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* Lana Askari (PhD, 2018) is research fellow at the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy and Assistant Professor in Anthropology at the University of Amsterdam. A visual anthropologist by training, she previously worked at the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs and AEF Consultancy before joining the Scientific Council. Her academic work focuses on migration, future imagination and planning, uncertainty, youth and ethnographic documentary filmmaking. *Catrien Bijleveld (PhD, 1989) is senior researcher at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement, professor of Research Methods in Empirical Legal Studies. Additionally, she is professor of Global Justice at Liverpool University's Faculty of Law within the Department of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology, and member of the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy. Her main research interests are in the areas of criminal careers, experimental evaluation, intergenerational continuity in (sex) offending and crime victimization. She is the author of several textbooks as well as of edited books. * Alyt Damstra (PhD, 2020) is senior research fellow at the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy, and professor of Knowledge and strategic policy advise at the Political Science Department of the University of Amsterdam. Her main research interests include media content and effects, both on public opinion and political decision making, and the role of knowledge in public administration. *Koen Hoogendoorn (MA, 2021) is junior research fellow at the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy. He contributed to projects on media and democracy and published a working paper on the efficacy of media literacy policy. Holding an MA in Conflict Studies and Human Rights (cum laude) and a double bachelor's degree in Law and History from Utrecht University, Hoogendoorn's research reflects a deep curiosity about human interactions and their implications for public policy. *Erik Schrijvers (PhD, 2012) is lecturer (professor) of crisis management at the Netherlands Academy of Crisis Management and Fire Services (NACB). He is also a member of the supervisory Board of DE, knowledge institute for culture and digital transformation. Until recently he worked as a senior researcher and project coordinator at the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy. His research there focused on the intersection of digital technology, culture and policy. He studied history of international relations and social and political philosophy at Utrecht University and obtained his PhD with a thesis on the history of forms of extra -parliamentary representation in the Netherlands. |