Ashna Lazatin
Ashna Lazatin is a Senior Manager at the Office for Space Technology & Industry at the Economic Development Board of Singapore. She works in public policy and international relations.
Ashna Lazatin is a Senior Manager at the Office for Space Technology & Industry at the Economic Development Board of Singapore. She works in public policy and international relations.
Steven Freeland (PhD, LLM, LLB, BCom) is Emeritus Professor of International Law at Western Sydney University, where he was previously the Dean of the School of Law, and Professorial Fellow at Bond University. He also holds Visiting or Adjunct positions at various other Universities/Institutes in Copenhagen, Vienna, Toulouse, Hong Kong, Montreal, Kuala Lumpur, Vancouver, Mumbai and London.
Kiran Mohan Vazhapully is an international lawyer based in India with a decade of experience in advising governments. He was Erin JC Arsenault Scholar at McGill University, Canada, where he specialized in space law.
Robin J. Frank is an international law and policy expert with 40 years of expertise in areas including human and robotic space exploration, the International Space Station, nonproliferation, export controls, telecommunications, U.S. laws affecting the ability of the U.S. Executive branch to engage in foreign policy and international criminal law and law enforcement. She is a Non-Resident Fellow at the Outer Space Institute, University of British Columbia and spent two years as Legal Adviser to the Ambassador, U.S. Embassy Panama.
Michael Byers is the Co-Director of the Outer Space Institute, a network of world-leading space experts united by their commitment to highly innovative, transdisciplinary research that addresses grand challenges facing the continued use and exploration of space. He is also a Professor of Global Politics and International Law at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Byers has been a Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford University; Professor of Law at Duke University; and a Visiting Professor at the universities of Cape Town, Tel Aviv, Nord (Norway), Novosibirsk (Russia), St Andrews, and the Geneva Graduate Institute. His two most recent books, both published by Cambridge University Press, are International Law and the Arctic and Who Owns Outer Space?
Chan Mo Ku is an analyst focused on co-operation between South Korea and other like-minded partner countries. He previously served as an interpretation officer in the Strategic Planning Directorate of the ROK–US Combined Forces Command and Ground Component Command.
Chan Mo holds a Master of Arts in International Relations from Johns Hopkins SAIS, where he focused on security and statecraft in Asia. His work has appeared in publications such as The Diplomat, War on the Rocks, Breaking Defense, and others.
Anastasia Ufimtseva is a Senior Program Manager, International Trade & Investment, at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. She holds a PhD in Global Governance from the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University with a specialization in international political economy. Her dissertation examined Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Canadian and Russian oil and natural gas sectors and she has published widely on trade and investment relations between Asia and Canada, specifically on FDI, governance, and energy policy. Prior to joining APF Canada, Anastasia worked as a post-doctoral researcher at the Jack Austin Centre for Asia Pacific Business Studies at Simon Fraser University's Beedie School of Business.
Kana Bak recently graduated with a master’s degree in international business from Sciences Po Paris. With experience in investment management and sustainability consulting across the EU as well as building business partnerships and research networks in South Korea and Singapore, Kana is dedicated to understanding and influencing diverse markets and geopolitical landscapes. She is particularly fascinated by minilateralism and the interdependencies of foreign capital flows with public policy.
Cathy Senay has been CBC's parliamentary correspondent at the National Assembly since 2018. From 2001 to 2018, she was a journalist at Radio-Canada, where she reported extensively on Quebec politics, in-depth reporting, and military affairs in Western Canada and the Quebec City region.
Her work with CBC Quebec earned a RTDNA Canada Best Canadian Local News Award for Radio Newscast (small/medium market) in 2021. Her APF Canada 2024-2025 Media Fellowship focused on innovation in robotics technology in Japan which was covered by Radio-Canada.
Danielle Goldfarb is an expert on trade, real-time data, economics, and public policy. She has developed leading-edge research programs and written almost 100 policy papers for Canadian and U.S. think-tanks. Danielle is a Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, a Senior Fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation and the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, and a Fellow at the CSA Public Policy Centre.