Stanford University
Showing 13,071-13,080 of 36,182 Results
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Margo E Horn
Affiliate, History Department
BioMARGO HORN has been teaching history at Stanford since 1985. She received her PhD from Tufts University and was awarded fellowships from NIMH and the Commonwealth Fund. In 2018, Dr. Horn was appointed the Silverman Visiting Professor at the Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science at Tel Aviv University. Dr. Horn’s research and teaching combines interests in US women’s history and the history of medicine. She has a longstanding fascination with the history of madness and psychiatry and is the author of "Before It’s Too Late: The Child Guidance Movement in the United States, 1922-1945," among other publications. Dr. Horn taught in Stanford’s Department of History and program in Structured Liberal Education (SLE). She currently teaches courses on the history of women and mental illness, and the history of women and medicine in the United States, in Stanford’s programs in Feminist, Gender and Sexuality Studies and American Studies. In addition, Dr. Horn directed Stanford’s program in Innovative Academic Courses, and offered workshops for advanced doctoral students across the university on the future of their research. Her current research projects concern the history of women physicians in the US, the history of women and mental illness in America, and global women leaders.
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Benjamin Davies Horne
Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor, Medicine - Cardiovascular Medicine
BioDr. Benjamin Horne is an Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor who is based at the Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute in Salt Lake City, UT, where he serves as the Director of Cardiovascular and Genetic Epidemiology. His doctoral training (PhD) in genetic epidemiology was completed at the University of Utah and he holds masters degrees in public health and in biostatistics. Dr. Horne is a fellow of the American Heart Association, a fellow of the American College of Cardiology, and a member of the American Society of Human Genetics. Dr. Horne’s research focuses on population health and precision medicine, including evaluating the genetic epidemiology of heart diseases, developing and implementing clinical decision tools for personalizing medical care, discovering the human health effects of intermittent fasting, and studying the influences of air pollution on major adverse health events.
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Carlie Ware Horne
Clinical Supervising Attorney and Lecturer in Law, Criminal Defense Clinic
BioCarlie Ware Horne is a Lecturer and Clinical Supervising Attorney at the Stanford Law School Criminal Defense Clinic. She received a B.A. from Yale College in American Studies, and a J.D. from U.C. Berkeley School of Law. She joins the academic staff at Stanford after two decades of litigation in civil rights, social justice, and indigent criminal defense.
She served as law clerk to the Honorable Claudia Wilken on the United States District Court, Northern District of California.Carlie received the Relman Civil Rights Fellowship from Relman Colfax PLLC in Washington, D.C., where she litigated civil rights claims in housing and public accommodations. She served as the Marvin M. Karpatkin Fellow at the ACLU Racial Justice Project, and then continued litigating civil rights and racial justice issues as a staff attorney at the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project.
Carlie served for fourteen years as a Santa Clara County Deputy Public Defender, where she represented adult and juvenile clients at all stages of defense in criminal cases. She designed and established the Santa Clara County Public Defender’s Pre-Arraignment Representation unit, providing early representation to indigent community members after arrest but before the first court date (arraignment) when they would otherwise first meet an attorney. She draws upon that experience to argue, in her Article, Pre Arraignment Promise, 66 B.C. L. REV. 1523 (2025) that widespread implementation of early representation programs has the power to expand the Sixth Amendment constitutional right to counsel. She is the author of a chapter on litigating Fourth Amendment Search and Seizure Motions, in the Continuing Education of the Bar (CEB) California Criminal Law Procedure and Practice manual, published by the Board of Governors of the State Bar of California and Regents of the University of California. -
Roland Horne
Thomas Davies Barrow Professor and Senior Fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsWell Testing, Optimisation and Geothermal Reservoir Engineering