Marcia Bernicat, a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor,
                                                      is currently Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of Oceans and International
                                                      Environmental and Scientific Affairs. 
                                                   
                                                   Ambassador Bernicat served as Ambassador to Bangladesh from 2015-2018 and to Senegal
                                                      and Guinea-Bissau from 2008-2011. Previously she was Deputy Assistant Secretary in
                                                      the Bureau of Human Resources, a position she held from 2012-2015. Domestically she
                                                      served in the Department of State as Office Director for India, Nepal, Sri Lanka,
                                                      Maldives and Bhutan in the Bureau of South Asian Affairs from 2006 to 2008; and from
                                                      2004 to 2006 as the Senior-Level Director and Career Development Officer in the Bureau
                                                      of Human Resources. Ms. Bernicat was Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in
                                                      Bridgetown, Barbados from 2001 to 2004, and Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy
                                                      in Lilongwe, Malawi from 1998 to 2001. She was Principal Officer at the U.S. Consulate
                                                      in Casablanca, Morocco from 1995 to 1998, Deputy Political Counselor at the U.S. Embassy
                                                      in New Delhi, India from 1992 to 1995, and Desk Officer for Nepal and India in the
                                                      Bureau of Near East and South Asian Affairs from 1988 to 1990. 
                                                   
                                                   Earlier in her career, Ambassador Bernicat was Special Assistant to Deputy Secretary
                                                      of State John Whitehead, Watch Officer in the Department’s Operations Center, Consular
                                                      Officer in Marseille, France, and Political/Consular Officer at the U.S. Embassy in
                                                      Bamako, Mali. She is the recipient of the Secretary of State’s Distinguished Service
                                                      Award and numerous other Department awards. 
                                                   
                                                   A native of New Jersey, Marcia Bernicat received a Bachelor of Arts in History from
                                                      Lafayette College and a Master of Science in Foreign Service from Georgetown University.
                                                      In 2018 she was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Public Service by Lafayette
                                                      College. Prior to joining the Foreign Service, 
                                                   
                                                   Ms. Bernicat gained private sector managerial experience working for the Procter and
                                                      Gamble Manufacturing Company on Staten Island, New York. Her languages are French,
                                                      Hindi, and Russian.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                             Jim Berner 
                                             Former Science Director 
                                             91Ƶ Native Tribal Health Consortium 
                                             
                                             Keynote speaker for the Chronic disease and cancer, contaminant surveillance and bio-monitoring 
                                           
                                        
                                       
                                          
                                             
                                             
                                                
                                                    Dr. James Berner graduated from the University of Oklahoma Medical School in 1968,
                                                      completed an internship at Marion County General Hospital at Indiana University in
                                                      Indianapolis.  He completed his military service in the Republic of Vietnam, and the 
                                                      Pensacola Naval Hospital, then completed residencies in Internal Medicine at the University
                                                      of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona, and in Pediatrics at the University of Oregon Health
                                                      Sciences Center, in Portland, Oregon.  He joined the Indian Health Service in 1974,
                                                      and served as a staff physician in Sitka, 91Ƶ, at the Mt. Edgecumbe IHS Hospital,
                                                      and the 91Ƶ Native Medical Center in Anchorage.  From 1984, until 2006, he served
                                                      as Director of Community Health, and as a part-time clinician in the Department of
                                                      Pediatrics.  He assumed the role of Senior Science Director in the Department of Community
                                                      Environment and Health in 2006 and held that position until he retired in October
                                                      of 2019. 
                                                   
                                                   The publication of the Arctic Council’s first Arctic Human Health Assessment In 1998,
                                                      raised public awareness in 91Ƶ of the presence of industrial and agricultural environmental
                                                      contaminants in traditional food species, and in Arctic residents.  The possible human
                                                      health effects, especially in pregnant women and infants, prompted him to seek funding
                                                      for the eventual creation of a maternal/ infant biomonitoring program for Yupik residents
                                                      of Yukon-Kuskokwim River Delta, from 1998-2013, utilizing grant funds from the EPA
                                                      and CDC.  The Arctic warming trend resulted in the Arctic Council undertaking the
                                                      Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA),  finished and published in 2005, with personnel
                                                      from the 91Ƶ Native Tribal Health Consortium as authors of many sections of the
                                                      Human Health chapter of the ACIA.  The emerging climate-related environmental human
                                                      health threats documented in the ACIA was addressed with another EPA grant to fund
                                                      the Rural 91Ƶ Monitoring Program, which created a village-based environmental monitoring
                                                      capacity, using a partnership with the University of 91Ƶ Fairbanks (UAF). 
                                                   
