Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer

Find an expert

1 - 8 of 8 results

Dr Christina Bornatici

Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Institute for Social Science Research
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Christina Bornatici is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow working on the ARC Kathleen Fitzpatrick Laureate Project Bringing Equality Home: A New Gender Agenda. Her broader research interests include gender inequality, family dynamics, paid employment and unpaid work, social policy, and quantitative research methods.

Her research examines how gender inequalities are produced, sustained, and challenged across the life course and over historical time, with a particular focus on gender attitudes and the division of labour within couples. She uses longitudinal quantitative and comparative methods to analyse how attitudes, couple dynamics, institutional contexts, and gender norms shape social outcomes.

Christina holds a PhD in Social Sciences from the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. Prior to joining ISSR, she was a researcher at FORS – the Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Science.

Christina Bornatici
Christina Bornatici

Dr Sandra Buchler

Affiliate of ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Institute for Social Science Research
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Sandra Buchler is the Mary Lee Family Dynamics Fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course. She is currently undertaking a research project on the life course trajectories of sole parents in Australia. Sandra holds a PhD in Sociology from the University of Queensland. Her broader research interest lies in the role of gender ideology and labour market stratification in perpetuating gender inequality. Her areas of research and expertise include life course transitions, families, gender inequality, female labour force participation, gender ideologies, education, qualitative evaluation and quantitative research methods. Sandra was a Lecturer at the University of Bamberg from 2011 to 2013 and a Senior Lecturer at the Goethe University Frankfurt (2014 – 2024).

Sandra Buchler
Sandra Buchler

Dr Suri Li

Affiliate of ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Institute for Social Science Research
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Not available for supervision

Suri Li is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Science Research, University of Queensland and the Centre of Excellence for Children & Families over the Life Course. Her current work centres on gender inequality and family dynamic across life course and explores the interplay of gender relations in the public and private spheres.

Prior to her current position, she holds a BSc and MSc in Finance, as well as an MA in Public Policy from the University of Edinburgh, the UK and a PhD in Sociology at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Her DPhil Thesis focus on the relationship between household resources and child wellbeing in Ireland, Australia and the UK using longitudinal data from birth cohort studies.

Suri Li
Suri Li

Dr Martin O'Flaherty

Affiliate of ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
ARC COE for Children and Families Over the Lifecourse
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Research Fellow
School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Martin O’Flahertyis a research fellow in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course located in the Institute for Social Science Research. Martin has made important contributions to the evaluation of nationally significant social policy, often working with the Department of Social Services. Notable highlights include designing the impact evaluation for the $90 million Try, Test, and Learn Fund and leading the evaluation of the Building Capacity in Australia’s Parents trial and the National Community Awareness Raising initiative. He is the quantitative lead for recently announced Community Refugee Integration and Sponsorship Pilot, funded by the Department of Home Affairs, which is investigating the feasibility of alternative settlement pathways for unlinked humanitarian migrants.

Martin’s broader research centres on the intersection of family, health, and disadvantage over the life course, using advanced quantitative methods to unlock causal and longitudinal perspectives on important social problems. Recent work has investigated patterns and determinants of children’s and adolescents’ time-use, including for adolescents with disability and LGBTQ adolescents. He has also led research using state-of-the-art machine learning methodology to study heterogeneous effects of teenage motherhood on later life mental health. Martin’s current research is primarily focussed on understanding the nature, causes of, and solutions to, poverty and financial insecurity among children with disabilities and their families. His work has appeared in leading international journals including Demography, Child Development, and The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health among others.

Martin O'Flaherty
Martin O'Flaherty

Dr Flora Rolf

Deputy Director (South West)
Southern Queensland Rural Health
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Dr Floraidh Rolf is the Deputy Director (South West) for Southern Queensland Rural Health in Charleville Queensland, as well as an educator, researcher and nurse. She is a strong supporter of social justice and activism in healthcare, in particular the duty to address gaps in the care afforded to disenfranchised and vulnerable populations.

Floraidh's background encompasses mental health, critical care, rural and remote health, and higher education. Her research interests include sociological approaches to nursing and health, power and stigma, and qualitative methodology. She is committed to supporting social change through collaborative research.

