in France, and a selected participant of the National Endowment for the Humanities seminar “The Search for Humanity after Atrocity.” Additionally, she has trained in conflict mediation, having most recently taken part in the Peacebuilding Institute hosted by the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding at EMU.

Her current book project, Cruelty, War, Fiction: Redefining the In-Human, explores excessive forms of violence in warfare and their representation in fiction and visual media from Algeria, Rwanda, and France. She argues that the concept of cruelty is fundamental to any discussion of political instability, war, and crimes against humanity. More broadly, this project examines the relationship between the evolution of warfare over the last eighty years and shifting conceptions of the human in the face of “universal” manifestations of violence. This work is closely tied to her second research project, which examines literary, artistic, and cultural responses to radioactive fallout and its ensuing ecological crisis following France’s nuclear arsenal testing in Algeria and the South Pacific. Dr. Stepanov’s scholarship has appeared in Contemporary French & Francophone Studies, The French Review, Voix plurielles, and in the volume Memory, Voice, and Identity: Muslim Women’s Writing from Across the Middle East (Routledge, 2021). Dr. Stepanov is also the translator of works by Peter Szendy and Laura Odello and has worked with the Derrida Seminar Translation Project.

Finally, she is a photographer, focusing on archiving memory and the geometry of ecological forms. Both facets of her work are preoccupied with minute documentation – be it to collect visual reminders of patches of lichen or the detailed brickwork of a monument. Among other venues, her work has been exhibited at the Houston Center for Photography, the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art in Chicago, the Granoff Center for the Creative Arts and AS220 in Providence. Her recent exhibit, “Why I’ll Always Dream of Poland,” supported by a grant from the Program in Judaic Studies at Brown, features photographs she took while conducting research on Holocaust remembrance in Israel, Germany, France, Ukraine, Poland, Canada, and the US. Shedding light on public mourning and memorialization, the project also reflects on personal loss and family histories and attempts to bridge the gap between private experiences and public sites of inhuman violence.

Assistant Professor
BBISS Lead: Energy Power Dynamics
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Sustainable Systems
Energy > Faculty Council
Energy > Faculty Council
Energy > Research Community
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts > School of Modern Languages
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Global Sustainable Development

Dori Pap

Dori Pap
dori.pap@scheller.gatech.edu

Dori Pap is the Managing Director of the Institute for Leadership and Social Impact (formerly the Institute for Leadership and Entrepreneurship). She directs the Leadership for Social Good Study Abroad Program in Central and Eastern Europe, coordinates the Impact Speaker Series, runs the annual Ideas to Serve student social innovation competition, and teaches courses on social entrepreneurship. 

Outside Tech, Dori serves on the board of Global Growers Network, a nonprofit organization that connects the agricultural talent of the refugee community in and around Atlanta to opportunities in sustainable agriculture. She is a board member for the Center for Civic Innovation, an organization that works at the frontline of civics education and advocacy, and she serves on the board of the Georgia Social Impact Collaborative. Dori is a triple Yellow Jacket and is currently pursuing her doctorate degree at the Institute for Higher Education at UGA.

Managing Director, Institute for Leadership and Entrepreneurship
BBISS Co-lead: Collaborative Social Impact
Phone
404-385-3278
Office
ILSI 4152
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Sustainable Systems
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > Scheller College of Business
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Sustainability Education Research
  • Global Sustainable Development

Alexander Oettl

Alexander Oettl
alex.oettl@scheller.gatech.edu

Alex Oettl joined Scheller in 2009.  His research interests include the economics of innovation, knowledge spillovers, labor mobility, and economic geography.  His current work focuses on the production and diffusion of ideas at the individual, firm, and regional level.

Professor Oettl's research has been published in Management Science, Organization Science, Nature, Journal of Financial Economics, Review of Economics and Statistics, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Journal of Urban Economics, Research Policy, Journal of International Business Studies, profiled in multiple media outlets, and presented at business schools around the world. He is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a recipient of the Kauffman Junior Faculty Fellowship in Entrepreneurship Research.

PhD Coordinator, Strategy & Innovation
Co-Site Lead, CDL-Atlanta
Associate Professor
BBISS Lead: Sustainability at the Creative Destruction Lab
Phone
404-385-4570
Additional Research
Economics of InnovationProduction and Diffusion of Ideas
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Sustainable Systems
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > Scheller College of Business
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Economics and Business of Sustainability

Jian Luo

Jian Luo
jian.luo@ce.gatech.edu

Dr. Jian Luo completed his undergraduate and M.S. studies at Tsinghua University, Beijing, where he received a B.Sc.(Eng.) and a M.S. degree in Environmental Engineering in 1998 and 2000, respectively. He completed his Ph.D. in 2006 in Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University, California. The research Dr. Luo is conducting involves field, theoretical, and computational investigations of flow and reactive transport in subsurface; development and application of geostatistical methods for the spatial and temporal analysis of hydrogeologic and biochemistry data; development of computational algorithms and programs to simulate subsurface flow and reactive transport, and to assess the associated uncertainty; inverse modeling to estimate flow and transport parameters under uncertainty; and use of such computational methods and models to assess subsurface contamination, and to aid the optimal design of groundwater remediation operations.

Professor
BBISS Lead: Coastal Urban Flooding
Phone
(404) 385-6390
Additional Research
Geosystems; Water
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Fellow
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Data Engineering and Science > Faculty
Energy > Research Community
Sustainable Systems
Data Engineering and Science
Energy
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Engineering > School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Ecosystem and Environmental Health

Neha Kumar

Neha Kumar
neha.kumar@gatech.edu

Neha Kumar is an Associate Professor jointly appointed at the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs and the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech. Her research lies at the intersection of human-computer interaction and global sustainable development, with a focus on global health and community informatics. Her work contributes feminist perspectives to the design and integration of emerging technologies across marginalized contexts in the Global South. 

Her research has been recognized by multiple ACM Best Paper and Honorable Mention awards. Neha received the College of Computing's Lockheed Inspirational Young Faculty Award (2017) and the Lockheed Excellence in Teaching Award (2019). She currently serves as the President of ACM SIGCHI. She earned her Ph.D. in Information Management Systems from UC Berkeley, Master’s degrees in Computer Science and Education from Stanford University, and Bachelor’s in Computer Science and Applied Math from UC Berkeley.

Associate Professor
BBISS Co-lead: Collaborative Social Impact
Additional Research

Human-Computer Interaction for Global Development

IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Fellow
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
Sustainable Systems
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Computing > School of Interactive Computing
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Global Sustainable Development

Xiaoming Huo

 Xiaoming Huo
xiaoming.huo@isye.gatech.edu

Xiaoming Huo is an A. Russell Chandler III Professor in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech. Dr. Huo's research interests include statistical theory, statistical computing, and issues related to data analytics. He has made numerous contributions on topics such as sparse representation, wavelets, and statistical problems in detectability. His papers appeared in top journals, and some of them are highly cited. He is a senior member of IEEE since May 2004. 

Associate Director for Research, IDEaS
Professor
Executive Director, TRIAD (Transdisciplinary Research Institute for Advancing Data Science)
BBISS Co-lead: Microclimate Monitoring and Prediction
IRI and Role
Sustainable Systems > Initiative Lead
Data Engineering and Science > Faculty
People and Technology > Affiliated Faculty
Sustainable Systems
Data Engineering and Science
People and Technology
University, College, and School/Department
Georgia Institute of Technology > College of Engineering > School of Industrial Systems Engineering
Research Areas
Sustainable Systems
  • Ecosystem and Environmental Health