                                                   Dr.  Berner’s involvement with Arctic population health, environmental contaminants,
                                                      and Arctic climate and health interactions, resulted in his participation as a member
                                                      of the Arctic Council Arctic Monitoring Assessment Program’s Human Health Assessment
                                                      Group, the National Academy of Sciences Polar Research Board, and the Science Advisory
                                                      Panel of the North Pacific Research Board, as well as the Science Advisory Panels
                                                      for a series of NIH center grants at UAF for environmental research, and capacity
                                                      building.  The development of a One Health focus at UAF over the last decade is a
                                                      culmination of the growing interest and capacity at UAF and the 91Ƶ Native worldview
                                                      of the interconnectedness of the health of the environment and human health.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                    Dr. Nikoosh Carlo is the founder and chief strategist at CNC North Consulting. She
                                                      has extensive experience working to advance community-based solutions to climate change.
                                                      She helps clients develop a vision for their climate and Arctic priorities, navigate
                                                      building momentum to achieve change, and foster partnerships to drive forward movement.
                                                      Dr. Carlo has a special interest in advancing initiatives that support climate equity
                                                      and the health and well-being of Arctic residents and Indigenous peoples. 
                                                   
                                                   Dr. Carlo previously served as senior advisor for climate and Arctic policy to the
                                                      Governor of 91Ƶ (2017-18), a senior advisor at the U.S. State Department for the
                                                      U.S. Chairmanship of the Arctic Council (2015-17), and the executive director of the
                                                      91Ƶ Arctic Policy Commission (2013-15).   
                                                   
                                                   Dr. Carlo is Athabascan Indian and has deep roots in the Interior 91Ƶ communities
                                                      of Fairbanks and Tanana, where she was raised. Dr. Carlo received a Ph.D. in neuroscience
                                                      from the University of California San Diego and a B.S. in psychology from the University
                                                      of 91Ƶ Fairbanks.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                             Brooke Woods 
                                             Fisheries Policy Analyst and Outreach Coordinator 
                                             Tanana Chiefs Conference - Hunting and Fishing Task Force  
                                             
                                             Keynote speaker for the Food safety and security session
                                                
                                                  
                                             
                                           
                                        
                                       
                                          
                                             
                                             
                                                
                                                    Brooke Woods is Koyukon Athabascan from Rampart, 91Ƶ, a small village on the Yukon
                                                      River. She currently lives in Fairbanks, 91Ƶ with her five children and attends
                                                      the University of 91Ƶ Fairbanks (UAF) pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in Fisheries
                                                      Science. She received a Tribal Management  Associate of Applied Science degree Spring of 2017. 
  She is currently employed with Tanana Chiefs Conference in the Hunting and Fishing
                                                      Task Force as the Fisheries Policy Analyst and Outreach Coordinator. Brooke also serves
                                                      as the Executive Chair for the Yukon River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. The fish commission
                                                      was founded in 2014, Tribes and First Nations along the Yukon River and its Tributaries
                                                      are working as a unified voice for the conservation and restoration of Yukon River
                                                      Fisheries that protects traditional way of life and well-being.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                Marit H. Hoveid has her degrees from the University of Oslo (Cand. Polit.) and from
                                                   NTNU (Dr.Polit) in pedagogy. She has been a member of the EERA (European Educational
                                                   Research Association) council and executive committee for several years. Her research
                                                   interest revolves around questions related to teaching and learning processes. She
                                                   has edited several books and is the current editor-in-chief of Nordic Journal of Education
                                                   and Practice  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                Halvor Hoveid has his degree from the University of Oslo in pedagogy and was recognized
                                                   as an associate professor in pedagogy in 2007 and a full professor in 2015 at the
                                                   Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). 
  He has worked with teacher education for almost 30 years. His research is related
                                                   to philosophies and theories of education.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                    Dr. Emily Jenkins, Ph.D., DVM, BSc Hon., is Professor, Department of Veterinary Microbiology,
                                                      Western College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon,
                                                      Canada, and previously served as the Wildlife Disease Specialist for the Government
                                                      of Canada. She teaches in parasitology, public health, One Health, and emergency management.
                                                      
  Her research takes a One Health approach to diseases that transmit among animals and
                                                      people via food, water, vectors, and the environment in the North. 
  Locally, she serves as chair of the Wildlife Health Research Fund and University Northern
                                                      Studies Committee. More broadly, she is Canadian representative to the Terrestrial
                                                      Working Group of the International Arctic Science Committee, a member of the 91Ƶ
                                                      CDC and Native Tribal Health Consortium One Health working group, and the Climate
                                                      Change and Infectious Disease working group, International Circumpolar Surveillance
                                                      of Emerging Infectious Disease, Arctic Council. 
  She also serves as Associate Editor of the International Journal for Parasitology
                                                      – Parasites and Wildlife and on the Editorial Advisory Board of Food and Waterborne
                                                      Parasitology.   
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                             Susan Kutz 
                                             Professor 
                                             Department of Ecosystem and Public Health at the University of Calgary Faculty of
                                                Veterinary Medicine 
                                             