Flora Rolf
Flora Rolf

Dr Zoe Staines

Senior Lecturer
School of Social Science
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Not available for supervision

Zoe Staines (she/her) is Senior Lecturer and Director of Research in the School of Social Science at The University of Queensland. Her deeply interdisciplinary research spans social policy, sociology, and criminology, examining gender and work, care, welfare conditionality, and (de)coloniality with particular attention to structural injustice. She has published four books (including with leading publishers, Routledge and Policy Press) and dozens of journal articles, 85% of which are in Q1 journals and 21% of which are in journals ranked well within the top 10% globally (e.g., Policy Studies–top 2%, Sociology–top 4%). Her research has received multiple prizes and awards, including an ARC DECRA (2020-2023), the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology's 'best book in criminology' prize (2025), the John Mayer best article in Aus Journal of Political Science prize (2022), a Whitlam Institute Research Fellowship (2023), and UQ's competitive Foundation Research Excellence Award (2023).

Zoe is an elected board member for Australia's national Council for Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (CHASS), Chair of the Organising Committee for the 2026 Australian Social Policy Conference, Deputy Chair of the Australian Basic Income Lab, and an invited mentor for the International Association for Feminist Economics where she works with a group of eight mentees from across the Asia-Pacific region. She also served as Associate Editor and then Co-Editor of the Australian Journal of Social Issues (Q1) between 2019-2025. Before entering academia, Zoe held senior research and policy roles in government and the non-profit sector, and she remains committed to research with translational impact on policy and practice.

Zoe is recipient of a 2024 Australian Award for University Teaching (AAUT) and a 2023 UQ Citation for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning, for 'co-creating imaginative, innovative, and engaging new resources for social science students to become effective social change agents'. She teaches into UQ's Bachelor of Social Science, Bachelor of Arts, and Bachelor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, while also sitting on the Bachelor of Social Science Program Committee. Zoe also currently supervises nine PhD students undertaking projects that span welfare conditionality, social policy, social housing, gender and work, work platformisation, artificial intelligence and future of work, and international human rights and law. She has been twice nominated for a UQ School of Social Science Excellence in Research Mentorship award.

Zoe Staines
Zoe Staines

Dr Charlotte Young

Research Fellow
Institute for Social Science Research
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Charlotte Young is a research fellow at the Institute for Social Science Research at The University of Queensland. Charlotte is a qualitative researcher with interdisciplinary interests spanning sociology, public health, health promotion, and migration studies. Her research focuses on the systemic drivers of migrant health inequities and how they can be redressed. Charlotte is also interested in the ways migrants adapt and respond to systemic and structural drivers of inequity. Recently, she has been exploring how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted migrant and refugee background tertiary students and how young culturally and linguistically diverse social media influencers have been promoting COVID-safe behaviours online. Charlotte also explores immigrant organisations as critical settings to influence health and wellbeing. She is passionate about producing impactful research to affect positive change and tackling migrant health problems in solidarity with the communities they affect. Charlotte also has experience conducting evaluation research for large-scale health interventions.

Charlotte Young
Charlotte Young

Dr Tomasz Zajac

Senior Research Fellow
Institute for Social Science Research
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Availability:
Available for supervision

Tomasz Zając is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Science Research (ISSR) at the University of Queensland (UQ) and the Deputy Lead of the Opportunities research program at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course (the Life Course Centre). Tomasz holds an MA and PhD in Sociology from the University of Warsaw, Poland. Before joining ISSR, he was an Assistant Professor in Sociology at the University of Warsaw and a Researcher at the National Processing Institute (OPI) in Warsaw, where he developed the Polish Graduate Tracking System (ELA) on behalf of the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education. He was also a visiting scholar at the Center for Studies in Higher Education, University of California, Berkeley and The Bamberg Graduate School of Social Sciences (BAGSS), University of Bamberg, Germany.

Tomasz's research interests include social stratification and inequality, migration, gender, and life-course research, especially individual educational trajectories and their links with labour market outcomes. He specialises in quantitative methods, particularly in using population-wide linked administrative data.

Moreover, he has been involved in developing research infrastructure. He currently leads two activity streams with the Social Science Research Infrastructure Network supported by the Australian Research Data Commons.

Tomasz Zajac
Tomasz Zajac