| Candramukhi Dasi (Chandra Wright
Marks) is a disciple of Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami since 1979. Aghari
Dasa (Andrew Marks) is a disciple of Srila Prabhupada since 1975.
They have trained in individual and family counselling with an
emphasis on communication, listening, and multi-cultural research.
Thesis work included phenomenological and ethnographic field research
with ‘extreme’ sub-culture groups. Specialisations
include working with children and adolescents, family dynamics,
organisational psychology, and mediation. They currently own and
operate a multi-family real estate development and management company
where they utilise principles of enlightened management. They have
been counselling devotees since 1985.
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Ales Crnic, Ph.D. in
sociology of religion, is a Research Fellow at the Institute of
Social Sciences (Centre for Religious and Cultural Studies), and a
Teaching Fellow at the Cultural Studies Department, Faculty of Social
Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. His scientific interest
focuses on new religious movements, oriental religions, and sociology
of religion.
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Tadeusz Doktor received
his doctorate in 1988 from Warsaw University where he is currently an
adjunct at the Institute of Applied Social Sciences. His books
include Ruchy kultowe: Psychologiczna charakterystyka
uczestnikow (Cult Movements: Psychological
Characteristics of Members); Nowe ruchy religijne i
parareligijne w Polsce (New Religious and Para-religious
Movements in Poland) and (with Irena Borowik) Pluralizm
religijny i moralny w Polsce (Religious and Moral Pluralism in
Poland).
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Jonathan B. Edelmann, a native
of Boston, is currently a D.Phil. student at the University of
Oxford. His area of research is the relationship of Vaisnava
conceptions of nature and creation with contemporary evolutionary
theory. He has a BA in Philosophy from the University of California.
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Lal Krsna Dasa (Lyall Ward) is
an editor for ISKCON Communications Journal. He works full
time for ISKCON Communications on web development and other projects.
He lives in Belfast with his wife Syama.
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Ranjit Dasa is a Director of the
Bhaktivedanta Archives where he has served since 1985. Born in South
Africa, he graduated from Rhodes University and after travelling to
North America, joined ISKCON in Vancouver in 1974. He has served in
ISKCON missions in the USA, South Africa, and India and is currently
engaged in various projects for the Bhaktivedanta Archives including
book publication, digitisation, photo-preservation and cataloguing.
He lives in Sandy Ridge, North Carolina, with his wife and daughter.
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Sesa Dasa (Seth W. Spellman)
joined the Hare Krsna Movement in 1973 inspired by the political
activism of the ‘In God We Trust Party for Purified Leaders’
organised by members of ISKCON. Currently a member of the ISKCON GBC
(Governing Body Commission) with a portfolio of the Ministry of
Educational Development, he has previously served in various
leadership positions within ISKCON including temple president in
Washington, DC, and Philadelphia; Managing Editor of Back to Godhead
Magazine; and North American Trustee of the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust.
Prior to joining ISKCON he attended the United States Military
Academy and received a BS in Political Science from the State
University of New York at Albany. In 1991 he earned a Juris Doctor
degree from the UCLA School of Law. He lives in Alachua, Florida,
with his wife and two daughters.
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Arnold M. Zack is a mediator and
arbitrator of labour management disputes and former President of the
National Academy of Arbitrators, with degrees from Tufts College (BA
1953), Yale Law School (LLB 1956), and Harvard School of Government
(MPA 1961). He has taught Dispute Resolution at Yale Law School,
teaches currently at the Harvard Trade Union Program, and is a member
of the Visiting Committee on Human Resources at Harvard University.
He is Co-Chair of the Due Process Task Force, which produced the Due
Process Protocol, and Chair of the Executive Committee of the
Alliance for Education in Dispute Resolution, and is the author of
twelve books on dispute resolution and international labour issues.
He has served as a consultant to the International Labor Organization
and the governments of Greece, Australia, Israel, and South Africa,
and recently chaired an international panel to recommend changes in
the internal dispute resolution systems of the International Monetary
Fund. Among his awards is the Distinguished Service Award for Labor
Management Arbitration and the Whitney North Seymour Medal of the
American Arbitration Association and the Cushing Gavin Award of the
Archdiocese of Boston. He is Vice President of the Yale Law School
Alumni Association and a member of the College of Labor and
Employment Lawyers.
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