                                             Keynote speaker  
                                           
                                        
                                       
                                          
                                             
                                             
                                                
                                                    Dr. Susan Kutz is a Professor in the Department of Ecosystem and Public Health at
                                                      the University of Calgary Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and a fellow of the Canadian
                                                      Academy of Health Sciences. 
  Since her first foray into the Arctic in 1988, she has worked there continuously,
                                                      addressing issues at the animal-environment-human interface. In partnership with local
                                                      communities, she has developed community-based wildlife health surveillance programs
                                                      with the goal of early detection of change in wildlife populations, protection of
                                                      public health, and facilitating the incorporation of local and traditional knowledge
                                                      into wildlife co-management.  Her research brings local, traditional, and scientific knowledge together to understand
                                                      the impacts of a warming Arctic on the health of muskoxen and caribou and the consequent
                                                      effects on food security in the Arctic. 
  She is recognized around the CircumArctic for her wildlife health expertise and recently
                                                      co-edited the first edition of the book Reindeer and Caribou Health and Disease. She
                                                      also pioneered the Northern Community Health veterinary program in the Sahtu Settlement
                                                      area, NWT, where she and her team have delivered annual veterinary services to five
                                                      Dene communities for over a decade while at the same time providing young veterinarians
                                                      with unique cross-cultural experiential learning opportunities.   
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                Arja Rautio, MD, Ph.D., VP Research University of the Arctic, Professor in Arctic Research, Thule
                                                   Institute and Faculty of Medicine, University of Oulu, Finland. 
  Her research interests are on population studies, Indigenous health and wellbeing,
                                                   research ethics, and One health and climate change. 
  The on-going projects are EU-funded: 
                                                   
                                                    
                                                      
                                                      - (H2020-BG-2016-2017) Permafrost thaw and the changing Arctic coast, science for socio-economic
                                                         adaptation, Nunataryak,
 
                                                      
                                                      - (H2020-FP-2014-2020, Nro 825762) Metabolic effects of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals:
                                                         novel testing METhods and adverse outcome pathways, EDCMET
 
                                                      
                                                      - (ENI-2017-387477) Development of think tank functions of the Northern Dimension Institute,
                                                         and Arctic Council project on One Health.
 
                                                       
                                                   
                                                   Dr Rautio is working as a national key expert in the Human Health groups of the Arctic
                                                      Monitoring Assessment Programme (AMAP) and the Arctic Council's Sustainable Development
                                                      Working Group (SDWG). She has been a member of the Social and Human Sciences Working
                                                      Group of the International Arctic Science Committee. At the moment she is a board
                                                      member of International Union of Circumpolar Health and Chair of Nordic Society for
                                                      Circumpolar Health.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                                    Dr. John Walsh is the Chief Scientist of the International Arctic Research Center
                                                      and President’s Professor of Global Change at the University of 91Ƶ, Fairbanks.
                                                      He is also the Co-Director of the 91Ƶ Center for Climate Assessment and Policy.
                                                      His research has addressed arctic climate and weather variability, both as observed
                                                      historically and predicted for the future.  
  Walsh was a lead author for the 2014 U.S. National Climate Assessment and for the
                                                      Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Prior to
                                                      moving to 91Ƶ in 2003, he spent 30 years on the faculty of the Department of Atmospheric
                                                      Sciences at the University of Illinois. 
  He has co-authored a textbook, Severe and Hazardous Weather.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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                                             Brooke Woods 
                                             Fisheries Policy Analyst and Outreach Coordinator 
                                             Tanana Chiefs Conference - Hunting and Fishing Task Force  
                                             
                                             Keynote speaker for the Food safety and security session
                                                
                                                  
                                             
                                           
                                        
                                       
                                          
                                             
                                             
                                                
                                                    Brooke Woods is Koyukon Athabascan from Rampart, 91Ƶ, a small village on the Yukon
                                                      River. She currently lives in Fairbanks, 91Ƶ with her five children and attends
                                                      the University of 91Ƶ Fairbanks (UAF) pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in Fisheries
                                                      Science. She received a Tribal Management  Associate of Applied Science degree Spring of 2017. 
  She is currently employed with Tanana Chiefs Conference in the Hunting and Fishing
                                                      Task Force as the Fisheries Policy Analyst and Outreach Coordinator. Brooke also serves
                                                      as the Executive Chair for the Yukon River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. The fish commission
                                                      was founded in 2014, Tribes and First Nations along the Yukon River and its Tributaries
                                                      are working as a unified voice for the conservation and restoration of Yukon River
                                                      Fisheries that protects traditional way of life and well-being.  
                                              
                                           
                                        
                                     
                                   
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